The topic of conversation is about taking a pause in the conflict in Gaza. The people involved are waiting for Hamas to give an answer to the plan.
The intelligence leaders of the US, Qatar, Israel, and Egypt all agreed on the framework.
Reports say it has at least three parts. Each would involve freeing Israeli captives in Gaza and Palestinian prisoners in Israel.
But Israel is not yet promising to stop fighting with Hamas. That’s a big issue because the Palestinian militant group wants the truce to bring about a lasting peace.
Importantly, if the fighting stops, more help can go to Gaza. The UN says people there might not have enough food.
If Hamas agrees to make a start on the plan, there are still a lot of things to figure out.
Israel’s security cabinet would also need to agree with it. Some members on the extreme right don’t like the terms.
Tag: Antony Blinken
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Blinken to advocate for cease-fire and hostages’ release
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US to reclassify Houthis as terror organisation
The US is planning to call the Houthi rebels in Yemen “global terrorists” again, according to senior officials in the Biden administration.
Antony Blinken, the Secretary of State, will agree to the move while there are ongoing attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea by a group supported by Iran.
US banks will have to stop Houthi money and Houthi people can’t come into the US.
It undoes Mr. Blinken’s decision in 2021 to take the Houthis off the list.
In the last days of the Trump administration, officials called the Houthis as global terrorists and a foreign terrorist organization.
They did it even though the UN and aid groups said it could make the hunger crisis in Yemen much worse.
But in 2021, shortly after President Joe Biden took office, the new Secretary Blinken changed the decision because of the urgent humanitarian crisis.
Before announcing on Wednesday, officials said they decided to reinstate the SDGT label but not the FTO label to keep aid going into Yemen.
“We made the right decision to cancel,” said one government official, explaining that it was done because of a very serious humanitarian crisis in the country and to make sure that US policies were not stopping civilians from getting urgent help.
However, they agreed that the Houthis’ continuous attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea, with dozens of missiles being fired, are not acceptable.
The new SDGT title will start in 30 days. It means that people and companies in the US can’t help the Houthis.
However, officials want to make it clear that there will be exceptions in the new rules to make sure that aid can still get to Yemen, a country that has been extremely damaged by almost ten years of fighting.
“We know that the situation in Yemen is very serious and we are trying to make sure that these sanctions do not hurt the people of Yemen too much,” one official said. They also mentioned that they are working on creating special exceptions and permissions for certain situations.
The Houthis started attacking trade ships in November because they wanted to retaliate against Israel’s military operation in Gaza. Ever since then, the group has carried out many attacks on commercial ships traveling through the Red Sea, which is one of the busiest shipping routes in the world.
In reply, the US and UK bombed many Houthi targets on January 11th. The strikes started because the Houthi forces didn’t stop their attacks, despite being warned to do so. Australia, Bahrain, the Netherlands and Canada supported the strikes.
The Biden administration said the new label does not mean they think the air attacks will stop the Houthi attacks.
“We think these sanctions are part of a bigger plan to stop the Houthis from carrying out terror attacks,” said one government official. “Our sanctions are not meant to be looked at by themselves, but as part of a bigger plan. ”
After the strikes last week, the Houthis said that the US and UK will soon understand that the action was a big mistake in their history.
“America and Britain messed up by starting the war in Yemen because they didn’t learn from their past experiences,” said the group’s leader Mohammed al-Bukhaiti on social media.
Yemen has been badly damaged by a civil war that got worse in 2015. The Houthis took over big areas in the west of the country from the government that most countries approve of. Then, a group of countries with Saudi Arabia in charge stepped in to try to bring back the government’s control.
The fighting has caused more than 160,000 people to die and created a very bad situation where 21 million people need help. -
Antony Blinken on US mission to stop Gaza igniting wider war
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken wants to talk about the most important message during his fourth visit to the Middle East in three months.
His main goal on this trip is to make sure that the fighting between Israel and Gaza does not spread to other countries nearby.
He is traveling to many places in southwest Asia like Turkey, Jordan, Qatar, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Israel. There is a lot of evidence that the tension in the region is getting worse.
The Houthi rebels in Yemen keep firing missiles and drones at civilian ships in the Red Sea. This has caused a lot of ships to stop using the Red Sea.
The US said it will protect the things that are important to them. If the rebels keep causing problems for global trade, the US might have to use its military to stop them. This would worry some important Arab allies of the US.
“We don’t see using the military as a solution,” said the leader of Qatar during a press conference with Mr. Blinken in Doha on Sunday. Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said he is very worried that taking such action will make the situation never-ending and create a lot of tension in the whole region.
On Saturday, the group Hezbollah in southern Lebanon shot a lot of rockets at northern Israel as revenge for what seemed to be a bomb attack planned by Israel that killed an important leader of Hamas in Beirut. Israel bombed Hezbollah forces in Lebanon with their airplanes.
Later in the day, Mr. Blinken said that the situation was getting worse and it was a serious problem. He asked Iran and Turkey to use their influence to control Hezbollah.
That might be hard. The Washington Post said American officials are worried that Israel might be planning a big attack on Hezbollah.
“We want to solve things through talking, but if we can’t, we might have to take action,” said Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on Friday.
At the same time, US military bases in Iraq and Syria were attacked by rockets and drones from militants. There are over 3,000 American soldiers in these areas. In the end of October, a drone entered US defenses and hit a building but did not explode, according to a report from Reuters. This avoided potentially causing serious harm to American soldiers.
The US took military action by bombing Baghdad last week and killing Mushtaq Taleb al-Saidi, who led a militia supported by Iran.
Each of these events could cause problems for the surrounding area. When you look at everything together, it seems like the Middle East is on the edge of a big war.
In Qatar, Mr. Blinken said the US has a plan to make things more stable. This plan depends on ending the fighting between the Israeli military and Gaza. The US wants to work with Arab countries and Israel to create a lasting peace for the Palestinians.
“He said the United States has a plan to make Israel safe and create a country for the Palestinian people. ” “And what I’ve learned from our talks up til now is. ” “Do our partners want to talk about tough things and make difficult choices. ”
That’s the problem. After talking to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Monday, Mr. Blinken said that all the leaders he has talked to seem ready to help make Gaza stable and strong again after the war. However, the US needs to convince Israel to agree.Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said on Friday that they would like to settle things peacefully through discussion, but they are getting close to a point where they might have to take action.
At the same time, militants in Iraq and Syria have attacked US military bases with rockets and drones. There are more than 3,000 American soldiers in these places. In October, a drone got past US defenses and hit a building but didn’t explode, said a Reuters report. This narrowly avoided causing a lot of American injuries.
The US used the military to attack and killed Mushtaq Taleb al-Saidi, a leader of an Iran-backed militia, in Baghdad last week.
Each of these episodes is a danger to the peace of the area. When you look at everything together, it seems like the Middle East is close to starting a big war.
In Qatar, Mr. Blinken said the US has a plan to deal with the growing problems in the region. The plan relies on ending the Israeli military operation in Gaza and collaborating with Arab nations and Israelis to create a lasting peace for the Palestinians.
“The United States has a plan to make Israel secure and give the Palestinian people their own state,” he said. “And what I got from the talks until now . Can our partners talk about hard things and make tough choices.
That’s the problem. After talking with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Monday, Mr. Blinken said that he sees a desire to help make post-war Gaza stable and strong from all the leaders he has talked to. The US needs to convince Israel to agree.
Mr Blinken’s trip to the Middle East might tell us about the plan the US has for its recent diplomacy efforts. He visited Turkey and Arab countries, and then he went to Israel two days later. This helped him to understand the feelings and opinions of the people in the region before meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Israeli War Cabinet.
Now it’s up to Israel to make a decision.
“On Monday, he said he will get to tell Israeli leaders everything he’s learned on this trip. ” “I believe there is a way to bring long-lasting peace and security to Israel in the future. ”
The American hope is that ending the Gaza War will reduce tensions in the region. It is a guess that the small problems in the Red Sea, Lebanon, Iraq, and Syria have not gotten worse on their own.
The Qatari prime minister said on Sunday that there can’t be peace in the area without a real and peaceful solution to the Palestinian conflict. Will there be peace if this is decided.
