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Wednesday, 14 January 2015

China's geopolitical policy shift that no one is talking about


I have been to China over the years more than a dozen times. I have spoken with people at all levels of policy-making, and one thing I have come to realize is that when Beijing makes a major policy change, they make it carefully and with great deliberation. And when they arrive at a new consensus, they execute it with remarkable effect on all levels. That is the secret to their thirty-year economic miracle. Now China's top leadership has made such a policy decision. It will transform our world over the next decade.

On November 29, 2014, a little-noted but highly significant meeting took place in Beijing as Washington was absorbed with its various attempts to cripple and ultimately destabilize Putin's Russia. They held what was termed The Central Conference on Work Relating to Foreign Affairs. Xi Jinping, Chinese President and Chairman of the Central Military Commission, delivered what was called "An Important Address" there.


Careful reading of the official Foreign Ministry statement on the meeting confirms it was indeed "important." The central leadership of China has now made official a strategic global shift in geopolitical priorities in Chinese foreign policy.


No longer does China regard its relationship with the United Sates or even the EU as of highest priority. Rather they have defined a new grouping of priority countries in their carefully-deliberated geopolitical map. It includes Russia, as well as the entire BRICS rapidly-developing economies; it includes China's Asian neighbors as well as Africa and other developing countries .


To give a perspective, as recently as 2012 China's foreign ptries in the world, including China); Multilateral Organizations (UN, APEC, ASEAN, IMF, World Bank etc.), and public diplomacy which determines which situations to become engaged in around the world. Clearly China has decided those priorities no longer work to her advantage olicy priorities were described in a general framework: Great Powers (principally the USA, EU, Japan, and Russia); Periphery (all countries bordering China); Developing Countries (all lower income coun.


In his address to the meeting, President Xi highlighted a sub-category of developing countries: "Major Developing Powers (kuoda fazhanzhong de guojia). China will "expand cooperation and closely integrate our country's development" with the designated Major Developing Powers, Xi declared. According to Chinese intellectuals, these are countries now deemed especially important partners "to support reform of the international order." It includes Russia, Brazil, South Africa, India, Indonesia, and Mexico, that is, China's BRICS partners, as well as Indonesia and Mexico. China has also ceased calling itself a "developing country," indicating the changed self-image.


Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin indicated one significant aspect of the new policy when at the conference in Beijing he declared that the "imbalance between Asia's political security and economic development has become an increasingly prominent issue." China's proposal to create an Asian "community of shared destiny" aims to resolve this imbalance. That implies closer economic and diplomatic ties with South Korea, Japan, India, Indonesia, even Vietnam and the Philippines.


In other words, although the relationship with the United States will remain highest priority because of America's military and financial power, we can expect an increasingly outspoken China against what it sees as American interference. This was seen clearly in October when the official China Daily wrote an OpEd during Hong Kong's "Umbrella Revolution" asking, "Why does Washington Make Color Revolutions?" The article named the Vice President of the US Government-financed regime-change NGO, National Endowment for Democracy as involved. Such directness would have been unthinkable just six years ago when Washington tried to embarrass Beijing by stirring up violent protests by the Dalai Lama Movement in Tibet just before the 2008 Beijing Olympics.


China is openly rejecting the usual Western criticism on human rights and recently declared a freeze in China-UK diplomatic relations following a meeting by the Cameron government with the Dalai Lama and to Norway over its recognition of dissident Liu Xiaobo. Over the past year, step-by-step Beijing has dismissed Washington's criticism of its reclamation of its historical claims in the South China Sea.


But perhaps most significant, in recent months, China has boldly moved an agenda to build alternative institutions to the US-controlled IMF and World Bank, a potentially devastating blow to US economic power if it succeeds. To counter the US attempt to economically isolate China in Asia through creation of a US Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), Beijing has announced its own Chinese vision of a Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP), an "all inclusive, all-win" trade deal that really promotes Asia-Pacific cooperation.


Elevating Russian Relations


At present, what clearly emerges is China's decision to make its relation with Putin's Russia central to this new priority strategy. Despite decades of mistrust following the 1960 Sino-Soviet split, the two countries have begun a depth of cooperation unprecedented. The two great land powers of Eurasia are welding economic bonds that create the only potential "challenger" to future American global supremacy, as US foreign policy strategist, Zbigniew Brzezinski described it in his in 1997.


