Consequences of unilaterally denouncing of the nuclear deal with Iran by the USA

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By Corneliu Pivariu. As he declared previously during the electoral campaign and at the beginning of his office, president Donald Trump announced and signed on May, 8th 2018, the United States’ unilateral withdrawal from what is known to the public at large as the nuclear agreement with Iran (The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action – JCPOA –signed in the 5+1 format with Iran by the USA, Great Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany after long negotiations, in July 2015). For those who did not remember, Germany’s inclusion into this agreement was the result of the fact it supplied Iran, decades ago, dual technology that benefitted the development of the Iranian nuclear file. Immediately after president Donald Trump’s official statement, the Iranian Foreign Affairs minister, Javad Zarif, begun a rapid diplomatic tour to China, Russia and the European Union. An advisor of the supreme leader Ali Kamenei state that Iran will neither renegotiate the agreement, nor its missiles program. Moreover, certain Iranian statements expressed the no-confidence in the European position of further supporting the implementation of the Agreement. Some other statements mentioned that Iran will, under unfavourable circumstances of the discussions with the European officials, will publicize the economic facilities and financial incentives granted to certain top European personalities and even to the American Secretary of State John Kerry, during the negotiations for agreeing JPCOA, and that would explain why the proposals that did not suit Iran were eliminated from the final text. For the time being, the EU (and also France, Germany and great Britain, separately) and Russia support maintaining the agreement denounced by president Donald Trump. We notice the rather sharp statements of the Commissioner for Foreign and Security Policy Federica Mogherini (which, in our opinion, exceed the real – and modest – possibilities of the UE’s foreign policy under current European legislation), as well as Donald Tusk’s statements criticizing the American decision and endorsed keeping the agreement into force. Some other voices have been heard as well considering the USA, after its withdrawal from the agreement, (as that was a real surprise) as not being any longer an European trusted ally something that is, again in our opinion, a great strategic and geopolitical mistake. We restate the opinion that, particularly under the circumstances of today’s geopolitical developments, the alliance between Europe and the USA or between the USA and Europe should be a constant able to prevent a new world conflict with incalculable consequences for the mankind. As far as the USA is concerned and in accordance with the decisions president Trump took, economic sanctions were imposed on certain Iranian entities including the Revolutionary Guard Corps (Pasdaran), Central Bank of Iran and other officials Moreover, the sanctions to be adopted will affect on the European firms (and American firms) that have already economic contracts amounting to hundreds and thousands of dollar with Iran. It is obvious that the sanctions against Iran, especially when they will be adopted by the European countries, will have important effects on the Iranian economy. As it was natural, the USA’s position was approved by Israel and also by Saudi Arabia that stated that if Iran gets nuclear weapons, it will do the same. We remind here some information according to which Saudi Arabia has already concluded a secret protocol with Pakistan since several decades (stipulating that in case of a nuclear threat against Saudi Arabia, Islamabad will put at Riyadh’s disposal some nuclear strikes as response). Russia seems to benefit as a result of this situation first by the crude oil price increase and then due to the possibilities of concluding new contracts with Tehran in case the European companies withdraw. An important consequence of the Agreement’s denunciation, under the circumstances of worsening the situation, is a large-scale regional military conflict breaking out that may end in redesigning the map of the Middle East, drastically reducing the Iranian influence in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. The Israeli military action against ā€œalmost the entire Iranian infrastructure in Syriaā€, as a response to the 20 Iranian missiles launched against Israel should be added, as it was the most powerful Israeli military actions of the last 40 years (Operation ā€House of Cardsā€). It seems that the operation was coordinated by Israel with the USA and Russia. A new evidence of how complicated the developments in the Middle East are and could be. The USA considered certainly the possibility of a military conflict with Iran breaking out. The question to be asked is what resulted from this analysis and what will Washington’s decision be.
About the author: Corneliu Pivariu,Ā former first deputy for military intelligence (two stars general) in the Romanian MoD, retired 2003. Member of IISS – London, alumni of Harvard – Kennedy School Executive Education and others international organizations. Founder of INGEPO Consulting, and bimonthly Bulletin, Geostrategic Pulseā€. Main areas of expertise – geopolitics, intelligence and security. ———— Corneliu Pivariu Ingepo Consulting. Photographer Ionus Paraschiv

Has the West Lost It?