During his trip to the Middle East in November, Mr. Blinken said that countries in the area don’t want war and are trying to stop it from spreading. He said this in Turkey.
The US secretary said that just because something bad did not happen, it doesn’t always show that progress has been made, but it does.
Since then, there has been a lot of evidence that shows the chances of a bigger war happening have gone up, even though Mr. Blinken and the Americans say they don’t want it. -
Israeli minister describes post-conflict preparations for Gaza
Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has given ideas for how Gaza should be run after the war between Israel and Hamas ends.
He said that Palestinians would have some control over the area, but it would be limited.
Hamas will not be in charge of Gaza anymore, and Israel will have the main control of security.
The fighting in Gaza kept going as the plan was released. Dozens of people were killed in the past day, according to the health ministry run by Hamas.
The US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is coming back to the area this week. He will have discussions with Palestinian officials in the West Bank and leaders in Israel.
He is visiting at a time when there is a lot of tension in the area because a top Hamas leader was killed in Beirut. Many people believe that Israel is responsible for his death. Israel has not said if they were involved or not.
Under Gallant’s plan, Israel would have the main control of security in Gaza.
A group from many different countries would help rebuild the area after it was damaged by Israeli bombing.
Egypt, which is next to the country, would also have a role in the plan, but it is not clear what that role will be.
However, the paper also says that Palestinians would have to take care of the area.
“Mr Gallant said that the people in Gaza are Palestinian, so Palestinian authorities will be in charge. But they must not do anything unfriendly or threatening to Israel. ”
The plan was not talked about much in the meeting with the government officials, and the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has not said anything about it. The meeting ended in a fight with some ministers getting mad about the names suggested for an investigation into the 7 October attack by Hamas.
There is a lot of disagreement in Israel about what will happen in Gaza after the current situation.
Some conservative members of Mr. Netanyahu’s government want Palestinian citizens to leave Gaza and for Jewish settlements to be rebuilt there. Other countries in the area and some of Israel’s allies think these ideas are extreme and impossible to make happen.
Mr Gallant has some ideas that may be easier to do than others in the government. But the Palestinian leaders will probably not agree with his ideas. They think the people in Gaza should be in charge of their own territory after the war ends.
Mr Netanyahu has not said in public how he thinks Gaza should be ruled.
He thinks the fighting in Gaza could continue for a few more months, with the goal of totally defeating Hamas.
MrGallant explained how the Israeli military plans to continue the war in Gaza.
He said the Israeli army will focus on specific areas in the north of the Gaza Strip and conduct operations like raids, destroying tunnels, and using air and ground attacks.
The Israeli military in the south will keep looking for Hamas leaders and trying to rescue Israeli hostages.
On Thursday, the Israeli military said it attacked parts of Gaza in the north and south, including Gaza City and Khan Younis.It attacked terrorist buildings and killed people it called militants who tried to set off a bomb near soldiers.
It also said it had killed a high-ranking member of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Mamdouh Lolo, in a bombing.
The health department in Gaza, run by Hamas, reported that 125 people died in the last day in the area.
An official from the health department said that 14 people, including nine children, were killed by Israeli air attacks in al-Mawasi, to the west of Khan Younis.
The small town is a “safe space” for Palestinians who have been forced to leave their homes, protected by Israeli forces. The IDF has not said anything about what Hamas has claimed.
“We were asleep when a strike hit the camp where people were sleeping in tents. Most of them were children,” said Jamal Hamad Salah to the news agency Reuters. “We found a body that was thrown 40 meters away from the scene. ”
“Save the Children’s country director for the occupied Palestinian territory, Jason Lee, says that Gaza is not a safe place. ” Places like camps, shelters, schools, hospitals, homes, and places where people should be safe should not be places where there is fighting.
More than 22,400 people have been killed in Gaza since Israel started attacking. This is almost 1% of the 2. 3 million people who live there. Hamas runs the health ministry and provided this information.
Israel started attacking after Hamas gunmen surprised and attacked southern Israel on October 7th. They killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 240 people as hostages. -
US orders Israel to safeguard civilians in Gaza prior to start of hostilities
More information is now available from the US statement about Antony Blinken‘s meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.
It said Blinken repeated the US’s support for “Israel’s right to defend itself from terrorist violence” while following international humanitarian rules.
But it also says: “The secretary emphasized the need to consider the needs of civilians and humanitarian aid in southern Gaza before starting any military actions there. ”
Since the war started, the health ministry in Gaza run by Hamas has reported that more than 14,800 people have been killed in Israel’s retaliation, including around 6,000 children.
As our reporter mentioned before, it seems like the US is telling Israel to change their tactics. -
Israel warned by US over hostilities return
The US diplomat Antony Blinken has told Israel to make sure that the people in Gaza are safe before they start any new military action.
Blinken is in the Middle East to talk with leaders. He met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said again that he will free all hostages and get rid of Hamas.
More people who were kept as captives will be let go on Thursday. They will be exchanged for Palestinian prisoners. This is happening while there is a break in the fighting in Gaza, which has been going on for seven days.
Discussions are still happening about making the truce longer. Egypt and Qatar are working together to add two more days to the truce.
Two people shoot at a bus stop in Jerusalem and three people died. It happened during busy time. Hamas said the people who attacked were its members and were killed by the police.
It happened one day after two young boys from Palestine, aged 8 and 14, were shot and killed by the Israeli army in the West Bank city of Jenin.
On 7 October, Hamas attacked Israel and killed 1,200 people and took about 240 people as hostages.
Since then, Gaza’s Hamas-controlled health ministry says over 14,800 people have been killed in Israel’s revenge attack, including around 6,000 children. -
Blinken visits Israel for the third time since October 7
Today, Antony Blinken, who is the US Secretary of State, met with Israeli President Isaac Herzog in Tel Aviv.
Blinken is coming to the area for the third time since the Israel-Hamas war started on 7 October.
“We have seen good news this week as hostages have come home and been reunited with their families,” Blinken said during the meeting.
This has also allowed more help to reach innocent people in Gaza who really need it. So this way of doing things is getting us the outcomes we want. “It’s important, and we want it to keep going. ”
Blinken is talking with the leader of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, and will also meet with the leader of the Palestinians, Mahmud Abbas, in Ramallah. -
Longer truce is what US and Israel desire – Blinken
Today, Antony Blinken, the US Secretary of State, is in Brussels. He is talking to a group of Nato foreign ministers.
He says the US wants the fighting to stop between Israel and Gaza to continue. They are trying to make that happen every day.
“Its continuation means more hostages will come home and more help will reach Gaza. ”
“Obviously, we want that. ” “I think Israel also wants it,” he said at the meeting. -
Xi announces significant change in China’s stance on US
Chinese pioneer Xi Jinping displayed an neighborly China prepared to move forward ties with the Joined together States in a point of interest assembly with US President Joe Biden Wednesday, stamping a discernible move in tone for Beijing because it looks to play down friction with Washington.
Whether that move could be a enduring one for the disagreeable relationship will be put to an quick test, be that as it may, by comments made by Biden during a solo press conference after the assembly. There, the President repeated his see that Xi may be a “dictator,” after being inquired by a columnist whether he stood by a comment saying as much this past June.
At that point, Beijing responded with vitriol, with the comment seen as casting a shadow over conditional advance in progressing discourse between the two sides taking after a visit from US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
When inquired around Biden’s most recent comment at a Chinese Foreign Ministry briefing on Thursday, a representative called it “extremely erroneous” and an “irresponsible political move, which China solidly opposes.”
“What ought to be pointed out is that there will continuously be a few individuals with hidden thought processes endeavoring to weaken China-US relations. They will not succeed in doing so,” representative Mao Ning said.
It’s still vague whether there will be any advance response this time, but the reaction comes as China’s signaling around the San Francisco Inlet Region assembly between Xi and Biden has stamped a move absent from its hardline position on the Joined together States. This softening comes as China hooks with a disturbed economy and is sharp to highlight Xi as a capable and able world pioneer.
Agreeing to explanations from both the US and China Wednesday, the two sides concurred to reestablish military communications and to combat the stream of fentanyl from China to the US amid a few hours of “constructive” gatherings.