At a time when Putin was engaged in a full-scale NATO economic sanctions war aimed at toppling his regime, China signed not one, but several gigantic energy deals with Russian state companies Gazprom and Rozneft, allowing Russia to offset the growing threat to her west European energy exports, a life-and-death issue for the Russian economy.


During the November APEC meeting in Beijing, where Obama was given an unmistakable Chinese diplomatic downgrade for the official photo by being told to stand next to the wife of one of the Asian presidents while Putin stood beside Xi. In politics symbols, especially in China carry great import as an essential part of communication. During the same occasion, Xi and Putin agreed to build a West Route Gas Pipeline from Siberia to China, as an addition to the historic East Route Pipeline agreed with Russia in May. When both are completed, Russia will deliver 40% of China's natural gas. At the same occasion in Beijing the Chief of the Russian General Staff announced significant new areas of cooperation between Russian Armed Forces and the Chinese PLA.


Now, in the midst of Washington's full-scale currency war against the Russian ruble, China has announced its readiness, if asked, to help its Russian partner. On December 20 amid a record fall in the Ruble to the dollar, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said that China will provide help if needed and is confident Russia can overcome its economic difficulties. At the same time Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng said expanding a currency swap between the two nations and making increased use of yuan for bilateral trade would have the greatest impact in aiding Russia.


There are other synergies between Russia and China where both coordinate more closely, including Putin's decision to meet in Spring with the North Korean President, as well as with India, a long-time Russian ally with whom China has had fragile relations since the 1950's. As well Russia has a strong position with Vietnam going back to the Cold War and development by Russian oil companies of Vietnam's offshore oil discoveries. In short, for both, once in a harmonized geopolitical strategy, Brzezinski's worst geopolitical nightmare is taking on a life of its own, thanks, largely, to the very stupid policies of Washington's neo-conservative warhawks, President Obama, and the very rich, loveless families who pay their bills.


All of these moves, while fraught with danger, signal that China has deeply understood the Washington geopolitical game and the strategies of the neo-conservative US warhawks and, like Putin's Russia, have little intention of bending their knee to what they see as a Washington global tyranny. The year 2015 shapes to be one of the most decisive and interesting in modern history.


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Study Shows Voters See Far Beyond The Expensive Suits And Practiced Language Patterns Of Politicians



Rick PerryMitt RomneyBarack Obama



Many of us have forgotten how to judge the character of another. Their words only tell half the story. For example it is good to watch television with the sound off, this allows you to see numerous nonverbal cues. Body language alone speaks volumes about someone. You can see shy people pull their bodies inward, shift their shoulders in and put their hands in their pockets. We have patterns that emerge that tell everything about ourselves. What we think of ourselves and others. Politicians in general are not immune, but they have been cultivated to hide those flaws. Lessons in culture, neural-linguistic programming, rapport and a lot more goes in to the most prominent politicians. Bill Clinton in particular was trained by two of the best in the business Kevin Hogan and Tony Robbins. They tell them never to stretch your arms past their shoulders as it makes you seem like you are lying. You end up looking like the fisherman who said I caught a fish 'this big'!



Science Daily has a great study on nonverbal communication:


As the old saying goes, "you never get a second chance to make a first impression."


When it comes to presidential candidates in nationally televised debates, though, a series of studies by a Texas Tech University professor in the College of Media and Communication are showing the nonverbal repertoires that make up a presidential candidate's communication style are important influencers of voter reaction.


Erik Bucy, a regents professor of strategic communication at Texas Tech, is a popular guest lecturer around the world for his research on nonverbal expressions in political news and presidential debates and how those televised leader displays affect public perceptions of candidates.


Over the past year, Bucy has presented the results to several national associations, spoke at a symposium on nonverbal communication and democracy in Sweden, guest lectured at UCLA and participated in an invited conference sponsored by the C-SPAN Education Foundation and Purdue University.