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By Barend ter Haar. The subtitle ā€œA Provocationā€ of Has the West Lost It? will not surprise someone who has read other books of the Singaporean diplomat-scholar Kishore Mahbubani, such as Can Asians Think? (2001) and The Great Convergence: Asia, the West, and the Logic of One World (2013). Just as in those earlier books, he is friendly, but provokingly clear, not only about the accomplishments of the West and the Rest, but also about their flaws and blunders. According to Mahbubani the West refuses to accept that humanity has turned a crucial corner in its history. For a short period of about two centuries, the West dominated the world. This extraordinary period is quickly coming to an end, because the Rest is catching up. In 1976 the combined GDP of the G7 (Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK and US) was still twice as big as that of the E7, the seven largest emerging economies (China, India, Brazil, Mexico, Russia, Turkey and Indonesia). Soon it will be the other way around. We are returning to the situation that existed before 1820, when the two largest economies of the world were China and India. However, thanks to the ā€œpower of reasoningā€ that the Rest has taken over from the West, the human condition has improved enormously: in 1950 75% of the world lived in extreme poverty. Now that is less than 10%. While Western elites prefer to look the other way, the populations of their countries ā€œfeel these large changes in their bones, and in the job marketsā€. The most consequential event of 2001 was not 9/11, but the entry of China into the WTO: ā€œThe entry of almost a billion workers into the global trading system would obviously result in massive ā€˜creative’ destruction and the loss of many jobs in the Westā€. According to a report of the Bank for International Settlements, the introduction of new workers from China and Eastern Europe led in the West to declining real wages and a smaller share of labour in national output and this ā€œnaturally meant that inequality [within Western economies] roseā€. Take for example the US: 63% of its population nowadays does not have enough savings to cover a $500 emergency. This is why Trump and Brexit happened. What should Western countries do, according to Mahbubani? First of all, they should engage in deep self-reflexion and recognize the grave mistakes they made out of hubris, such as the invasion of Iraq and the humiliation of Russia. The United Kingdom should give its permanent seat in the UN Security Council to India and France should share its seat with the EU. Secondly, they should become more ā€œstrategically cunningā€ in defending their interests. ā€œFor Europe, it is clear that the primary threat is not going to come from Russia. (..) Europe’s primary threat is spillover instability from the Islamic world. As long as North Africa and the Middle East are populated with struggling states, migrants will come into Europe, stirring populist parties.ā€ Promoting the economic development of North Africa is a matter of even higher urgency because of the expected growth of the population of the rest of Africa. In 80 years, the population of Africa is expected to be 4,5 billion, against 450 million Europeans. According to Mahbubani the West can continue to play a key role in the world, but only if it recognizes that the era of Western domination is coming to an end and if it seeks to influence the world rather than to dominate it.

Why is the Korean Reunification not to Work anytime soon

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(Denuclearisation of the Far East long way Ahead) By Prof. Anis H. Bajrektarevic How to draw the line between the recent and still unsettled EU/EURO crisis and Asia’s success story? Well, it might be easier than it seems: Neither Europe nor Asia has any alternative. The difference is that Europe well knows there is no alternative – and therefore is multilateral. Asia thinks it has an alternative – and therefore is strikingly bilateral, while stubbornly residing enveloped in economic egoisms. No wonder that Europe is/will be able to manage its decline, while Asia is (still) unable to capitalize its successes. Asia clearly does not accept any more the lead of the post-industrial and post-Christian Europe, but is not ready for the post-West world. Following the famous saying allegedly spelled by Kissinger: ā€œEurope? Give me a name and a phone number!ā€ (when – back in early 1970s – urged by President Nixon to inform Europeans on the particular US policy action), the author is trying to examine how close is Asia to have its own telephone number. Another fallacy is that the German reunification can be just copied. 