China labeled the talks as “positive” and “comprehensive” — whereas moreover highlighting Xi’s endeavors to spell out Beijing’s non-negotiables such as its position on Taiwan and seen American endeavors to contain China’s rise.
On Chinese state media and over social media stages, where the hashtag #Planet-Earth-Is-Big-Enough-For-Both-China-And-The-US was trending, the wide recognition showed up to be of a work well done.
Chinese state broadcaster CCTV highlighted how Biden welcomed Xi for a walk around the verdant domain where the assembly took put which the American pioneer “personally escorted him to his car to offered goodbye” — a detail that was moreover highlighted in another top-trending hashtag on Chinese social media.
The positive scope of the occasion was a break from the normal talk basic of the US that frequently plays over Chinese state and social media. Anti-US talk has been a critical topic boosting development in Chinese patriotism as pressures flared between the two in later a long time.It’s really important for Xi to look friendly and strong when meeting with Biden because he wants to show that he is doing a good job of handling China’s relationships with other countries, especially at a time when China’s economy is not doing so well. He also wants to make sure that people in China see him as good at dealing with other countries.
Xi visited as the Chinese economy is having problems with a real estate market crisis, high debt of local governments, and a high number of young people without jobs. At the same time, strict rules in different industries have made businesses worried and made them wonder if there are still good chances to make money in China.
“These challenges are huge,” said Alfred Wu, a teacher at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore. He mentioned that Xi wanted to show people in China his abilities in handling foreign affairs while in California. He also said that Xi is well respected in America and is considered as a world leader equal to Biden.
A meeting with China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi in California showed some important visual messages.
Wang said that Biden invited President Xi Jinping to have a special meeting, different from the meetings that other leaders at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum are having.
Wang said the Xi-Biden meeting will be a very important event in world relations. He also mentioned that the meeting was held during a crucial time in China-US relations.
Xi also spoke nicely at a dinner event in front of American business leaders later that day.
He said the most important thing about US-China relations is whether they are enemies or friends.
Xi said that if we see each other as our biggest enemy and a big challenge, and always feel threatened by each other, we will make bad decisions and get bad results. This was said to a group that included Tim Cook and Elon Musk.
China wants to be a partner and friend of the United States.
The meeting helped people to talk and work together, but it also showed that they disagree on certain things and can’t come to an agreement on them. This will keep causing problems in their relationship.
And even in places where they agreed, there is still some uncertainty.
China said they will start talking with the US military again, after the US government asked them to. They said they will talk in a fair and respectful way.
Wen-Ti Sung, who works for the Atlantic Council’s Global China Hub in Taiwan, explained that in the future, if China is upset with the US, they can stop talking about military things and blame the US for not showing them respect.
“He said this weakens the reason for the talks to start again and continue. ”
China’s leader, Xi, told the US to stop giving weapons to Taiwan and to help China bring Taiwan back peacefully. China says Taiwan is part of their country, but Taiwan governs itself.
Xi said that China will eventually come together as one, and it is certain that it will happen. This was a popular topic on social media in China after the meeting.
Biden said that America still supports Taiwan and doesn’t want any changes to happen without both sides agreeing. He thinks that any issues between Taiwan and China should be solved peacefully.
Xi also told the US to not try to control China. This seems to refer to America making stronger partnerships in Asia and trying to limit China’s economic growth by restricting trade and investment in high tech.
Xi said that both sides should try to understand each other’s basic beliefs and limits.
Both of them are still worried about each other’s motives after meeting once, and it’s doubtful that their worries will go away. How those agreements are carried out in the coming weeks and months will show if China and the US are both dedicated to long-term stability.
“The meeting shows that the relationship between the US and China won’t get much worse next year, but it also won’t improve very quickly and become much better soon,” said Liu Dongshu, who is a professor at City University of Hong Kong and studies Chinese politics.
“Xi Jinping wants to improve relations with the US, but China knows that the US wants to control China. So, China hopes for better relations, but they can live with things staying the same. ”
One way to see how things will go between Beijing and Biden is to look at how Beijing reacts to Biden calling their leader a dictator. Also, we can see if their media hides the comment and only talks about the good things that happened on Wednesday.
Biden thinks that he and Xi can fix their problems because he said that Xi runs a communist country and their government is different from the US government.
“Anyway,” he said. “We moved forward. “ -
Antony Blinken visits Kyiv to witness Ukraine’s latest counteroffensive
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Kyiv Wednesday on what is his third trip to the Ukrainian capital since the begin of Russia’s full-scale attack in February 2022.
The visit comes as Ukraine’s counteroffensive moves into its fourth month, with both political and military pioneers in Kyiv talking up later picks up, particularly within the south of the nation, taking after developing concerns the concerted thrust on the war zone has fizzled to create comes about.
Blinken’s to begin with halt on Wednesday was at a military cemetery, where he laid a wreath in honor of Ukraine’s fallen officers. Afterward he is planned to meet with, among others, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, from whom he can anticipate a first-hand report of Ukraine’s endeavors to recapture arrive around the eastern city of Bakhmut – the Ukrainian pioneer gone by with his troops there on Tuesday.
The visit by Washington’s best ambassador is an opportunity for the Joined together States and Ukraine to adjust ahead of the Joined together Countries Common Get together (UNGA) afterward this month, a senior state office official told columnists traveling with Blinken.
“The Ukrainians have an critical mission in Modern York to proceed to clarify – to their partners and accomplices around the world – what’s going on and their proceeded require for bolster. And it’s critical for us to proceed to lead that worldwide exertion to back them,” the official said.
“Having a chance allude to”>to allude to and adjust some time recently we get to Unused York is exceptionally, exceptionally important.”
Whereas a few US authorities have been secretly basic of Ukraine’s counteroffensive technique, the official would not dive into specifics other than to say that presently is the correct time to “come and assess” how the counteroffensive is going.
“We need to see, listen, how they expected to thrust forward within the coming weeks,” the official said, adding that the US sees the nation making “some amazing progresses within the south in specific, but too within the east in recent days and weeks.”
Blinken’s entry in Kyiv comes less than a month after President Joe Biden inquired Congress for more than $24 billion to assist Ukraine vanquish Russia within the continuous war, as a few surveys appear the American public’s bolster for proceeded financing start to mollify. This visit will offer assistance the organization make the case for that proceeded bolster to the American individuals, the official said.
The official emphasized an contention for supporting Ukraine that Biden has made within the past, saying that it is around “dictators and czars not being able to nibble off a bit of their neighbor and get to keep it live that way with impunity.”
Blinken is additionally anticipated to declare more than a billion dollars in unused US subsidizing for Ukraine amid the course of this visit with a parcel of that being unused security help, agreeing to the official. Wheninquired on the off chance that the unused bundle of back would incorporate depleted-uranium weapons, after a report that the organization had chosen to move ahead with the disputable weapons, the official would not comment.
Secretary Blinken arrived in Kyiv Wednesday morning after making an overnight travel by prepare from Poland, in common with nearly all high-profile guests to the war-torn city, counting Biden.
In April 2022 Blinken made the trip with Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, fair many weeks after Russian powers had pulled back from regions promptly to the north of the Ukrainian capital. His moment trip was in September final year as Ukraine’s to begin with huge counteroffensive was underway within the Kharkiv locale.
Concurring to the State Division, Blinken too briefly went into Ukraine in Walk 2022, when he met on the border with Remote Serve Kuleba. -
Blinken engages Tinubu over Niger crisis
The US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, has confirmed that he had a conversation with President Bola Tinubu regarding the ongoing developments in Niger.
The communication that took place on Monday marked the third exchange within three weeks between senior US officials and Abuja, following the seizure of power by coup leaders in the West African nation.
President Tinubu holds the position of chairman within the regional organization Ecowas, which is at the forefront of initiatives to restore the deposed President Mohamed Bazoum. Ecowas is also in the process of assembling troops for potential deployment of military force in Niamey.
Mr. Blinken said in a Twitter post that he had called President Tinubu to “commend his leadership of the Economic Community of West African States and discussed shared efforts to restore constitutional order in Niger.”