Some of this work, conducted in collaboration with researchers from the University of Wisconsin (UW), is summarized in a paper entitled "The Power of Television Images in a Social Media Age: Linking Biobehavioral and Computational Approaches via the Second Screen," soon to be published in The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.

What Bucy and his colleagues discovered is candidates' facial expressions, gestures and voice tone do as much do as much or more to drive public reaction to the debates than what the candidates actually say.


"This frustrates some people who study media and politics because they want the discussion to be all about the issues," Bucy said. "What we're documenting is, in fact, people respond a lot to behavior. Not everybody pays really that close of attention to elections or knows all their party's positions on the issues, but they can get a sense of the candidates' traits by observing competitive political behavior. And traits are reliable predictors of candidate support."



Let's talk about rapport for a moment, politicians want to make a deep connection with their voters. George W Bush acted like he was a real Texan and made obvious attempts at sounding like an idiot. Today we call them 'Bush-isms' but the best way to get rapport with someone is to talk like that someone and act like that someone. Because we like ourselves and we like people like us. An old school technique for getting deep rapport was called matching and mirroring. When someone changed their body language you wait three seconds and do it yourself and make it look like you both are mirror images of each other. You can breath in sync with someone, that also works well. If you are not good at this you can really piss people off. Obama has dabbled with conversational hypnosis, you can use it redefine arguments such as:


“The issue isn't (high taxes), it's about (roads and schools), and that means..”

“I agree (taxes are high) and would add the issue isn't about the revenue but how useful we are using it..”


You lead everyone away from the problem at hand toward something that you can debate properly. One of the hidden tricks of the trade that Obama overuses is future pacing. Pushing an important agenda forward and avoiding the issue altogether:


“The issue is not the misuse of the people's taxes but how we can work together to ensure the American people benefit from their hard earned money they send to Washington every year.”


We notice everything about these politicians on a subconscious level. I've gotten myself out of very bad situations based on gut reactions that came about through nonverbal communication. I'll be adding a few pictures of politicians from the previous election and I surely would love to know what were the first thoughts you had about them.


Mike Vail is a US based investigative journalist, geopolitical analyst, and publisher of StratRisks.com. You can read Michael's articles on BlacklistedNews.com, and follow him on Twitter @MichaelVail




Russia giving France until February to deliver Mistral carrier


© Sputnik/ Alexey Danichev



The Russian Defense Ministry will not take any action until February over France's failure to deliver the first Mistral-class helicopter carrier, a high-ranking Russian military source told RIA Novosti on Wednesday.


"We'll wait until February and then we'll make a decision depending on the situation," the source said.


On Tuesday, the official from the Defense Ministry's Federal Service for Military-Technical Cooperation told that Moscow has sent Paris an official inquiry about its failure to deliver the Mistral.


The official said that to proceed with the issue, either by taking the case to court or giving France more time, Moscow requires a written explanation of the current situation.


The $1.5 billion deal for the delivery of two Mistral-class amphibious assault ships was signed in 2011 between Russian state-run arms exporter Rosoboronexport and French shipbuilder DCNS. The first carrier, the , was due by November 14, 2014. However, French President Francois Hollande announced the suspension of the delivery, citing Russia's alleged role in the Ukrainian conflict.


In early December, French Prime Minister Manuel Valls called any speculation about the contract's cancellation "premature."


Russian experts estimate that if France fails to fulfill its contractual obligations, it could face penalties up to $10 billion.


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Palestinian market in Jerusalem attacked by illegal Israeli settler

israeli settler opens fire market

© Spencer Platt/Getty Images

An Israeli settler walks with his gun in the Old City on November 25, 2014 in Jerusalem.



Local sources said that the Israeli assailant lives in one of the illegal colonial outposts in the Old City, and that he started walking provocatively in the market, while carrying his government-issued automatic rifle.

He then started shouting and cursing at the Palestinian merchants and residents before assaulting a young man, identified as Anwar Mona, 24 years of age.


The settler also opened fire at the Palestinians in the area, causing no injuries, while Israeli soldiers arrived at the scene, provided protection to the Israeli assailant, and kidnapped Anwar.


