Venu Rajamony presented his book on the Netherlands to Indian President

OSD to Kerala Government Venu Rajamony called on Indian President Ramnath Kovind and presented his book on the Netherlands

New Delhi: Officer on Special Duty to the Kerala Government and former Ambassador of India to the Netherlands Venu Rajamony called on President Ramnath Kovind today and presented him a copy of his book “India and the Netherlands: Past, Present and Future”. The President will travel to the Netherlands on a State visit next week reciprocating the visit of King Willem Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands to India in 2019

The first copy of the book on India and the Netherlands was received by the King at a grand function in Amsterdam in September 2019.

Former Indian Ambassador to the Netherlands, Venu Rajamoni with the President of India, Ramnath Kovind..

Ambassador Rajamony briefed the President on the close relations which exist between the two countries and the importance of the Netherlands as an economic partner of India. He described Dutch strengths in areas such as water and agriculture and pointed out that the state of Kerala has forged strong bonds with the Netherlands.

Ambassador Rajamony took the President through the book which provides vivid snapshots of relations over the centuries and describes the compelling personalities who shaped the Indo-Dutch discourse.

The President responded by describing the book as a wonderful publication made lively with plenty of pictures.

Eurojust against money laundering

Action against money laundering freezes EUR 120 million worth of Lebanese assets, seizing bank accounts 

The Hague, 28 March 2022

Authorities from France, Germany and Luxemburg carried out extensive measures to freeze EUR 120 million worth of assets linked to the investigation of a money laundering case in Lebanon, during an action day on 25 March. Five properties in Germany and France were seized as well as several bank accounts. Eurojust supported the judicial cooperation by setting up a joint investigation team (JIT) and organising three coordination meetings.

The main investigation is directed against five suspects accused of money laundering. They are suspected of embezzling public funds in Lebanon for amounts of more than USD 330 million and EUR 5 million, respectively, between 2002 and 2021.

During the action day, judicial authorities in Germany seized three properties (one in Hamburg and two in Munich). Shares in a property company based in DĂŒsseldorf were also secured. In addition to the properties, the current value of which is estimated at around EUR 28 million, further assets of around EUR 7 million were seized throughout Germany.

Eurojust

In France, authorities seized two property complexes in Paris with a combined value of EUR 16 million, as well as several bank accounts in France (EUR 2.2 million) and Monaco (EUR 46 million), and a building in Brussels worth EUR 7 million.

In Luxembourg, approximately 11 million EUR were seized across several bank accounts.

Despite the outcome of the action day, the suspects in the main investigation are assumed to be innocent until they have been proven guilty, according to law.

Eurojust supported the judicial cooperation by setting up a JIT into the case and organising three coordination meetings between the authorities involved. The Agency also provided in-depth analytical support to the investigation.

The following authorities took part in this investigation:

  • France: Investigative judges of Court of Paris (Tribunal judiciaire de Paris); Investigators of OCRGDF (Central Office against serious financial criminality).
  • Germany: Public Prosecutors Office Munich I; Federal Criminal Police Office.
  • Luxembourg: Investigative judge; anti-money laundering unit of the judicial police.

A Bolivian Sea

On March 23, 2022, The Ambassador of the Plurinational State of Bolivia, H.E. Mr. Roberto Calzadilla Sarmiento, hosted a reception on the occasion of the 143rd anniversary of La Defensa de Calama, or Day of the Bolivian Sea.

Bolivia filed a lawsuit before the International Court of Justice on April 24, 2013, regarding Chile’s obligation to negotiate with this State, to reach an agreement that would grant it sovereign access to the sea.

“On October 1, 2018, the International Court of Justice ruled on the case that was debated here in The Hague during the last few years. In that context, the court’s ruling has been very clear in recommending both parties to continue the dialogue, exchanges, and negotiations within the spirit of good neighborliness and seek a solution to the situation of Bolivia, which should be of mutual interest.” expressed the ambassador.

It is important to note that the election of the new Chilean president Gabriel Boric on March 11, 2022,  augurs a positive expectation from the Bolivian point of view. It presents a possibility that both countries can improve relations due to the ideological affinity of both governments, as well as hope for the reestablishment of diplomatic relations with the solution of Bolivia’s access to the sea.

H.E. Mr. Roberto Calzadilla Sarmiento

“For 60 years Bolivia and Chile have not maintained diplomatic relations. Both countries have much to contribute to South American, Latin American, and Caribbean integration. This date, the Day of the Bolivian Sea,  is very important for us. We want to overcome the barriers between our peoples and strengthen our ties of brotherhood that have existed since before the colony, to establish a fruitful relationship of good neighborliness. These 400 kilometers that Bolivia claims have deprived us of the economic development that our people deserve.”

Recently, President Boric assured that there is a ‘predisposition’ together with Bolivia to improve relations between Santiago and La Paz,” said Ambassador Sarmiento.

“In his speech at the Day of the Sea event, our President Luis Arce affirmed that re-establishing relations with Chile will only be possible in the framework of the solution to the maritime issue.” The right to the sea is inalienable and is embodied in Article 267 of the Bolivian Constitution. President Arce recalled the phrase of Salvador Allende who said that Bolivia’s right to the sea “is in the conscience of all the peoples of the world”.

Bolivian-Dutch singer, Charo Duran accompanied on guitar by Chilean artist, Alvaro Pinta Lyon.

In this opportunity, Ambassador Calzadilla introduced Bolivian-Dutch singer Charo Duran. She performed Bolivian music in Spanish and Dutch. Charo Duran was accompanied on guitar by Alvaro Pinta Lyon, a Chilean artist who plays the ronrocco.