The US is one of many western nations with military installations in Niger, which is thought to be crucial in the struggle against the development of the Sahelian Islamist insurgency.
Many common people in West Africa are adamantly opposed to any military intervention in Niger, and there was a minor protest against the use of force over the weekend in Kano, the capital of northern Nigeria.
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UN worried about health of overthrown president of Niger
The elected president of Niger, Mohamed Bazoum, who has been under house arrest for more than two weeks, is concern to the US and the UN.
“We are deeply concerned about his health, his personal safety, and the personal safety of his family.” A representative for the US State Department said,
The leaders of the coup in Niger had been given till Sunday to abdicate by the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas).
Officials from Ecowas will meet later to deliberate the next steps.
Antonio Guterres, secretary general of the UN, expressed his concern about the family’s allegedly “deplorable living conditions” among other things.
On July 26th, Mr. Bazoum was dismissed.
Earlier, according to Mr. Bazoum’s party, he and his family were being held in “cruel” and “inhumane” conditions, according to Reuters.
Since that time, Niger has been governed by a military junta, with Mr. Bazoum being held at the presidential mansion. Regarding the condition of the ousted leader, junta members have remained silent.
Washington reported that on Tuesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called Mr. Bazoum to reassure him of the US’s continued support.
According to Matthew Miller, a spokesman for the US State Department, “as time passes and he is held in isolation, it’s a situation that is of growing concern to us.”
In a statement, Mr. Bazoum’s political party, PNDS-Tarayya, asserted that he and his family lacked access to running water, power, fresh food, and medical care.
The declaration confirmed earlier remarks made by the elected prime minister of Niger, Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou, who claimed that Mr. Bazoum was being held without electricity or water together with his wife and son.
Gen. Abdourahmane Tchiani, the commander of the presidential guard, claims to be in charge of Niger at the moment, while Ali Mahaman Lamine Zeine, the former finance minister, was named the country’s new prime minister by the military coup.
Niger’s airspace has also been shut down by the new military government till further notice, citing Ecowas’ “threat of military intervention.”
France refuted claims made by the military junta of Niger on Wednesday that it was attempting to undermine the nation.
The leaders of the coup alleged that French planes had violated national airspace and that French soldiers had released jihadist prisoners so they could assault military targets.
The French military and foreign ministries issued a joint statement, which was cited by AFP news agency, in which they categorically denied the latest false allegations made by the putschists in Niger.
The military of Niger had approved the flight, they noted.
The US and France both maintain military installations in Niger as part of efforts to dismantle Islamist organisations active throughout the region.
After being ordered to leave Mali due to a coup, Niger became the major base for French forces.
Two representatives of Nigerian President Bola Tinubu met with the junta in the nation’s capital, Niamey, as part of diplomatic attempts.
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US claims Wagner is taking advantage of instability in Niger
US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, has stated that the Wagner mercenary group from Russia is exploiting the instability in Niger following the recent coup.
The junta has taken control of the country after the removal of President Mohamed Bazoum.
Although there are suggestions that the coup leaders sought assistance from Wagner, which is known to be active in neighboring Mali, Blinken clarified that he doesn’t believe Russia or Wagner initiated the coup.
Nevertheless, he expressed concern about the group potentially operating in the Sahel region.
Blinken mentioned that wherever Wagner has operated, it has brought about death, destruction, and exploitation, leading to increased insecurity.
“I think what happened, and what continues to happen in Niger was not instigated by Russia or by Wagner, but… they tried to take advantage of it.
“Every single place that this Wagner group has gone, death, destruction and exploitation have followed,” said Mr Blinken.
“Insecurity has gone up, not down”.
The US and France have military bases in Niger to counter jihadist groups. Wagner is present in several African countries, and despite its involvement in human rights abuses, Niger’s army is reportedly considering seeking their help.
Wagner’s influence has caused anti-France and pro-Russian sentiments in Niger, similar to neighboring Mali and Burkina Faso.
Niger’s junta refused to meet a delegation from West African regional bloc Ecowas, the African Union, and the UN, citing public anger over sanctions. Ecowas is now set to discuss further actions in response to the coup.
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Chinese officials concurred the necessity of stabilizing US-China relations – Blinken
In response to the need to “stabilise” the bilateral relationship between the two superpowers, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated on Monday that the US and China had made “progress” towards reviving relations.
The top US diplomat acknowledged that there are still significant issues between the two countries that need to be resolved but expressed his “hope and expectation that we will have better communications and better engagement going forward” after two days of meetings with senior officials in Beijing, including President Xi Jinping.
Blinken is the first US secretary of state to visit Beijing in five years, and his talks with senior Chinese officials were seen as a key litmus test for whether the two governments could stop relations from continuing to plummet at a time of lingering distrust.
“It was clear coming in that the relationship was at a point of instability,” Blinken said at a news conference in the Chinese capital Monday. “And both sides recognized the need to work to stabilize it.”
“I came to Beijing to strengthen high-level channels of communication, to make clear our positions and intentions in areas of disagreement, and to explore areas where we might work together on our interests, align on shared transnational challenges, and we did all of that,” Blinken said.
“We’re not going to have success on every issue between us on any given day, but in a whole variety of areas, on the terms that we set for this trip, we have made progress and we are moving forward,” he said.
“But again, I want emphasize none of this gets resolved with one visit, one trip, one conversation. It’s a process,” the top US diplomat said.
One of the key issues that did not get resolved was that of restoring military-to-military communications between the US and China. Contacts between the country’s top military officials remain frozen, and two recent incidents have raised concerns that the fraught relationship could veer into conflict.
China recently rebuffed a meeting between Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chinese Defense Minister Li Shangfu, who is under US sanction, in Singapore, although the two did speak briefly.
Blinken said that although he raised the need for such channels of communication “repeatedly” in his meetings, there was “no immediate progress.”
“At this moment, China has not agreed to move forward with that. I think that’s an issue that we have to keep working on. It is very important that we restore those channels,” he said.
The top US diplomat said his conversations touched on the Ukraine war and North Korea, and that he raised US concerns “shared by a growing number of countries about the (People’s Republic of China’s) provocative actions to the Taiwan Strait, as well as in the South and East China Seas.” He said the US position on Taiwan has not changed and pressed China over human rights.
The top US diplomat also repeatedly noted that he sought to clarify the US’ economic stance toward China in his meetings with top Chinese officials and to emphasize that the US is not seeking to “contain” China economically.
“There is a profound difference for the United States, and for many other countries, between ‘de-risking’ and decoupling,” he said.
“We are for de-risking and diversifying. That means investing in our own capacities and in secure, resilient supply chains, pushing for level playing fields for our workers and our companies, defending against harmful trade practices and protecting our critical technologies so that they aren’t used against us,” he said.
Blinken said China assured the US and other countries that it will not provide lethal aid to Russia and “we have not seen any evidence that contradicts that,” though he noted that China’s assurance was in keeping with repeated statements made in recent weeks.
“What we do have ongoing concerns about, though, are Chinese firms, companies that may be providing technology that Russia can use to advance its aggression in Ukraine. And we’ve asked the Chinese government to be very vigilant about that,” Blinken added.
Blinken said he raised human rights in his meetings, including the human rights violations in Xinjiang, Tibet and Hong Kong. He also said he “specifically raised wrongfully detained US citizens and those facing exit bans.”
The top US diplomat said on areas of potential cooperation, the two sides “agreed to explore setting up a working group effort so that we can shut off the flow of precursor chemicals” for fentanyl. China is one of the top producers of those precursor chemicals that are used to produce the highly deadly synthetic drug that has claimed the lives of thousands.
The top US diplomat described his conversations with top Chinese officials Wang Yi and Qin Gang as “candid, substantive and constructive,” and said his meeting with China’s president was “important.”
However, that meeting was not publicly confirmed until shortly before it took place, and uncertainty around whether Xi and Blinken would meet during the two-day visit further highlighted the fraught US-China relations. A failure to schedule a face-to-face meeting would have been seen by Washington as a slight, breaking with a number of previous visits from top American diplomats.