15 days at any German institute of political science and one becomes expert of reunification. Yes, Germany is a success story since the neighbors were extremely forgiving. And that was enhanced by the overall pan-continental commitment to multilateralism – by both institutions and instruments. Europe of German re-unification was the most multilateralised region of the world. Asia today is extremely bilateral – not far from the constellations at the time of Hiroshima or Korean War of 1950s. No multilateralism – no denuclearisation; no denuclearisation – no reunification; no reunification – no overall cross-continental tranquilization of relations; no tranquility – no Asia’s sustainable success. Why multilateralism matters? Author tries to answer it … By contrasting and comparing genesis of multilateral security structures in Europe with those currently existing in Asia, and by listing some of the most pressing security challenges in Asia, this policy paper offers several policy incentives why the largest world’s continent must consider creation of the comprehensive pan-Asian institution. Prevailing security structures in Asia are bilateral and mostly asymmetric while Europe enjoys multilateral, balanced and symmetric setups (American and African continents too). Author goes as far as to claim that irrespective to the impressive economic growth, no Asian century will emerge without creation of such an institution. *Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  *Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  *Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  * For over a decade, many of the relevant academic journals are full of articles prophesizing the 21st as the Asian century. The argument is usually based on the impressive economic growth, increased production and trade volumes as well as the booming foreign currency reserves and exports of many populous Asian nations, with nearly 1/3 of total world population inhabiting just two countries of the largest world’s continent. However, history serves as a powerful reminder by warning us that economically or/and demographically mighty gravity centers tend to expand into their peripheries, especially when the periphery is weaker by either category. It means that any absolute or relative shift in economic and demographic strength of one subject of international relations will inevitably put additional stress on the existing power equilibriums and constellations that support this balance in the particular theater of implicit or explicit structure. Lessons of the Past Thus, what is the state of art of Asia’s security structures? What is the existing capacity of preventive diplomacy and what instruments are at disposal when it comes to early warning/ prevention, fact-finding, exchange mechanisms, reconciliation, capacity and confidence– building measures in the Asian theater? While all other major theaters do have the pan-continental settings in place already for many decades, such as the Organization of American States – OAS (American continent), African Union – AU (Africa), Council of Europe and Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe – OSCE (Europe), the state-of-arts of the largest world’s continent is rather different. What becomes apparent, nearly at the first glance, is the absence of any pan-Asian security/ multilateral structure. Prevailing security structures are bilateral and mostly asymmetric. They range from the clearly defined and enduring non-aggression security treaties, through less formal arrangements, up to the Ad hoc cooperation accords on specific issues. The presence of the multilateral regional settings is limited to a very few spots in the largest continent, and even then, they are rarely mandated with security issues in their declared scope of work. Another striking feature is that most of the existing bilateral structures have an Asian state on one side, and either peripheral or external protĆ©gĆ© country on the other side which makes them nearly per definition asymmetric. The examples are numerous: the US–Japan, the US– S. Korea, the US–Singapore, Russia–India, Australia–East Timor, Russia–North Korea, Japan –Malaysia, China–Pakistan, the US–Pakistan, China–Cambodia, the US–Saudi Arabia, Russia –Iran, China–Burma, India–Maldives, Iran–Syria, N. Korea–Pakistan, etc. Indeed, Asia today resonates a mixed echo of the European past. It combines features of the pre-Napoleonic, post-Napoleonic and the League-of-Nations Europe. What are the useful lessons from the European past? Well, there are a few, for sure. Bismarck accommodated the exponential economic, demographic and military growth as well as the territorial expansion of Prussia by skillfully architecturing and calibrating the complex networks of bilateral security arrangements of 19th century Europe. Like Asia today, it was not an institutionalized security structure of Europe, but a talented leadership exercising restraint and wisdom in combination with the quick assertiveness and fast military absorptions, concluded by the lasting endurance. However, as soon as the new Kaiser removed the Iron Chancellor (Bismarck), the provincial and backward–minded, insecure and militant Prussian establishment contested (by their own interpretations of the German’s machtpolitik and weltpolitik policies) Europe and the world in two devastating world wars. That, as well as Hitler’s establishment afterwards, simply did not know what to do with a powerful Germany. The aspirations and constellations of some of Asia’s powers today remind us also of the pre-Napoleonic Europe, in which a unified, universalistic block of the Holy Roman Empire was contested by the impatient challengers of the status quo. Such serious centripetal and centrifugal oscillations of Europe were not without grave deviations: as much as Cardinal Richelieu’s and Jacobin’s France successfully emancipated itself, the Napoleon III and pre-WWII France encircled, isolated itself, implicitly laying the foundation for the German attack. Finally, the existing Asian regional settings also resemble the picture of the post-Napoleonic Europe: first and foremost, of Europe between the Vienna Congress of 1815 and the revolutionary year of 1848. At any rate, let us take