The musical program consisted of beautiful songs of the Bolivian repertoire, among them Bolivia y Mar para Bolivia by the Kjarkes, Los pobres recuerdos Muertos by Luisa Molina, Soy caporal by Zulma Yugar, and many others.

The dance group Jallalla Boliviana interpretating the Diablada from the Carnaval of Oruro.

The dance group Jallalla Boliviana interpreted the Diablada, a manifestation of the Carnaval of Oruro which is the patrimony of humanity, born in the middle of the XVI century in Oruro, Bolivia. This dance represents the struggle between good and evil, the clash of two cultures.

The dance is related to the figure of the “Tio”, located at the entrance of the Bolivian mines and at whose feet, each miner leaves their offerings of coca and alcohol. Present in the dance is the Archangel Michael, Lucifer, the China Sypay, (Devil Woman) Satan, the bear, the condor, and the devils.

Ambassador Calzadilla with the Minister Counsellor of the Embassy of Ecuador Mr. Oscar Izquierdo and his wife Samira, together with Mr. Renan Villacis, Director Secretariat of the Assembly, International Criminal Court.

During the reception following the cultural program, the guests enjoyed empanadas Saltenas –  a popular Bolivian staple of Potosi origin from the mid-sixteenth century, which is in the southwest of the country.

Each guest received the Book of the Sea, courtesy of the Bolivian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Pope names Archbishop Cavalli as apostolic visitator to Medjugorje

By Sergio Centofanti

Pope Francis has appointed Archbishop Aldo Cavalli as a new special Apostolic Visitor for the Parish of Medjugorje, for an indefinite period and ad nutum Sanctae Sedis. Until now, Archbisop Cavalli has been Apostolic Nuncio to the Netherlands and permanent representative to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. He succeeds Polish Archbishop Henryk Hoser, who died on 13 August in Warsaw at the age of 78, and who had held this post since 2018.

Nuncio in three continents

Archbishop Cavalli was born in Muggianico di Lecco, Lombardy, in October 1946, to a family of bakers. He was ordained a priest in Bergamo in 1971 and went on to complete his studies at the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy, entering the Holy See’s diplomatic service in 1979. Appointed apostolic nuncio, he was consecrated bishop in 1996, as titular archbishop of Vibo Valentia. He led the nunciatures of SĂŁo TomĂ© and PrĂ­ncipe (1996), Angola (1997), Chile (2001), Colombia (2007), Libya and Malta (2013) Netherlands (2015) and was also permanent representative to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (2015). On 15 May, he was received in audience by Pope Francis.

The Press Office specified at the time of Hoser’s nomination that his role as apostolic visitor is “exclusively pastoral”, that of “stable and continuous” accompaniment of the parish community of this small town in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and of the many faithful who go there on pilgrimage, “whose needs require special attention”. It is a pastoral role, therefore, that does not enter into the question of Marian apparitions that some people claim to have had since 24 June 1981.

Official authorisation of pilgrimages

In May 2019, Pope Francis authorised pilgrimages to Medjugorje, which since that time may be officially organised by dioceses and parishes; that is, they need not be undertaken strictly in private form.

Pope to young people of Medjugorje: have the courage to follow Jesus

Last August, Pope Francis sent a message to the young people gathered for the traditional Mladifest, the annual prayer meeting in Medjugorje, urging them to have the courage to follow Jesus: “Have the courage to live your youth by entrusting yourselves to the Lord and setting out with Him. Let yourselves be conquered by his gaze of love that frees us from the seduction of idols, from the false riches that promise life but bring death. Do not be afraid to welcome the Word of Christ and accept his call. Do not be discouraged like the rich young man in the Gospel; instead, fix your gaze on Mary, the great model of the imitation of Christ, and entrust yourselves to Her who, with her ‘here I am’, responded unreservedly to the Lord’s call”.

At Medjugorje to meet Christ through Mary

The late Abp Hoser told Vatican News that pilgrims come to Medjugorje from all over the world “to encounter Christ and His Mother”. “The Marian way”, he said, “is the most certain and the safest” path because it leads to Jesus. In Medjugorje, he noted, the faithful have “adoration of the Blessed Sacrament at their centre; the Holy Mass; a massive frequency of the Sacrament of Penance”. It is a true “Christocentric” devotion lived with closeness to the Virgin Mary, venerated with the appellative of “Queen of Peace”, he said.

Published by the Vatican News

Is a new and different world order being created?

Europe is faced with yet another crisis that reminds of the horrors of the two world wars. The consequences of the war ravaging the Eastern part of the European continent, will not be limited only to the region, but will have ramifications on the rest of the world as well. 

Russia started the war with Ukraine after a number of phases of oscillations and conflicts in their relations since the fall of the Soviet Union (USSR) in 1990. Relations between the two countries culminated at various levels and erupted with the Russian military intervention. 

Russian tanks have reached the suburbs of the Ukrainian capital of Kiev. The scenes remind of the developments in the sixties of the twentieth century, when the Soviet tanks entered Prague and crushed the “Prague spring.”

It is important to emphasize that this is not a traditional war, nor a conflict between two states over disputed territory, nor a pre-election propaganda, but a war of an entirely different kind. This war is a first step on the path to establishment of a new order in international relations, that is a new division of spheres of influence at the global level. 

In fact, this war is not the first episode on that path, as it was preceded by similar episodes in Georgia- – Abkhazia in 2008, Crimea in 2014, Syria in 2015, Libya in 2019, Belarus in 2020, Kazakhstan in 2022, etc. 