The meeting, which took place at Beijing’s cavernous Great Hall of the People, was only publicly announced by the US about an hour before it went ahead. It lasted roughly half an hour, beginning at 4:34 p.m. local time and ended at 5:09 p.m., a State Department official said.
“The world needs an overall stable Sino-US relationship, and whether China and the United States can get along has a bearing on the future and destiny of mankind,” Xi told Blinken, according to a Chinese readout of the meeting.
“China respects the interests of the United States and will not challenge or replace the United States. Similarly, the United States must also respect China and not harm China’s legitimate rights and interests,” Xi added. The readout said that Xi told Blinken that the world needs stable China-US relations and that the future of humanity hinges on both getting along.
The two global powers have been increasingly at loggerheads over a host of issues ranging from Beijing’s close ties with Moscow to American efforts to limit the sale of advanced technologies to China.
Earlier this year, a Chinese surveillance balloon that was detected floating across the US and hovering over sensitive military sites before ultimately being shot down by an American fighter plane sent relations plunging to a new low and resulted in Blinken scrapping an earlier Beijing visit.
This time, the diplomatic mission went forward.
A roughly three-hour meeting between Blinken and Wang earlier Monday underscored the deep challenges in overcoming the mistrust and friction that has come to characterize the relationship.
The Chinese government’s growing clout internationally and increasingly authoritarian controls at home have pushed the US to reframe how it manages its relations with the power in recent years.
Repeating Beijing’s typical rhetoric, Wang blamed Washington’s “wrong perception” of China as the “root cause” of the decline in the two sides’ relations and demanded the US stop “suppressing” China’s technological development and hyping the “China threat,” according to a readout from Chinese state broadcaster CCTV.
“We must reverse the downward spiral of China-US relations, promote a return to a healthy and stable track, and jointly find the right way for China and the United States to co-exist in the new era,” Wang said, adding that Blinken’s visit came at “a critical juncture in US-China relations, where a choice needs to be made between dialogue or confrontation, cooperation or conflict.”
Wang also reiterated that Taiwan is one of one of China’s “core interests,” over which it “has no room for compromise or backdown.”
The self-ruling democratic island, which China’s ruling Communist Party claims but has never controlled, has increasingly been another flashpoint in the US-China relationship.
During the meeting, Blinken underscored the need for the countries to “responsibly” manage their competition through “open channels of communication” to ensure it “does not veer into conflict,” State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a statement.
The US would continue to use its diplomacy to “stand up for the interests and values of the American people,” Blinken said, according to the statement, which described the talks as “candid and productive” and said they including discussion of potential cooperation on shared transnational challenges.
Overall, Wang’s comments took a more combative tone than those of China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang, who met with Blinken the previous day. Qin said both sides agreed to “advance dialogue, exchanges and cooperation” and “maintain high-level interactions,” according to a readout from Beijing.
Blinken’s Sunday meeting with Qin, which stretched more than five hours and then wrapped with a working dinner, resulted in progress “on a number of fronts,” with both sides showing a “desire to reduce tensions,” a senior State Department official told reporters Sunday.
“Profound differences” between the US and China, however, were also clear during the meeting, the official added.
While Qin holds the title of Foreign Minister, he wields less power than Wang, who directs the country’s foreign policy through his position among party’s core leadership.
Blinken’s original scheduled visit in early February had been agreed on as a follow-up to an amicable face-to-face between US President Joe Biden and China’s Xi on the sidelines of the G20 in Bali in November.
That meeting – the first in person between the two leaders as presidents – was seen a pivotal step in restoring certain lines of communication, which Beijing last year severed last year following a visit from then-US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan.
Both the US and China had played down expectations of a major breakthrough during Blinken’s visit.
Ahead of the meeting, Washington was careful to manage expectations, with a senior State Department official last week telling reporters that he does not expect “a long list of deliverables.”
Meanwhile, both sides are also navigating how the meetings play to their respective domestic audiences.
In the US, how strongly to counter China has become the topic of heated political debate – with some lawmakers slamming the Biden administration for sitting down with Beijing.
China views Washington as actively trying to thwart its development, and is also very much aware the US is headed into a presidential election cycle, where hawkish rhetoric against it may intensify further.
Its officials also meet Blinken in an environment where China’s state media and official rhetoric have long portrayed Washington as a bad-faith actor responsible for destabilizing ties.
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G7 warns Sudan to stop fighting ‘immediately’
G7 foreign ministers on Tuesday April 18 2023, called on the opposing sides in Sudan on Tuesday to “end hostilities immediately” and resume talks.
A weeks-long power struggle exploded into deadly violence Saturday between the forces of two generals who seized power in a 2021 coup: Sudanese army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who commands the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
The surge in violence forced the issue onto the agenda as the top G7 diplomats met in the Japanese town of Karuizawa for talks.
“We urge the parties to end hostilities immediately without pre-conditions,” they said in a statement issued after their discussions.
They warned that the fighting “threatens the security and safety of Sudanese civilians and undermines efforts to restore Sudan’s democratic transition.”
The group urged a return to negotiations and called on all sides to “take active steps to reduce tensions and ensure the safety of all civilians, including diplomatic and humanitarian personnel.”
Earlier Tuesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with the generals leading the two warring factions and urged them to agree to a ceasefire, the State Department said.
A US diplomatic convoy was fired upon in Sudan, but those inside were unharmed, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Tuesday.
“I can confirm that yesterday we had an American diplomatic convoy that was fired on. All of our people are safe and unharmed. But this action was reckless, it was irresponsible and of course unsafe,” he told reporters in Japan after G7 talks.
Analysts say the fighting in the capital of the chronically unstable country is unprecedented and could be prolonged, despite regional and global calls for a ceasefire as diplomats mobilise.
Battles have also taken place throughout the vast country, and there are fears of regional spillover.
Terrified residents of the capital are spending the last and holiest days of Ramadan watching from their windows as tanks roll through the streets, buildings shake, and smoke from fires triggered by the fighting hangs in the air.
The conflict has seen air strikes, artillery and heavy gunfire.
Those compelled to venture out face queues for bread and petrol at outlets which are not shuttered. Residents are also dealing with power outages.
Volker Perthes, the head of the United Nations mission to Sudan, told the Security Council in a closed-door session, that at least 185 people have been killed and another 1,800 wounded.
“It’s a very fluid situation so it’s very difficult to say where the balance is shifting to,” Perthes told reporters after the meeting.
Earlier Monday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres again called on Sudan’s warring parties to “immediately cease hostilities”. He warned that further escalation “could be devastating for the country and the region.”
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US calls for release of detained journalist, Evan Gershkovich in call with Russia
In a rare phone call with his Russian counterpart, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken requested for the release of a detained Wall Street Journal reporter.
In response, Sergei Lavrov, the foreign minister of Russia, said that the US shouldn’t try to “make a fuss” or politicise the arrest.
On Friday, Evan Gershkovich was taken into custody on spying-related charges.
The espionage accusation has been vehemently refuted by The Wall Street Journal.
On Sunday, the Russian Foreign Ministry confirmed that Mr. Lavrov and Mr. Blinken spoke on the phone about Mr. Gershkovich’s arrest at the US’s request.
A readout of the call released by the US Department of State said that Mr Blinken conveyed “great concern over Russia’s unacceptable detention of a US citizen journalist”.
Mr Lavrov responded by repeating Russia’s claims that Mr Gershkovich was caught “red-handed attempting to obtain classified information” and that his case will be handled by Russian courts, a statement by Russia’s foreign ministry said.
Mr Lavrov also cautioned US officials and media not to fan “hysteria” around the journalist’s arrest.
“It was stressed that it is inadmissible for Washington officials and Western mass media to stir up hysteria with an obvious aim of giving a political overtone to this case,” the ministry said.
The White House has previously condemned Mr Gershkovich’s arrest “in the strongest terms”, and Mr Blinken said he was “deeply concerned” by his detainment.
During the call, Mr Blinken also urged the release of other US citizens detained in Russia, including former US Marine Paul Whelan, who has also been held on espionage charges for over five years.
Mr Gershkovich, 31, is a well-known correspondent in Moscow.
The Wall Street Journal lost all contact with him on Wednesday afternoon, after which it was revealed that he was arrested by Russia’s FSB security service.