The soldiers also installed sudden roadblocks, on Saturday evening, blocking most Gates of the Old City of Jerusalem, especially Bab al-Amoud (Damascus Gate), Bab al-Asbat (Gate of the Tribes) and Bab al-Khalil (Hebron Gate), and prevented the Palestinian from entering or leaving the area for more than 30 minutes.


The soldiers also stopped and interrogated dozens of Palestinians, especially young men, and inspected their ID cards.


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EU is considering easing anti-Russia sanctions and improving relations


© Flickr/ Giampaolo Squarcina



The EU is considering the possibility of scaling down its sanctions against Russia and resuming previously-suspended discussions with the country on a broad range of issues, depending on how the situation in Ukraine develops, according to a European Union discussion paper cited by the .


The paper was drafted ahead of the upcoming meeting of the EU member-states' foreign ministers in Brussels, and hasn't been disseminated yet.


According to the paper, the change in the EU's stance would depend on Moscow's implementation of the peace and ceasefire agreements that have already been signed with Ukraine; Russia would also be required to abide by the terms of the gas-supply deal, and not throw "fresh wrenches in the way of the EU-Ukraine trade and political pact," the notes.


In the event of a positive development, the paper suggests a potential increase in cooperation with Russia in the spheres of foreign policy and trade.


The newspaper points out that it is the first serious attempt by the EU officials to scale back tensions related to the Ukrainian crisis and to provide some incentive for Russia to ensure its cooperation. The paper doesn't address the possibility that sanctions may be tightened if the situation in eastern Ukraine deteriorates.


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Radical element of reality: Israeli citizens who have refused to serve in the armed forces


© Mondoweiss

Miriam Peretz and Ronnie Barkan on Israeli Channel 10.



Last month over 50 alumni of the Israel Arts and Science Academy called on students at the prestige school to refuse to serve in the Israeli armed forces. The story has gotten wide coverage but very little in the U.S. till now. Here are some developments.

First, Moriel Rothman-Zecker was published on the op-ed page - "Why I Won't Serve Israel" - where he points out that the ethos of service in Israel is being undermined on many sides, not just by the IASA letter. A tiny fraction of the 1.7 million Palestinians inside Israel serve in the army; hundreds of thousands of religious Jews don't serve; and thousands of Jews are in a "gray area" of getting out of service. He sees this community as contending with Israel's power structure:



In a recent interview, the Israeli author Amos Oz urged politicians to act as "traitors," and make peace. But the type of traitors Mr. Oz wishes for - visionary ministers, peace-minded military men - are nonexistent. The most left-wing of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's potential challengers in Israel's coming election is the same Mr. Herzog who attacked the 8200 refusers.


Peace won't come from the next Knesset, or the one after that. But some hope for a less violent, more decent future lies with the real traitors, the disregarded millions of Israeli citizens who have refused to serve in the army.



Of course, Rothman-Zecker also describes the monolithic social pressure to serve: "Refusal to serve is portrayed by politicians and pundits - many of whom began their careers through service in elite units - as treacherous and marginal."

On that note, here is Ronnie Barkan, one of the signers of the IASA alumni letter, going on Israel television and speaking of massacres in Gaza and keeping his cool during an onslaught of hostile questions. Barkan shows real bravery as the hosts blow up at him for saying that Israel is not a democracy. Those hosts are Orly and Guy on Channel 10, who I am told are on the left side of the Israeli mainstream spectrum.


"Your call for refusal is illegal. Your call harms the state... I will not accept harming the state," Miriam Peretz, who lost two sons in Israeli actions, catechizes Barkan.


She cannot hear the word massacre - but of course many in the world regard Gaza as a massacre; it has had a huge impact on global opinion. While the male TV host loses his cool at 10:23, shouting at Barkan about "people who come through tunnels to kill children."


At minute 11, Avi Wortzman, the acting Israeli minister of education, rebukes Barkan as representing a "radical element of reality." "You stain the name of the school," he says. And the principal there "washes his hands of you."



"What you do here is anarchy. What you do here is undermining our most basic values of life here."





So Barkan is excommunicated.

[embedded content]




Finally, Russia Today scooped American media with this wonderful interview by Abby Martin of Amit Gilutz, a composer evidently living in New York, who helped to organize the IASA letter to stop the next generation of "obedient soldiers."