Russia tests the US and the West in Ukraine

Ukraine is a new episode. However, it will not be the first nor the last if the Russian President Vladimir Putin succeeds in this battle on the path to transformation of international relations, within which major geopolitical changes are expected to take place on the European continent, as well as in Asia and, even, the entire world. The developments in Ukraine represent the beginning of the end of the existing world order, which was a result of the victory of the US-led Western block over the USSR-led East-bloc in the early nineties of the twentieth century. 

Put succinctly, the current developments are a prelude to the emergence of a new international order. It will seemingly have three poles (US – Russia – China), while practically only two poles, as was the case in the past. The US and its western allies are on one side, while Russia, China and their eastern allies on the other.  Russia will not be satisfied just with the annexation of Ukraine, but will subsequently work on annexation of Moldova and directly put pressure on the Baltic states, as well as on the borders of Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, etc. Russia will strive to convince the former socialist states that NATO cannot protect them, as is evident in the case of Ukraine. 

The true goals of this war transcend Ukraine. In other words, what is happening is not just a military invasion of another country, but a serious Russian military enterprise to retailor the Russian sphere of interest, which would be recognized by NATO, and establish a new security structure along the demarcation line between Russia and NATO based on written guarantees. Specifically, if Putin’s project succeeds, the world will be faced with a transition era of complete chaos and fierce conflicts at the international level, all until the new order is officially validated and verified by the West.

Is Ukraine paying a price for its wrong policy and excessive expectations from NATO and US?

Ukraine is paying the praise for naivety of the young President Volodymyr Zelensky (without diminishing his patriotic fervor and heroic resistance), who has fallen a victim of empty promises of the Western and US officials made prior to the breakout of military conflict. The Ukrainian leadership ignored some important facts in its relations with Russia. Specifically, the opinion of the Ukrainian population of which Russians amount to 17%, particularly in the East part of the country, as well as the effects of historic influence of the Soviet period in which Ukraine was a part of the USSR, the requirements and concerns of the neighboring Russia as a superpower and, finally, the imperial ambitions of Russian President Vladimir Putin with respect to revival of the USSR era. 

The war is raging, polarization will occur, the divisions in international relations will become deeper, whereas it is very difficult and even impossible to go a step backward. Particularly as there are the factors and an ambience that facilitate establishment of a bipolar world order, one of the most important being the presence of strong president Putin with totalitarian tendencies, an imperial dream and security-intelligence background. 

Gulf states neutral in Ukraine crisis 

Traditional US allies in the Gulf and the Middle East generally aspire to maintain good energy and geopolitical relations with Russia. 

Early this year the United Arab Emirates (UAE) became a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council. In the eve of the meeting of the UN Security Council dedicated to the Ukraine crises, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken called his UAE counterpart Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed to underline “the importance of building a strong international response to support Ukrainian sovereignty through the UN Security Council.” However, on 27 February 2022, that is when the time to vote on Resolution 2623 came, the UAE ignored the appeals of Washington and sided with China and India, that is abstained from voting, as an expression of the frustration of the UAE over the US Policy .

The stance of the UAE was that the positioning could lead to an even bigger violence and that in the case of Ukraine crisis their priorities are to encourage the parties to resort to diplomacy and negotiate a political solution that would end the crisis. 

Just like other Gulf states, the UAE also aspires to have a bigger political role in the regional and international arena, preserve important security, economic and military relations with Washington, but also its growing connections with Moscow. This forces the Gulf countries to establish a difficult balance in the relations between the US and Russia. While the world swiftly condemned the Russian military invasion of its smaller neighbor, Saudi Arabia, Bahrein and Oman predominantly remained silent on the issue, while Kuwait and Qatar refrained from direct criticism of Moscow and only condemned the violence. As the key stakeholders on energy markets, all countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) cultivate close relations with Russia in the area of energy. Furthermore, for years already Riyadh and Moscow have been leading the OPEC Plus alliance, where their jointly control the production quotas in order to achieve market and price stability. 

On 28 February 2022, one day after the vote, Russia supported the UAE in the UN Security Council on adoption of Resolution 2624 , extending the arms embargo to the Yemen-based Houthi movement. This indicates a direct connection between the Russian support of Resolution 2624 and the decision of the UAE to abstain from voting the day before when the UN Security Council voted on the Resolution on Ukraine. In January 2021, Russia explicitly supported the Houthi movement in Yemen, which is at war with Saudi Arabia and the Emirate, and the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov stated in Riyadh that “designating the Houthi group as a terrorist organization would exclude it from the political solution in Yemen, and described such a move as an attempt to thwart the political process in Yemen.”

China’s strategic gains from the Russian war against Ukraine 

On 24 February 1972, US President Richard Nixon visited China with an intent to create an alliance between the US and China with the aim of “surrounding” and weakening the Soviet Union in the process of the change of structure of the global order. Fifty years later to the day, on 24 February 2022, the Russian military attacked Ukraine with the silent support of China. 

China has not condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine. In fact, it abstained from condemning the invasion in the UN Security Council, and subsequently at the vote in the UN General Assembly. China also did not welcome the economic sanctions of the West introduced against Russia because of its military invasion of Ukraine. These stances clearly show that China supports Russia in its current war policy. China is considered a winner in this war, now and in the future. China’s strategic gains from this ware include different levels:

  • Russia launched the war against Ukraine on 24 February 2022 under the pretext of defending its national security and stopping the enlargement of NATO. This war violates international conventions, particularly UN laws, as it does not fall under the concept of preemptive war. Lack of clear opposition of China to the war indicates that China has understanding for Russian national security concerns. Hence, in the future, China could find itself in a similar situation if it becomes necessary for it to intervene in neighboring countries for the sake of defense of its national security, that is to conduct a preemptive war.
  • One of the major requests regarding ending the current war is the insisting by Russia on recognition of the annexation of Crimea by Ukraine. In order words, the return of Russian territories, which under specific historic conditions were annexed to Ukraine in the fifties of the last century, as Crimea was considered Russian territory throughout the history. Such explanation is sufficient for China to put back, in the future, Taiwan under its constitutional-legal order, and if necessary use force in the process. 
  • China realized that in the future it could become a target of NATO, just as is the case with Russia in the present times. The military doctrine of the Alliance designates Moscow as an adversary, not alleged by real adversary. That is why the Alliance spreads and relocates its advanced weapons, such as the rocket shield, from Spain to Rumania and Poland, for the purposes of interception of Russian ballistic and nuclear projectiles. 
  • China reckons that in the future the Alliance could spread to Asia, if it finds an opportunity to do so. Countries such as Japan and Korea have the status of Major Non-NATO Allies (MNNA) .

China looks with concern on the increasing presence of US military basis and cooperation between the US and these two countries. 

Over time, relations between China and Russia evolved from relations of partners to relations of allies. In the past twenty years, the relations between Moscow and Beijing experiences an exceptional boom and the mistrust that prevailed in their relations during the period of the Soviet Union no longer exists. In the past ten years and particularly since China sided with Russia after the introduction of international sanctions in 2014 because of the annexation of Crimea, the relations recorded a major increase and gradual transition from a strong partnership to the “alliance” concept. 

One of the most prominent testimonies of the alliance between Russia and China is that the Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping have met 37 times in the past twenty years, which is a record in international relations, probably unparalleled among leaders of other countries. At the same time, the two countries take the same positions in international organizations, and particularly in the UN Security Council, where they have the right of veto. In such a way, the Russian-Chinese coordination has become a balance to the traditional US-British coordination, which has been in place ever since the inception of the United Nations. 

China has a historic opportunity to deepen its economic relations and interests with Russia, as the largest country in the world that has significant agricultural and natural resources, mineral resources and energy. In case of introduction of an oil embargo on Russia, China has the capacity to import all the oil and gas that Russia exports to the EU and US. In 2021, the trade relations between Russia and China recorded growth of more than 35%, which amounts to 140 billion dollars. It is expected that the level of trade in goods will reach the level of 200 billion dollars in 2024. Hence, in the next two years China will become the biggest partner of Russia and replace the EU. 

China is aware of the plans of the West. Hence, after the insisting on enlargement of NATO towards the East, Beijing managed to make its biggest strategic achievement, which is to win Russia to its side on the military plan, and then economically link it with China’s economy.

In general, China has realized that it will be the next target of the West, and particularly the US, because of the competition for global leadership. As a result, it sees the current war in Ukraine as a historic opportunity to achieve its strategic goals.

Where does Turkey stand in the new Cold War?

Although in the Turkish media there is broad support to the Ukrainian people, the anti-West sentiments are evident in the stances of all political parties, despite the fact that the country has been a NATO member since 1952. 

There is a feeling of mistrust in the relations between Turkey and Russia. Turkey is not thrilled by the Russian policy. Namely, Russia has broadened its influence in the Caucasus and is now threating with the control of the northern part of the Black Sea. Historically, Turkey and Russia were rivals and even fought on opposite sides in the conflicts in Libya and Syria.

Turkey is aware that its actions in the northern part of Syria are subject to Putin’s approval.  There are also the economic relations that include Russian gas, Russian tourism and Russian investments. The spokesperson of the Turkish President Ibrahim Kalin stated that Turkey does not plan to join the sanctions against Russia in order to preserve the close political and trade relations. “We have to act bearing in mind the priorities of our country,” Kalin said in a TV interview. “There has to be a side capable to negotiate with Russia. Who will talk with Russia if everyone is destroying the bridges? We do not plan to introduce sanctions so that this channel can remain open.” 

EU surprised and unprepared

Prior to the Russian military invasion, the Ukraine crisis exposed major differences in the stances of Western countries with respect to relations with Russia and revealed a rift in the Western alliance at the time when the crisis culminated. The Ukraine crisis, which has been escalating in the heart Europe ever since the end of the Cold War and increasingly acutely since 2014, is a herald of a turning point in the history of the continent. Effects of the crisis, as it proceeds from one phase to another, indicate that it will have a role in the far-reaching changes in the structure of international relations, as it is the first major war in Europe since 1845. Truth be told, for the Europeans the war in Croatia (1991-1995), Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992-1995) and Kosovo (1999) was of local character.

The Ukraine crisis is the first European war after 75 years in which one country attacks another country and strives to occupy it and remove its legally elected political leadership. Before 24 February 2022, the prevailing opinion was that things of the kind could happen only in the Middle East, or maybe in Asia and Africa, but definitely not in Europe. This has changed now and will probably have major reflections on the relations within the EU, and particularly between its two main pillars- Germany and France, the “defeated” and a “winner” in World War 2, respectively. 

Maybe the most important change triggered by the Ukraine crisis is the decision of Germany to rearm itself. Namely, the German Federal Chancellor Olaf Scholz stated in the Bundestag of 27 February 2022 that the country will appropriate 100 billion Euros for arming of the German military (Bundeswehr) and increase the defense appropriations to 2% of the gross domestic product (GDP) of Germany, which implies that from this year Germany will spend around 85 billion dollars on defense. This means that Germany will be ranked third in the world, right after the US (770 billions), China (254 billions) and before Russia (61 billions). This decision constitutes a radical twist in the German and Western policy that had prevailed since the end of World War II and included restrictions on the arming of Germany, which had pushed Europe into three large wars in less than one century (war with France from 1870, World War I and World War II). This decision will have significant ramifications on the relations within the EU and broader area, because it changes the balance of forces on the “old continent” and threatens a return to policy of power, which had marked its modern history. 