The FSB claimed that it had halted “illegal activities” and that the journalist had been detained “acting on US instructions”.
They alleged that Mr Gershkovich had “collected information classified as a state secret about the activities of a Russian defence enterprise”. He was ordered to remain in detention until 29 May.
Espionage in Russia carries a maximum jail term of 20 years.
Mr Gershkovich’s arrest has been strongly condemned by journalists around the world.
In a letter to Russia’s US ambassador Anatoly Antenov, the Committee to Protect Journalists called Mr Gershkovich’s arrest “unwarranted and unjust”, and accused the Russian government of being anti-press.
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The Ukraine conflict is a warning to “aggressors everywhere,”
It sends a strong message to “would-be aggressors worldwide,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Friday during a discussion on the fringes of the G20 conference, that Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine and the support pouring into Kiev.
“Part of the reason countries way beyond Europe are also so concerned on this and are working to support Ukraine and deal with the difficulty is because they realize it might have effect here,” Blinken said, speaking in New Delhi.
He continued, “If we allow Russia to act as it is in Ukraine with impunity, that sends a message to would-be aggressors everywhere that they would be able to get away with it too.
The comments came as Blinken met with his counterparts from India, Japan and Australia – a grouping known as the “Quad,” or Quadrilateral Security Dialogue.
The Quad is an informal group focused on security that dates back to the early 2000s, though it has become more active in recent years as part of efforts to counter China’s reach and territorial claims in the Indo-Pacific.
Blinken added that the challenges faced by people around the world cannot be dealt with by “any one country acting alone.”
“The great power of the Quad is you have four like-minded countries, united in their basic values, united in their basic interests, bringing different strengths, experiences, different comparative ways to tackle these problems,” he said.
Though he didn’t specify any “would-be aggressors,” he made several veiled references, saying the Quad is working on increasing countries’ maritime domain awareness – meaning greater surveillance on things happening in their waters – and tamping down on illegal fishing.
Top US officials have previously called out China for illegal fishing operations that “plunder the region’s provisions,” and accused Beijing’s “maritime militias” of intimidating and harassing Indo-Pacific countries.
China has established the world’s largest naval force, built heavily-fortified islands in the South China Sea, and maintains a large presence of coast guard and fishing vessels in the disputed waters – frequently stoking tensions with its neighbors, and prompting promises from the US to stand by its partners in the region.
The Quad ministers reiterated the point in a joint statement on Friday, expressing “serious concern at the militarization of disputed features, the dangerous use of coast guard vessels and maritime militia, and efforts to disrupt other countries’ offshore resource exploitation activities.”
Though sometimes dubbed by critics as an “Asian NATO,” the Quad is not a formal military alliance – rather, it’s an informal strategic forum, featuring semi-regular summits, information exchanges and military drills.
It does not have the same kind of military agreements seen in NATO, like the concept of collective defense, where an attack on one member is viewed as an attack on all.
Quad members cooperate across various fields including Covid-19 and natural disasters, climate change and sustainability.
But security and the goal of a “free and open Indo-Pacific” are key focuses – and the Quad has increasingly been seen as a counterweight to China’s influence, with all four nations experiencing turbulent relations with Beijing in recent years.
The strategic location of each of the Quad nations – at different corners of the Indo-Pacific and with China in between them – has rattled Beijing, which fears the potential for military encirclement. It has condemned the bloc as an anti-China “clique” that is emblematic of a “poisonous” Cold War mentality.
The joint statement on Friday also touched on other regional and international issues, such as the humanitarian crisis in Myanmar following the military’s bloody coup two years ago, North Korea’s nuclear threat and increasingly aggressive missile testing, and the “inadmissible” threat of using nuclear weapons regarding the war in Ukraine.
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Haiti to receive warships from Canada amid ongoing violence
Since President Jovenel Moise was assassinated, Haiti gangs abduct three churchgoers after Mass, demand hefty ransom
As the Caribbean country of Haiti continues to suffer from economic and political unrest as well as violence, much of it fueled by organised criminal groups, Canada will send navy vessels there to gather intelligence.
At a gathering of Caribbean leaders on Thursday in the Bahamas, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made the decision public. One of the subjects they discussed was the powerful armed gangs operating in the nation, which have generated numerous reports of murder, kidnapping, and sexual violence.
“Right now, Haiti is confronted with unrelenting gang violence, political turmoil and corruption,” Trudeau said. “Now is the moment to come together to confront the severity of this situation.”
The Canadian leader did not specify how many ships would take part in the effort or the duration of their mission. The announcement came during a meeting for CARICOM, the 15-member Caribbean trade bloc.
Haitian leaders including Prime Minister Ariel Henry have previously requested military assistance from the international community to help curb the escalating violence.
But some Haitians have pushed back against those calls, citing Haiti’s long and troubled history with foreign intervention.
Last Friday, United Nations human rights chief Volker Turk also called for an international force to help end the island’s “living nightmare”.
Haiti’s gangs have seen their power grow since the assassination of former Haitian President Jovenel Moise in July 2021. The UN estimated in December that 60 percent of the capital city of Port-au-Prince was under gang control.
For more than a month, starting last September, a powerful gang alliance known as the G9 Family and Allies also blockaded a key fuel terminal in the capital, effectively shutting down commerce for much of the city and sparking a humanitarian crisis.
With rubbish piling up and clean water growing scarce during the blockade, Haiti documented its first case of cholera in nearly three years. Since then, infections have shot up.
For many Haitians, the conditions amid the violence have become unbearable, with many seeking refuge abroad.
In January, the United States unveiled new rules that would allow up to 30,000 people a month to arrive from Nicaragua, Haiti, Venezuela and Cuba so long as they meet a strict set of requirements, including extensive vetting. But under the new programme, Haitians who try to cross into the US from Mexico would be turned away.
The UN has urged countries not to deport refugees and migrants back to Haiti, citing the dangerous conditions there.
Speaking at CARICOM on Thursday, Trudeau explained that Haiti’s plight “weighs heavily” on him. He also pledged $9.1m in humanitarian assistance, as well as $7.4m to help protect Haitian women and children along the country’s border with the Dominican Republic.
Tens of thousands of Haitians and people of Haitian descent have been deported from the Dominican Republic over the past year, despite international criticism against the removals.
Both Canada and the US have previously sent military hardware to the Haitian government and imposed sanctions on individuals accused of corruption or criminal ties in Haiti.
That tactic continued on Thursday, as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced further sanctions against “five individuals and seven family members” with links to criminal groups that “have threatened the livelihoods of the Haitian people and are blocking life-saving humanitarian support”.
Haiti’s Prime Minister Henry even suggested the US and Canada could lead the proposed foreign intervention. But neither country has offered to head such a force.
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US Navy shares first images of recovered debris of Chinese ‘spy’ balloon
The US is conducting a substantial operation to recover every component of the weekend-downed device.
In an effort to recover what Washington claims was a Chinese “surveillance balloon,” which was shot down over the Atlantic Ocean after being spotted in US airspace last week, the US Navy has released the first official pictures.
A rigid-hull inflatable boat was pictured being leaned over by US Navy members from an explosive ordnance group as they pulled in large sections of the balloon’s white outer fabric and shell structure on Tuesday.
Using underwater drones, warships and inflatable vessels, the Navy is carrying out an extensive operation to gather all the pieces of the device, which spent several days flying over North America last week before being shot down on Saturday off the coast of South Carolina.
The balloon measured approximately 60 metres (200 ft) tall and was carrying a long sensor package underneath, which the head of US Northern Command, General Glen VanHerck, said earlier this week was about the size of a small, regional jet.
While Beijing has said the balloon was an “unmanned civilian airship” that was primarily gathering weather data and had blown off course, Washington denounced its presence in US airspace as an “unacceptable” violation of the country’s sovereignty.
VanHerck said on Monday that the teams involved in the balloon recovery efforts were taking precautions to safeguard against the chance any part of the balloon was rigged with explosives.
The Navy is also using ships to map and scan the sea floor for all remaining parts of the balloon so US analysts can get a full picture of what types of sensors were used and to better understand how the balloon was able to manoeuvre.