a quick look at the most relevant regional settings in Asia. Multilateral constellations By far, the largest Asian participation is with the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation – APEC, an organization engulfing both sides of the Pacific Rim. Nevertheless, this is a forum for member economies not of sovereign nations, a sort of a prep-com or waiting room for the World Trade Organization – WTO. To use the words of one senior Singapore diplomat who recently told me in Geneva the following: ā€œwhat is your option here? …to sign the Free Trade Agreement (FTA), side up with the US, login to Facebook, and keep shopping on the internet happily ever afterā€¦ā€ Two other crosscutting settings, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation – OIC and Non-Aligned Movement – NAM, the first with and the second without a permanent secretariat, represent the well-established political multilateral bodies. However, they are inadequate forums as neither of the two is strictly mandated with security issues. Although both trans-continental entities do have large memberships being the 2nd and 3rd largest multilateral systems, right after the UN, neither covers the entire Asian political landscape – having important Asian countries outside the system or opposing it. Further on, one should mention the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization – KEDO (Nuclear) and the Iran-related Contact (Quartet/P-5+1) Group. In both cases, the issues dealt with are indeed security related, but they are more an asymmetric approach to deter and contain a single country by the larger front of peripheral states that are opposing a particular security policy, in this case, of North Korea and of Iran. Same was with the short-lived SEATO Pact – a defense treaty organization for SEA which was essentially dissolved as soon as the imminent threat from communism was slowed down and successfully contained within the French Indochina. Confidence building – an attempt If some of the settings are reminiscent of the pre-Napoleonic Europe, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization – SCO and Cooperation Council for the Arab states of the Gulf – GCC remind us of the post-Napoleonic Europe and its Alliance of the Eastern Conservative courts (of Metternich). Both arrangements were created on a pretext of a common external ideological and geopolitical threat, on a shared status quo security consideration. Asymmetric GCC was an externally induced setting by which an American key Middle East ally Saudi Arabia gathered the grouping of the Arabian Peninsula monarchies. It has served a dual purpose; originally, to contain the leftist Nasseristic pan-Arabism which was introducing a republican type of egalitarian government in the Middle Eastern theater. It was also – after the 1979 revolution – an instrument to counter-balance the Iranian influence in the Gulf and wider Middle East. The response to the spring 2011-13 turmoil in the Middle East, including the deployment of the Saudi troops in Bahrain, and including the analysis of the role of influential Qatar-based and GCC-backed Al Jazeera TV network is the best proof of the very nature of the GCC mandate. The SCO is internally induced and more symmetric setting. Essentially, it came into existence through a strategic Sino-Russian rapprochement[1], based, for the first time in modern history, on parity, to deter external aspirants (the US, Japan, Korea, India, Turkey and Saudi Arabia) and to keep the resources, territory, present socio-economic cultural and political regime in the Central Asia, Tibet heights and the Xinjiang Uighur province in line. The next to consider is the Indian sub-continent’s grouping, the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation – SAARC. This organization has a well-established mandate, well staffed and versed Secretariat. However, the Organization is strikingly reminiscent of the League of Nations. The League is remembered as an altruistic setup which repeatedly failed to adequately respond to the security quests of its members as well as to the challenges and pressures of parties that were kept out of the system (e.g. Russia until well into the 1930s and the US remaining completely outside the system, and in the case of the SAARC surrounding; China, Saudi Arabia and the US). The SAARC is practically a hostage of mega confrontation of its two largest members, both confirmed nuclear powers; India and Pakistan. These two challenge each other geopolitically and ideologically. Existence of one is a negation of the existence of the other; the religiously determined nationhood of Pakistan is a negation of multiethnic India and vice verse. Additionally, the SAARC although internally induced is an asymmetric organization. It is not only the size of India, but also its position: centrality of that country makes SAARC practically impossible to operate in any field without the direct consent of India, be it commerce, communication, politics or security. For a serious advancement of multilateralism, mutual trust, a will to compromise and achieve a common denominator through active co-existence is the key. It is hard to build a common course of action around the disproportionately big and centrally positioned member which would escape the interpretation as containment by the big or assertiveness of its center by the smaller, peripheral members. Multivector Foreign Policy Finally, there is an ASEAN – a grouping of 10 Southeast Asian