The Ukraine crisis has caused a major blow to the Russian-German partnership, which commenced during the tenure of the former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder (1998 – 2005) and developed during the rule of Angela Merkel (2005 -2021). In fact, this is one of the major consequences of the crisis. Nowadays, Germans believe that by refusing to talk about the requests of Moscow in relation to the membership of Ukraine in NATO and to give security guarantees, Washington did not leave Russia with any other option but to conduct a military invasion. 

In fact, the German-Russian partnership is the main victim of the war. The partnership was based on import of Russian energy and export of German technology and goods. Over the past years, Washington tried to “break” this equation, which provides for development of closer relations between Moscow and Berlin at the cost of relations with Washington, but without major success. Over the past years, having decided to close its nuclear power plants and coal-based energy production within the framework of its obligations stemming from the Paris climate agreement from 2015, Germany increased its dependency on the Russian gas and resisted all the attempts by Washington to stop the construction of Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which supplies gas directly from Russia to Germany via the Baltic Sea. 

The Ukraine crisis has changed all the plans made so far and gave a major blow not just to the pipeline, as Berlin has already announced freezing of the project despite the finalization of the 12-billion-dollar construction works, but also to the Moscow-Berlin axis. 

Germany, which had agreed to introduce strongest sanctions to Russia after Russia’s intervention in Ukraine, now embarks on a search for alternatives to the Russian gas. Paradoxically enough, the US gas, whose sale in Europe has already increased by 15% in the last two months, will be one of the possible alternatives. 

Through the Ukraine crises, the US achieved one of its most important strategic goals in Europe, which was to turn Germany against Russia, and focus on opposing its most important threat in the Indo-Pacific region (China).

So far, the stance of the French government has been that it is necessary to focus on diplomatic methods to reduce the escalation and tensions regarding Ukraine, which the French president articulated by saying, “we have to preserve all diplomatic channels so that Russia would return to the negotiating table.” French President Emmanuel Macron is the only Western leader who is in regular contact with Putin. The stance of the French government is succinct and clear: “We stand by Ukraine, but do not want to enter into conflict with Russia.” The war on Ukraine has given new momentum to Emmanuel Macron’s push to make the European Union more autonomous. However, European leaders still have to clarify what that means in practice. French politician Pascal Lamy, former World Trade Organization Director-General and ex-European commissioner, said crises such as the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine have accelerated Europe’s path toward that goal, which has been a long-standing French aim. 

What response does NATO have in case of escalation?

The war that Russia is waging against Ukraine reveals an important and very worrying fact. Specifically, the inability of the West to militarily confront Russia, except in case of use of nuclear weapons. Furthermore, while the economic sanctions have yielded no significant influence on the Russian military and economic infrastructure, they have a reflexive effect on the political and economic circumstances within the alliance. 

After four weeks of the war that Russia is waging against Ukraine, which is an illegal war and ever enters in the category of aggression on a sovereign state, despite all the justifications offered by Russia how it is defending its national security, it is becoming clear that advance weapons (i.e. military power) that dictate conduct in international relations. 

NATO’s powerlessness and limited maneuver space became evident in front of the Russian military invasion. Firstly, there was talk about possible military intervention by NATO to protect a member that is a candidate for membership in the Alliance, and then such an option was rejected under the explanation that Ukraine is not a NATO member. In another attempt, there was talk of introduction of a no-fly zone, in order to prevent Russian aircrafts from attacking Ukrainian military forces, but this plan was also rejected under the pretext of avoiding a conflict with Russia, so that the third world war would not break out. The same explanation was used for the refusal to move Russian-made fighter jets from Poland to Ukraine. 

In fact, this is not about ending a war. NATO has already waged many wars in the past. The list of wars includes the military intervention in Serbia in 1999, the war against terror in Afghanistan in 2002, the US military intervention in Iraq in 2003, the war against ISIL in Iraq and Syria in 2015, and then the intervention aimed to overthrow the regime of Muammar Gaddafi in Libya in 2011. European forces led by France are present in Mali in Africa, which is thousands of kilometers away from Europe, under the pretext of protection of European security from terrorism. 

This time, in the case of Ukraine, NATO currently does not have the strength to confront Russia in Europe, although it believes that the current war is a real threat to Europe because it is happening within the borders of Europe and directly threatens its security. With the exception of nuclear weapons, NATO currently does not have sufficient military power to confront Russian nonnuclear weapons, nor does it have sufficient weapons to confront Russia. Numerous military experts from the West admit that had NATO had sufficient military power to force Russia to withdraw from Ukraine it would have used it in the name of protection of international law in the Crimea crisis in 2014, and would not wait for the current war in Ukraine to do so. 

NATO does not have enough military equipment, not at the level of national militaries nor at the level of presence of US military troops on the European continent. In example, despite the gravity of the situation on the European continent, there is still just one US aircraft carrier, Harry Truman, in the European waters. Specifically, in the vicinity of Italian waters in the Mediterranean Sea, and not in the Baltic Sea where the situation is very worrying. If the situation deteriorates and the war spills over to NATO member states, such as Poland or Rumania, NATO would settle with repelling the Russian forces, intercepting their aircrafts and projectiles, without attacking Russian forces on the Ukrainian territory. 

NATO is not able to carry out a military siege of Russia for the purposes of ensuring compliance with the economic and financial sanctions imposed by the West. Russia is a large state that has three key elements for survival: energy, as it is among top global exporters of oil and gas, other mineral resources/raw materials and food. Namely, Russia is self-sustainable in this respect and can produce on its own food not just for its requirements but for export as well. In fact, Russia is considered an important element in the preservation of food stability in the world.  The world is currently concerned by the increasingly high prices of grains, as well as the possible outbreak of famine and unrests in some African and Asian countries. Russia is self-sufficient in a number of industrial sector, starting from the defense sector to the medical and advanced technology sectors. 