The incident has heightened tensions between the two countries, prompting US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to postpone a planned visit to the Chinese capital that had been expected to begin on Sunday.
China said the decision to shoot down the device “seriously impacted and damaged” its relationship with the US, but White House national security spokesperson John Kirby, on Monday, said Washington was not seeking confrontation.
Kirby dismissed China’s contention the balloon was for meteorological purposes, saying “it strains credulity … that this was some kind of weather balloon that was floating on the winds”.
On Tuesday, US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters that “the [Biden] administration is looking at other actions that can be taken” in response to the balloon, though he did not provide further details.
While the top Democratic legislator acknowledged that US-China relations were “tense”, Schumer defended President Joe Biden’s administration amid criticism from Republicans, saying its actions were “calm, calculated and effective”.
“This is one area where we don’t need politics. So we need Democrats and Republicans to come together,” Schumer said.
This image provided by the US Navy shows sailors recovering the balloon off the coast of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, February 5, 2023 [US Navy via AP Photo] Members of the Republican Party have accused the administration of failing to bring down the balloon quickly enough and taking a “weak” stance towards China.
A Pentagon spokesman said on Tuesday that China declined a US request for a phone call between the US defence secretary, Lloyd Austin, and his Chinese counterpart, Wei Fenghe.
The Pentagon submitted the request for a secure call on Saturday, immediately after shooting down the balloon, Brigadier General Patrick Ryder said in a statement.
“Unfortunately, [China] has declined our request. Our commitment to open lines of communication will continue,” Ryder said.
Relations between the two powers have been strained in recent years by a number of issues, from disputes over technology and trade to the status of the self-ruled island of Taiwan, which Beijing sees as part of its territory.
Cooperation between the US and China, the first and second largest economies in the world, respectively, is critical to tackling global issues such as climate change.
Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping – who held in-person talks on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Bali, Indonesia in November – have previously stressed they are not looking for confrontation or a new Cold War.
Speaking to reporters on Friday, an official with the US State Department told reporters that lines of communication would remain open and that the US and China would seek to “responsibly manage” their differences.
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US suspends Blinken China visit following spy balloon controversy
As a result of the discovery of a Chinese spy balloon flying across the US, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has postponed his trip to China.
Meetings between Mr. Blinken and President Xi Jinping and his Chinese counterpart were anticipated.
The visit would have taken place as tensions between the two nations are deteriorating.
According to China, the balloon veered off course due to bad weather and is used for meteorological research.
A statement from China’s Foreign Ministry said that it “regrets” the incident and will work with the US to resolve the issue.
Speaking to reporters on Friday, a senior state department official said that the conditions were not right for Mr Blinken to visit China but that another trip would be planned “at the earliest opportunity.”
The official added that Washington planned to maintain “open lines of communication” about the incident, which was described as “a clear violation” of US sovereignty.
While the official said that the US had acknowledged China’s claim about the balloon’s purpose, it stands by the Department of Defense’s assessment that it was being used for surveillance.
Mr Blinken’s visit was expected to take place on 5 and 6 February.
A US official quoted by the Associated Press said that the decision to abruptly halt the trip was made by Mr. Blinken and President Joe Biden.
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US Democrats call for suspension of aid to Peru due to a “pattern of repression”
Democrats in the US House of Representatives have written a letter condemning the violent crackdown on protesters in Peru.
The Biden administration has been urged to halt all security assistance to Peru due to a “pattern of repression” against antigovernment protests that has resulted in more than 50 civilian fatalities by a group of Democrats in the US House of Representatives.
They requested in a letter shared with The Associated Press on Monday that the Biden administration halt its security assistance until it can certify that the crackdown in Peru has ended and the Peruvian officials accountable for violations of human rights have been brought to justice.
This week, Peru’s foreign minister is seeking international assistance for President Dina Boluarte’s government, which is coming under increasing pressure.
Peru’s foreign minister is in Washington, DC, this week seeking international support for President Dina Boluarte’s increasingly besieged government. Pressure has been mounting on Boluarte, formerly the vice president under ex-President Pedro Castillo, to resign the post she inherited last month when Castillo was impeached and arrested for his ill-fated attempt to close Peru’s Congress.
“Security forces have indiscriminately responded with almost no regard for protestors’ human rights,” according to the letter, which was signed by 20 mostly progressive House Democrats. “Rather than working to deescalate tensions, the Boluarte government has substantially increased tensions — including classifying protesters as ‘terrorists’ and limiting citizens’ right of movement.”
The US provides more than $40m annually to Peru in security assistance, according to the Washington Office on Latin America, a research nonprofit. The vast majority is aimed at helping Peru counter drug trafficking.
While protesters were initially demanding Castillo’s release from jail, the unrest has spread across the country, galvanising the support of many poor, Indigenous Peruvians who have benefitted little from Peru’s mining-driven economic boom.
Protesters demand that both Boluarte and Congress stand down and that new elections be held this year. Legislators rejected that on Friday. But after another protester died and Boluarte urged them to reconsider, Congress narrowly agreed on Monday to debate a proposal to hold elections in October, with 66 votes in favour, 49 opposed and six abstentions.
Meanwhile, as the protests stretch into their second month, beleaguered security forces have become more forceful.
Among the incidents cited in the letter, organised by Representative Susan Wild of Pennsylvania, was the national police raid on student dormitories at San Marcos University in Lima, which included the mass arrest of nearly 200 people. That shocked many Peruvians because campuses have long been off-limits to security forces except when crimes are being committed.
The campus invasion drew sharp condemnation from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which said it collected testimony from civil society groups who alleged law enforcement officers invaded the bedrooms of student leaders, slung racist remarks at Indigenous activists, and forced women to strip naked and do squats.
Officials from the United Nations and European Union have strongly condemned what they consider the disproportionate use of force. The Biden administration has been more measured, calling for impartial investigations into abuses while also expressing support for Boluarte’s efforts to restore calm and seek a political solution.
Amid the unrest, outgoing US Ambassador Lisa Kenna announced an additional $8m in US support for coca eradication efforts in the remote Upper Huallaga valley, part of the Amazon basin in Peru. Kenna has also met with the defence minister and other Cabinet members.
Such actions send an “ambiguous message”, according to the letter, which was also signed by representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Pramila Jayapal of Washington state, and Jim McGovern of Massachusetts, a longtime voice for human rights in Latin America.
“The US government can and must do more,” they wrote. “We believe our proposed actions would send a powerful signal in support of fundamental rights and help promote effective engagement for a political resolution.”
A copy of the letter was also sent to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin.
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Russian troops in West Africa, a major concern for UK
According to a minister speaking to the BBC, Russia’s presence in West Africa is “neither constructive nor helpful,” and Britain is worried about the Russian mercenaries operating there.
During his visit to the area, UK Development Minister Andrew Mitchell reaffirmed his country’s commitment to assisting West African coastal nations stop the movement of militants from the Sahel and maintain general security.
He has, however, also voiced concern over how “very difficult” it has been to communicate security-related issues with the Burkina Faso government.
In order to evaluate Ghana’s capacity to fend off the jihadists, Mr. Mitchell has been visiting a military base in the northern part of the country.
It comes after Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo said Russian mercenaries from the Wagner group have been operating near the country’s northern border with Burkina Faso.
He described Wagner’s presence as “distressing” during a meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken this week.
He alleged that the military junta in Burkina Faso had hired Wagner mercenaries to help fight extremists and awarded them a mining concession as a form of payment. Burkina Faso has not commented on the claim.
In recent weeks, hundreds of people fleeing militants attacks in Burkina Faso have crossed the border into northern Ghana.
Source: BBC.com
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‘Burkina has not called on Wagner’: Burkina Faso upset over Ghana’s Akufo-Addo claim on Russian troops relations
Foreign ministry of Burkina Faso has noted that, it has summoned Ghana’s ambassador to protest allegations that the embattled Sahel nation has hired Russian mercenaries.
This comes after Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo alleged on Wednesday that Burkina Faso had hired the mercenaries during the us-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington DC.