nations[2], exercising the balanced multi-vector policy, based on the non-interference principle, internally and externally. This, Jakarta/Indonesia headquartered[3] organization has a dynamic past and an ambitious current charter. It is an internally induced and relatively symmetric arrangement with the strongest members placed around its geographic center, like in case of the EU equilibrium with Germany-France/Britain-Italy/Poland-Spain geographically balancing each other. Situated on the geographic axis of the southern flank of the Asian landmass, the so-called growth triangle of Thailand-Malaysia-Indonesia represents the core of the ASEAN not only in economic and communication terms but also by its political leverage. The EU-like ASEAN Community Road Map (for 2015) will absorb most of the Organization’s energy[4]. However, the ASEAN has managed to open its forums for the 3+3 group/s, and could be seen in the long run as a cumulus setting towards the wider pan-Asian forum in future. Before closing this brief overview, let us mention two recently inaugurated informal forums, both based on the external calls for a burden sharing. One, with a jingoistic-coined name by the Wall Street bankers[5] – BRI(I)C/S, so far includes two important Asian economic, demographic and political powerhouses (India and China), and one peripheral (Russia). Indonesia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Iran are a few additional Asian countries whose national pride and pragmatic interests are advocating a BRIC membership. The G–20, the other informal forum, is also assembled on the Ad hoc (pro bono) basis following the need of the G–7 to achieve a larger approval and support for its monetary (currency exchange accord) and financial (austerity) actions introduced in the aftermath of still unsettled financial crisis. Nevertheless, the BRIC and G-20 have not provided the Asian participating states either with the more leverage in the Bretton Woods institutions besides a burden sharing, or have they helped to tackle the indigenous Asian security problems. Appealing for the national pride, however, both informal gatherings may divert the necessary resources and attention to Asian states from their pressing domestic, pan-continental issues. Yet, besides the UN system machinery of the Geneva-based Disarmament committee, the UN Security Council, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons – OPCW and International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA (or CTBTO), even the ASEAN Asians (as the most multilateralized Asians) have no suitable standing forum to tackle and solve their security issues. An organization similar to the Council of Europe or the OSCE is still far from emerging on Asian soil. Our history warns. Nevertheless, it also provides a hope: Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā The pre-CSCE (pre-Helsinki) Europe was indeed a dangerous place to live in. The sharp geopolitical and ideological default line was passing through the very heart of Europe, cutting it into halves. The southern Europe was practically sealed off by notorious dictatorships; in Greece (Colonel Junta), Spain (Franco) and Portugal (Salazar), with Turkey witnessing several of its governments toppled by the secular and omnipotent military establishment, with inverted Albania and a (non-Europe minded) non-allied, Tito’s Yugoslavia. Two powerful instruments of the US military presence (NATO) and of the Soviets (Warsaw pact) in Europe were keeping huge standing armies, enormous stockpiles of conventional as well as the ABC weaponry and delivery systems, practically next to each other. By far and large, European borders were not mutually recognized. Essentially, the west rejected to even recognize many of the Eastern European, Soviet dominated/installed governments. Territorial disputes unresolved Currently in Asia, there is hardly a single state which has no territorial dispute within its neighborhood. From the Middle East, Caspian and Central Asia, Indian sub-continent, mainland Indochina or Archipelago SEA, Tibet, South China Sea and the Far East, many countries are suffering numerous green and blue border disputes. The South China Sea solely counts for over a dozen territorial disputes – in which mostly China presses peripheries to break free from the long-lasting encirclement. These moves are often interpreted by the neighbors as dangerous assertiveness. On the top of that Sea resides a huge economy and insular territory in a legal limbo – Taiwan, which waits for a time when the pan-Asian and intl. agreement on how many Chinas Asia should have, gains a wide and lasting consensus. Unsolved territorial issues, sporadic irredentism, conventional armament, nuclear ambitions, conflicts over exploitation of and access to the marine biota, other natural resources including fresh water access and supply are posing enormous stress on external security, safety and stability in Asia. Additional stress comes from the newly emerging environmental concerns, that are representing nearly absolute security threats, not only to the tiny Pacific nation of Tuvalu[6], but also to the Maldives, Bangladesh, Cambodia, parts of Thailand, of Indonesia, of Kazakhstan and of the Philippines, etc[7]. All this combined with uneven economic and demographic dynamics[8] of the continent are portraying Asia as a real powder keg. It is absolutely inappropriate to compare the size of Asia and Europe – the latter being rather an extension