How to stop this war?

Currently, neither of the sides has an exit strategy. Putin cannot just return its military forces back home without a victory, and Zelensky cannot just hand over to Putin what he aspires to achieve by war. In the meantime, three strong mediators (presidents of France and Turkey, Macron and Erdogan, and the Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett) remain powerless.

There are wars in which both sides are losers. Nevertheless, Putin is convinced that the military invasion will reinstate Russia in the position of a major power. He is aware that he will have to pay a high for that at the national and international level because of the 5,532 sanctions introduced against Russia, half of them after the invasion on Ukraine. (Prior to 24 February 2022, 2,754 sanctions had been introduced against Russia, and in the days after the attack an additional 2,778 sanctions, bringing the total number of sanctions to 5.532).  On the other side, Ukrainian President Zelensky believed that his path to the West is open, if not to NATO, then at least to the EU. However, the EU has told him that for the time being Ukraine does not meet the conditions for membership. Ukrainian leadership did not believe the warnings about the Russian military invasion and the enormous price that the Ukrainian people will pay.

Analysts believe that only an agreement under the auspices of the Unites States and China can stop the Russian advance. The question is whether the US can exert pressure on President Zelensky. An agreement would require a compromise, and a compromise would reveal that the West had forced a democratically elected government of Ukraine to yield to the dictate of a powerful state, specifically Russia -just like Arthur Neville Chamberlain did in Munich in 1938. However brutal it may sound, the history repeats itself? 

Ljubljana/Washington/Brussels /Kiev, 25 March 2022  

Published by IFIMES   

                                 

Footnotes:


[1] IFIMES – The International Institute for Middle East and Balkan Studies (IFIMES) from Ljubljana, Slovenia, has a special consultative status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)/UN since 2018.

[2] United Nations Security Council Resolution 2623 https://www.un.org/press/en/2022/sc14809.doc.htm 
[3] United Nations Security Council Resolution 2624  https://www.un.org/press/en/2022/sc14810.doc.htm
[4] Major Non-NATO Ally (MNNA) status is a designation given by the US government to its close allies that have strategic working relations with the US armed forces, but are not a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Although the status does not automatically imply an agreement with the US on mutual defense, it still offers a number of military and financial benefits otherwise not available for the countries that are not NATO members. www.state.gov/major-non-nato-ally-status/
[5] Daily Sabah https://www.dailysabah.com/politics/diplomacy/russia-should-give-negotiations-a-real-chance-ankara-says
[6] Russia Is Now the World’s Most Sanctioned Country www.castellum.ai/insights/russia-is-now-the-worlds-most-sanctioned-country

Turning away girls from secondary schools

Published by The New Arab – March 23, 2022

The Taliban ordered girls’ secondary schools in Afghanistan to shut Wednesday just hours after they reopened, an official confirmed, sparking confusion and heartbreak over the policy reversal by the hardline Islamist group. 

“Yes, it’s true,” Taliban spokesman Inamullah Samangani told AFP when asked to confirm reports that girls had been ordered home. He would not immediately explain the reasoning, while education ministry spokesman Aziz Ahmad Rayan said: “We are not allowed to comment on this”.  

An AFP team was filming at Zarghona High School in the capital, Kabul, when a teacher entered and said class was over. Crestfallen students, back at school for the first time since the Taliban seized power in August last year, tearfully packed up their belongings and filed out. “I see my students crying and reluctant to leave classes,” said Palwasha, a teacher at Omra Khan girls’ school in Kabul. 

United Nations envoy Deborah Lyons called reports of the closure “disturbing”. “If true, what could possibly be the reason?” she tweeted. â€œThe UN in Afghanistan deplores today’s reported announcement by the Taliban that they are further extending their indefinite ban on female students above the 6th grade being permitted to return school,” the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said in a statement.  

When the Taliban took over last August, schools were closed because of the Covid-19 pandemic, but only boys and younger girls were allowed to resume classes two months later. There were fears the Taliban would shut down all formal education for girls, as they did during their first stint in power from 1996 to 2001.The international community has made the right to education for all a sticking point in negotiations over aid and recognition of the new Taliban regime, with several nations and organisations offering to pay teachers. 

On Wednesday, the order for girls’ secondary schools to resume appeared to only be patchily observed, with reports emerging from some parts of the country — including the Taliban’s spiritual heartland of Kandahar — that classes would restart next month instead. But several did reopen in the capital and elsewhere, including Herat and Panjshir — temporarily at least. “All the students that we are seeing today are very happy, and they are here with open eyes,” Latifa Hamdard, principal of Gawharshad Begum High School in Herat, told AFP. 

The education ministry said reopening the schools was always a government objective and the Taliban were not bowing to international pressure. “We are doing it as part of our responsibility to provide education and other facilities to our students,” ministry spokesman Rayan told AFP Tuesday. The Taliban had insisted they wanted to ensure schools for girls aged 12 to 19 were segregated and would operate according to Islamic principles. The Taliban have imposed a slew of restrictions on women, effectively banning them from many government jobs, policing what they wear and preventing them from travelling outside of their cities alone. They have also detained several women’s rights activists. 