“Today, Russian mercenaries are on our northern border. Burkina Faso has now entered into an arrangement to go along with Mali in employing the Wagner forces there,” Akufo-Addo said.
Speaking alongside United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Akufo-Addo also alleged that Burkina Faso had offered Wagner a mine as payment.
In a statement issued after its meeting with Ghana’s ambassador, Burkina Faso’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it had “expressed disapproval” about the statements made by the Ghanaian president.
“Ghana could have undertaken exchanges with the Burkinabe authorities on the security issue in order to have the right information,” it said.
However, it did not confirm or deny the allegations. In a separate message to Reuters, a foreign ministry spokesperson said, without elaborating: “In any case, Burkina has not called on Wagner.”
Burkina Faso also recalled its ambassador from Ghana for a meeting, the spokesperson said.
Authorities in Ouagadougou have not commented publicly on speculations of working with Wagner, a mercenary group that was hired in neighbouring Mali to help fight armed groups.
In a response on Thursday to Akufo-Addo’s remarks, Wagner did not directly address Ghana’s concerns. But the response, attributed to Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin, accused Western governments and United Nations forces of carrying out some of the offences Wagner has been accused of in Africa.
The prospect of Wagner expanding its presence in Africa has troubled Western powers such as France and the US, who say the group exploits mineral resources and commits human rights abuses in countries where it operates.
Burkina Faso’s government spokesman did not answer calls and did not reply to a message requesting comment.
An official at Ghana’s foreign ministry said no one was immediately available for comment.
Burkina Faso is struggling to contain some of the same armed groups present in Mali and, like its neighbour, is ruled by a military government that came to power on promises to improve security.
Mali’s decision to employ Wagner forces last year alienated it from its regional and Western allies and was one of the reasons why French forces pulled out of the country.
Wagner forces have also fought in Libya, the Central African Republic and Mozambique.
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Ghana asserts that Burkina Faso invited Russian mercenaries
Mercenaries from the Russian company Wagner have reportedly been invited into neighbouring Burkina Faso, according to Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo.
He described the development as distressing while speaking with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken about it.
This occurs at a time when Ghana and other coastal nations in West Africa are growing more concerned about the spread of jihadist violence from the Sahel.
Russian mercenaries, according to President Akufo-Addo, were on Ghana’s northern border.
He said he understood that the Wagner group had been offered a mine in southern Burkina Faso as a form of payment for services – presumably fighting Islamist militants.
In a video of the meeting with the US secretary of state, Mr Akufo-Addo describes the development as particularly worrying seeing as Ghana strongly condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
He spoke of the dangerous proliferation of coups in West Africa adding that there were enemies of democracy working hard in the region.
It was a call for people to focus on what Ghana sees as the combined threats of jihadist violence, coups and Russian interference.
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Ukraine war: Neither the US encouraged nor enabled Kyiv to strike inside Russia – Blinken
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken says, Washington has “neither encouraged nor enabled” Ukraine to strike targets inside Russia.
He spoke shortly after Moscow accused Kyiv of carrying out drone attacks on three Russian airfields, two of which were hundreds of miles away from Ukraine.
Ukraine has made no comment on the matter.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly warned the United States and its allies not to cross “red lines” by supplying Ukraine with long-range weapons.
The US-led Nato military alliance has ruled out providing such arms to Kyiv, amid concerns that this could lead to a major escalation with a nuclear-armed Russia that invaded Ukraine on 24 February.
Two Russian airfield explosions were reported on Monday, in the Ryazan and Saratov regions. The sites house strategic bombers used to carrying out regular missile attacks on Ukraine’s critical energy infrastructure.
Russia said there was another attack was on Tuesday, in the Kursk region that borders Ukraine.
Russia’s latest missile attack on Ukraine was on Monday, when 70 rockets were fired on targets across the country. Four people were killed, local officials said.
Millions of people across the country are now without electricity and running water, raising fears people may die of hypothermia in sub-zero temperatures.
At a briefing on Tuesday, Mr Blinken accused Russia of “trying to take out the civilian infrastructure that is allowing people to have heat, to have water, to have electricity”.
He said Moscow was now “weaponising winter” and “that is the daily and nightly reality in Ukraine”.
“We have neither encouraged nor enabled the Ukrainians to strike inside of Russia, but the important thing is to understand what Ukrainians are living through every day with the ongoing Russian aggression against their country.
He said he was determined that Ukrainians have “the equipment that they need to defend themselves, to defend their territory, to defend their freedom.”
Speaking alongside him, US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin stressed that the US would not prevent Ukraine from developing its own long-range strike capability.
“The short answer is no. We are absolutely not doing that,” Mr Austin said, adding that Washington had already given Ukraine more than $19bn (£16bn) in security assistance.
In other developments on Tuesday:
- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited troops in the eastern Donetsk region where fierce fighting has been going for weeks
- In the evening, one person was injured in Russian strikes in the central-eastern Dnipropetrovsk region, local officials said
- Russian-installed officials in the city of Donetsk – controlled by Moscow since 2014 – said six people were killed in Ukrainian shelling
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US urges withdrawal of foreign forces in Tigray
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has spoken to Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed about the implementation of the ceasefire deal between government troops and Tigray forces in the north.
“[The] Ethiopian Prime Minister and I discussed the urgent need to implement the cessation of hostilities agreement and to secure lasting peace in northern Ethiopia,” Mr Blinken said in a tweet.
In a readout of his phone call to the Ethiopian leader, Mr Blinken stressed the need to immediately implement the deal “including withdrawal of all foreign forces and concurrent disarmament of the Tigrayan forces”.
Mr Abiy has already reiterated his government’s commitment to the peace deal.
The secretary of state said the US was committed to support the African Union-led process including its monitoring and verification mechanism of the peace agreement
Mr Blinken recognised ongoing efforts by the Ethiopian government “to work towards unhindered humanitarian assistance and restoration of basic services” in Tigray and neighbouring Afar and Amhara regions.
Amhara and Afar regional forces, as well as Eritrean troops, have been fighting alongside the federal forces war against the Tigrayan fighters.
On 2 November the Ethiopia’s government and Tigrayan fighters agreed, in a surprise move, to halt their two-year conflict.
The conflict has led to thousands of deaths and warnings of a famine.
Source: BBc.com
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US has imposed new sanctions against Russian military supply chains
The United States has imposed new sanctions aimed at disrupting Russian military supply chains, targeting 14 people and 28 entities it claims are part of a transnational network that procures technology to support Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
The US Treasury also designated family members of Russian oligarch Suleiman Kerimov, as well as individuals who worked as financial intermediaries in Suleiman’s network.
“The United States will continue to disrupt Russia’s military supply chains and impose high costs on President Putin’s enablers, as well as all those who support Russia’s brutality against its neighbor,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.
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USA is keen to cooperate with new Italian government
The US government says it is “eager” to collaborate with a new Italian government on “shared goals” now that Giorgia Meloni’s success is obvious.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Twitter listed the priorities:
- supporting a free and independent Ukraine
- respecting human rights
- building a sustainable economic future
Quote Message: Italy is a vital ally, strong democracy, and valued partner [of the US].” from Antony Blinken US Secretary of State
Meanwhile, French President Emmanuel Macron says his government respects the democratic choice of Italian voters.
The European Union must continue to work together with Italy “as neighbours and friends”, the Elysée Palace said in a statement.
“It is within Europe that we will overcome our common challenges”, it added.
France’s statement shares similarities with the official line from fellow eurozone lynchpin Germany, where the government has expressed the view it expects Italy to continue to be a “very Europe-friendly country”.
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US provides $457.5 million in humanitarian aid for Ukraine
United States Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, has announced that the US will offer Ukraine new civilian security assistance of $457.5 million.
The aid is designed to help Ukrainian law enforcement and criminal justice agencies, Blinken tweeted.
“We share their commitment to a democratic, independent, and sovereign Ukraine,” he added.
The United States will provide an additional $457.5 million in civilian security assistance to save lives and bolster the capacity of our Ukrainian law enforcement and criminal justice partners. We share their commitment to a democratic, independent, and sovereign Ukraine.
— Secretary Antony Blinken (@SecBlinken) September 26, 2022
Source: Aljazeera