[embedded content]




Gilutz says the indoctrination of children to be soldiers begins in kindergarten, with uniformed teachers visiting schools. The depiction of Palestinians is racist, as being either terrorists or primitive farmers, per Nurit Peled-Elhanan's study. Students are encouraged to learn Arabic as a "tool to be used against the Palestinian people, and with a very high degree of cooperation between the Ministry of Defense and Ministry of Education on that point." This goes along with politicians trying to "script a more narrow Zionist narrative... normalizing the occupation by sending students to Hebron."

Gilutz criticizes deputy minister Tzipi Hotovely for calling the letter a wakeup call.



I agree with what she says but I don't think we mean the same thing.... What she means by that is that we need to indoctrinate students even more forcefully to put these ideological walls around them, so they won't be able to see through the cracks. And trying to create the crack is what we are doing with this letter... [We are saying] Look, The education that you're receiving is at best a manipulation, you're only being given the tools to rationalize reality and to accept your own role in it as the oppressor, as someone who is about to take an active role in the dispossession of Palestinians, in the continued ethnic cleansing of Palestine, and in participating in the crimes of occupation and apartheid.



It's actually against Israeli law to urge others not to serve. We could end up being prosecuted, Gilutz says.

Reporter Martin thanks him for his bravery. Amen.


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Albuquerque cop shoots first, asks questions later; turns out the person he shot was a cop

Albuquerque Police Department's five months without a shooting has come to an end as an Albuquerque police officer remains in critical condition after being shot by a fellow officer on Friday.

The unnamed officer was shot while undercover during a drug operation to bust two men for $60 worth of meth. Another officer sustained minor injuries, but information on how has not been released.




Police have not released the names of any of the officers who were involved, but criminal complaints filed in Metropolitan Court against the two targets of the investigation identify the undercover officers as detectives Holly Garcia and Jacob Grant, The reported.

According to the criminal complaint, Garcia and Grant met a suspect to buy $60 worth of "shards," another term for meth. The suspects got into Garcia's car and she drove them to an Econo Lodge Motel. One of the suspects went into a room and returned to Garcia's vehicle with the meth.


Garcia then went to a McDonald's parking lot and gave the signal to begin the bust, the shooting took place shortly after.


Witnesses report that they heard around five shots, and the officer was shot multiple times, but the exact number has not yet been released.


Police have not yet come forward with any explanation as to why an officer opened fire, but it appears as though both of the suspects were unarmed. The pair was taken into custody on drug trafficking charges following the shooting.


Media, police, and citizens are grieving and expressing condolences, but what they are not doing is discussing why this really happened.


We don't need all the details to be able to safely assume the undercover officer was not a threat to their peers, . Media is discussing this event using words like "" and "" while ignoring the fact that this is a symptom of a much larger problem, and it seems that an officer once again shot someone who posed no threat to them.


This trigger happy officer, who opened fire and shot someone who posed no danger to them, multiple times, is "devastated" according to Police Chief Gorden Eden. The lieutenant is currently on administrative leave and "getting support" through the department's counseling services.


Police even went so far as to confiscate a witness's cell phone after he had recorded some of the incident.


While brutality is clearly a nationwide issue, the APD has claimed some major notoriety for their badge abuse. Since 2010, the department has had 41 officer involved shootings, 27 of which were fatal.


In April, the department was accused of using excessive force by the Justice Department after the frightening murder of the homeless James Boyd when he was approached for "illegally camping." Boyd was shot by an officer who had discussed his plans to shoot him in the penis hours prior. Their own police chief openly admitted that he is stuck with officers who should not be on the force.


Had the person this officer mistakenly shot, under the exact same circumstances, been one of the suspects- we would likely already know their entire history, the history of all relatives, and have been spoon fed some wild tale about the officer "fearing for their life" and having no other choice. The shooting would be written off and ultimately swept away and forgotten by the media.


Police and police apologists have not blamed the unnamed officer.


So was this a "tragic accident" as they say, or evidence of the systemic lack of care taken by reckless officers as they reach for their weapons?


Perhaps we should call it what it is- one more victim of our militarized police and the disastrous drug war. Nobody is safe, not even those standing behind the thin blue line.


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