Even if schools do reopen fully, barriers to girls returning to education remain, with many families suspicious of the Taliban and reluctant to allow their daughters outside. Others see little point in girls learning at all. “Those girls who have finished their education have ended up sitting at home and their future is uncertain,” said Heela Haya, 20, from Kandahar, who has decided to quit school.”What will be our future?” It is common for Afghan pupils to miss chunks of the school year as a result of poverty or conflict, and some continue lessons well into their late teens or early twenties. 

Human Rights Watch also raised the issue of the few avenues girls are given to apply their education. “Why would you and your family make huge sacrifices for you to study if you can never have the career you dreamed of?” said Sahar Fetrat, an assistant researcher with the group. The education ministry acknowledged authorities faced a shortage of teachers — with many among the tens of thousands of people who fled the country as the Taliban swept to power. “We need thousands of teachers and to solve this problem we are trying to hire new teachers on a temporary basis,” the spokesman said. 

From https://hrwf.eu / Human Rights Without Frontiers International

Photo credits: Getty Images

Albanian President Ilir Meta received Director of IFIMES Zijad Bećirović

LJUBLJANA/TIRANA, 25 March 2022 â€“ The President of the Republic of Albania Ilir Meta received Director of the International Institute for Middle East and Balkan Studies (IFIMES) Assoc. Prof. Dr. Zijad Bećirović. They discussed the current war situation in Ukraine and its impact on the region and beyond.

During the conversation, President Meta stressed that the opening of European Union membership negotiations for Albania and North Macedonia as soon as possible, as well as visa liberalization for Kosovo and its membership in NATO and the EU, would bring concrete and very positive contributions for the consolidation of peace, stability and security in the region, as well as for the prosperity of Albanian citizens.

President also stressed that respecting the aspirations of the people of Bosnia and Herzegovina for NATO and EU membership is legitimate and maximally serves peace, stability and security not only in the region, but also beyond.

Director of IFIMES Dr. Bećirović thanked the president for presenting his views and stressed the importance of Albanian activities on its European path and in the process of re-democratization.

At the end of the conversation he invited the President Meta to have a lecture at the institute soon which President Meta gladly accepted.

Ljubljana/Tirana, 25 March 2022

A Polish Concert Lecture

By Roy Lie Atjam

The Polish Embassy The Hague, 22 March 2022, to what might be one of his last activities at the Embassy before taking up his new position as Secretary-General of the  Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA), H.E. Ambassador Marcin Czepelak chaired an outstanding  Polish Concert Lecture.

Ambassador Marcin Czepelak welcomed his guests, “I am happy that after the period of the pandemic and being locked up at home, we can see each other again at the Polish Embassy. We failed to forget one plague while another plague, even more terrible, namely the war in Ukraine has taken the world by surprise. The Russian Federation invaded a neighbouring state inhabited by a sister nation for no reason. And again the world comes to a standstill.

Jan Bokken

This spring we had many cultural events planned, but because of the international situation, we have cancelled them all. However, we have chosen to present today’s performance, Klara Biermasz and Jan Bokken.

Jan Bokken is a well-known Dutch journalist and publicist, a famous writer and a passionate historian with a big heart for Chopin.

Clara Biermasz is a Dutch pianist fascinated by Chopin, she founded the Chopin Foundation Netherlands and is its artistic director. She has been organizing Chopin festivals in the Netherlands for years.

Jan Bokken and Klara Biermasz during the Polish concert lecture.

Their concert lecture this evening, which tells about the rescue of Jewish refugees by the Polish Ambassador Tadeusz Romer to Japan in the early years of World War II, is like a reflection of history. The dramatic story that Jan Bokken will recite under the guidance of Chopin’s music by Klara Biermasz is an illustration of the events we witness in Ukraine.

Remembering the refugees of the past and those who helped them, let us remember the people fleeing Ukraine today count on our support. We stand with Ukraine!”

The working language at the concert lecture was Dutch. The Ambassador also spoke in Dutch. Jan Brokken delivered an epic lecture, he captured the attention of the entire audience. He was supported by Clara Biermasz, as a pianist.

Brokken spoke about the Polish ambassador Count Tadeusz Romer helped thousands of Polish Jews to flee to safe places between 1940 and 1943. Tadeusz was a convinced democrat and was the last Foreign Minister of the Polish government-in-exile.

Tadeusz Romer later lived in Canada, longed for Poland and polish music, Chopin of course. Like Chopin, Tadeusz Romer continued to believe in equality, freedom and humanism under all circumstances and in the healing power of music and culture.

Ambassador Czepelak opening the Polish concert lecture.

Shortly before the break, Mr Jan Brokken paused and dedicate some time to phenomena “Chopin around the Equator”. Jan Bokken narrated passages from his non-fiction book “Why eleven Antilleans knelt before Chopin’s heart”.  Music on Curacao,  waltzes, mazurkas and danzas, are strongly influenced by Chopin.

Why eleven Antilleans knelt before Chopin’s heart is an impressive and entertaining cultural history of music on the Caribbean Island Curacao.

For sure, a surpassingly literature-musical narration evening enjoyed by all.

Extra-ordinary times

The transformation of Joe Biden from peacetime to “wartime” president’

Joe Biden-lecture by Willem Post

These are extra-ordinary times. The 46th president presented at the start of his term an attractive domestic agenda. But like so many presidents in U.S. history, once again a foreign policy crisis has ‘overtaken’ a president. The Russian invasion in Ukraine, ‘Putin’s war’,  transformed Biden’s presidency almost overnight. What are the consequenses for the U.S., Europe and the rest of the world? Is this indeed the birth of a new World Order?

Dutch historian Willem Post, specialized in the U.S. presidency, will share in English his thoughts with us on these and other urgent questions at an informal hamburger or vegaburger dinner session (including fries and salad) in International presscentre Nieuwspoort. Drinks could be ordered.

Conversation with Ivo van Wijdeven
Ivo van de Wijdeven is historian and author. His book ‘De rafelranden van Europa’ (Europe’s frayed edges) is widely acclaimed. Especially these last months Ivo is a frequent guest in Dutch television- and radio programs because of his in-depth knowledge of Ukraine and Russia. Willem and Ivo will have a conversation on the current situation concerning Ukraine and the politics of president Putin.

General information:
Time: April 5th from 18.30 hours till 20.00 hours. Doors open 18.00.
Address: Lange Poten 10
2511 CL Den Haag (The Hague city centre)
Tickets €29,50 p.p. with a (vegetarian) burger, fries and 2 drinks (beer/ wine / soft drink).
For a Poorter (member of Nieuwspoort) a ticket is €28,50 p.p. with a (vegetarian) burger, fries and 2 drinks (beer/ wine / soft drink).

Mr. Willem Post

Willem Post is a Senior Research Associate Fellow at the Clingendael Institute in The Hague and a member of the Public Diplomacy Council in Washington D.C. He is a well-known media-commentator  and writer of twelve books on U.S. politics and presidents from Franklin Roosevelt up to and including Joe Biden.

As international adviser to the Mayor of The Hague Willem Post specifically build bridges between the expat community and local residents. Willem Post proposed and implemented initiatives like The Hague International Centre in city hall, The Hague Bridge Program and The Hague international day in September.

CPI Nouvelle Mise à jour du Guide pratique de procédure

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Mise Ă  jour du Guide pratique de procĂ©dure pour les Chambres dans le cadre du renforcement de la cohĂ©rence et de l’efficacitĂ© des procĂ©dures

Aujourd’hui, 25 mars 2022, la cinquiĂšme Ă©dition du Guide pratique de procĂ©dure Ă  l’intention des juges de la Cour pĂ©nale internationale (CPI) a Ă©tĂ© publiĂ©e en anglais et en français.

La rĂ©vision du Guide pratique de procĂ©dure vise Ă  amĂ©liorer nettement l’efficacitĂ© et la cohĂ©rence des procĂ©dures devant la CPI Ă  trois Ă©gards.

Tout d’abord, le Guide pratique a Ă©tĂ© enrichi d’une nouvelle partie consacrĂ©e Ă  la transmission du dossier de la procĂ©dure, afin que celui ci soit transmis plus rapidement de la chambre prĂ©liminaire Ă  la PrĂ©sidence, et ensuite Ă  la chambre de premiĂšre instance une fois celle-ci constituĂ©e. Cet ajout rend la prĂ©paration du procĂšs plus aisĂ©e et met en Ɠuvre la recommandation 199 contenue dans le rapport d’examen remis par le groupe d’experts indĂ©pendants instituĂ© par l’AssemblĂ©e des États parties.

Ensuite, les juges de la Cour ont adoptĂ© un modĂšle de dĂ©cision intitulĂ© « Instructions pour la conduite des dĂ©bats » et publiĂ© en annexe du Guide pratique de procĂ©dure en tant que document interne des Chambres. Ce modĂšle de dĂ©cision porte sur des questions telles que l’ouverture du procĂšs, l’ordre de prĂ©sentation des Ă©lĂ©ments de preuve, les tĂ©moignages et les mesures de protection en faveur des tĂ©moins, et il prĂ©voit un systĂšme concertĂ© et unique d’administration de la preuve (le systĂšme de prĂ©sentation des Ă©lĂ©ments de preuve) pour les preuves documentaires, numĂ©riques ou physiques. L’utilisation de ce modĂšle renforcera de maniĂšre significative l’efficacitĂ©, la cohĂ©rence et la prĂ©visibilitĂ© des procĂ©dures en premiĂšre instance.

Enfin, le Guide pratique a Ă©tĂ© actualisĂ© pour tenir compte de l’évolution de la pratique en matiĂšre de procĂ©dure d’admission des demandes de participation des victimes Ă  la procĂ©dure, qu’elle qu’en soit la phase. Les chambres peuvent adopter l’approche dite « ABC », selon laquelle le Greffe classe les demandeurs en trois groupes : i) les demandeurs qui remplissent de toute Ă©vidence les conditions requises pour se voir reconnaĂźtre la qualitĂ© de victime (« le groupe A ») ; b) les demandeurs qui ne remplissent clairement pas les conditions requises pour se voir reconnaĂźtre la qualitĂ© de victime (« le groupe B ») ; et c) les demandeurs sur le cas desquels le Greffe n’a pas pu se prononcer clairement, pour une raison ou une autre (« le groupe C »). Cette approche a Ă©tĂ© retenue par plusieurs chambres dans des affaires rĂ©centes, et la Chambre d’appel l’a jugĂ©e conforme au cadre juridique applicable Ă  la Cour. L’ajout de cette approche dans le Guide pratique de procĂ©dure pour les Chambres renforcera davantage la cohĂ©rence et l’efficacitĂ©, Ă©tant donnĂ© le rĂŽle Ă  la fois crucial et trĂšs particulier que jouent les victimes dans les procĂ©dures devant la Cour.

La cinquiĂšme Ă©dition du Guide pratique de procĂ©dure pour les Chambres est le fruit de la rĂ©flexion collective menĂ©e par les juges lors de leur retraite en novembre 2021. Sa rĂ©vision et sa mise Ă  jour rĂ©guliĂšres s’inscrivent dans le cadre des efforts dĂ©ployĂ©s par les juges pour continuer d’amĂ©liorer les pratiques internes aux chambres, ainsi que l’efficacitĂ© et la transparence des procĂ©dures devant la CPI.

Guide pratique de procédure pour les Chambres