of a huge Asian continental landmass, a sort of western Asian peninsula – but the interstate maneuvering space is comparable. Yet, the space between the major powers of post-Napoleonic Europe was as equally narrow for any maneuver as is the space today for any security maneuver of Japan, China, India, Pakistan, Iran and the like. Let us also take a brief look at the peculiarities of the nuclear constellations in Asia. Following the historic analogies; it echoes the age of the American nuclear monopoly and the years of Russia’s desperation to achieve the parity. Besides holding huge stockpiles of conventional weaponry and numerous standing armies, Asia is a home of four (plus peripheral Russia and Israel) of the nine known nuclear powers (declared and undeclared). Only China and Russia are parties to the Non-proliferation Treaty – NPT. North Korea walked away in 2003, whereas India and Pakistan both confirmed nuclear powers declined to sign the Treaty. Asia is also the only continent on which nuclear weaponry has been deployed. [9] Cold War exiled in Asia As is well known, the peak of the Cold War was marked by the mega geopolitical and ideological confrontation of the two nuclear superpowers whose stockpiles by far outnumbered the stockpiles of all the other nuclear powers combined. However enigmatic, mysterious and incalculable to each other[10], the Americans and Soviets were on opposite sides of the globe, had no territorial disputes, and no record of direct armed conflicts. Insofar, the Asian nuclear constellation is additionally specific as each of the holders has a history of hostilities – armed frictions and confrontations over unsolved territorial disputes along the shared borders, all combined with the intensive and lasting ideological rivalries. The Soviet Union had bitter transborder armed frictions with China over the demarcation of its long land border. China has fought a war with India and has acquired a significant territorial gain. India has fought four mutually extortive wars with Pakistan over Kashmir and other disputed bordering regions. Finally, the Korean peninsula has witnessed the direct military confrontations of Japan, USSR, Chinese as well as the US on its very soil, and remains a split nation under a sharp ideological divide. On the western edge of the Eurasian continent, neither France, Britain, Russia nor the US had a (recent) history of direct armed conflicts. They do not even share land borders. Finally, only India and now post-Soviet Russia have a strict and full civilian control over its military and the nuclear deployment authorization. In the case of North Korea and China, it is in the hands of an unpredictable and non-transparent communist leadership – meaning, it resides outside democratic, governmental decision-making. In Pakistan, it is completely in the hands of a politically omnipresent military establishment. Pakistan has lived under a direct military rule for over half of its existence as an independent state. What eventually kept the US and the USSR from deploying nuclear weapons was the dangerous and costly struggle called: ā€œmutual destruction assuranceā€. Already by the late 1950s, both sides achieved parity in the number and type of nuclear warheads as well as in the number and precision of their delivery systems. Both sides produced enough warheads, delivery systems’ secret depots and launching sites to amply survive the first impact and to maintain a strong second-strike capability[11]. Once comprehending that neither the preventive nor pre-emptive nuclear strike would bring a decisive victory but would actually trigger the final global nuclear holocaust and ensure total mutual destruction, the Americans and the Soviets have achieved a fear–equilibrium through the hazardous deterrence. Thus, it was not an intended armament rush (for parity), but the non-intended Mutual Assurance Destruction – MAD – with its tranquilizing effect of nuclear weaponry, if possessed in sufficient quantities and impenetrable configurations – that brought a bizarre sort of pacifying stability between two confronting superpowers. Hence, MAD prevented nuclear war, but did not disarm the superpowers. As noted, the nuclear stockpiles in Asia are considerably modest[12]. The number of warheads, launching sites and delivery systems is not sufficient and sophisticated enough to offer the second strike capability. That fact seriously compromises stability and security: preventive or preemptive N–strike against a nuclear or non-nuclear state could be contemplated as decisive, especially in South Asia and on the Korean peninsula, not to mention the Middle East[13]. A general wisdom of geopolitics assumes the potentiality of threat by examining the degree of intensions and capability of belligerents. However, in Asia this theory does not necessarily hold the complete truth: Close geographic proximities of Asian nuclear powers means shorter flight time of warheads, which ultimately gives a very brief decision-making period to engaged adversaries. Besides a deliberate, a serious danger of an accidental nuclear war is therefore evident. Multilateral mechanisms One of the greatest thinkers and humanists of the 20th century, Erich Fromm wrote: ā€œā€¦man can only go forward by developing (his) reason, by finding a new harmonyā€¦ā€[14] There is certainly a long road from vision and wisdom to a clear political commitment and accorded action. However, once it is achieved, the operational tools are readily at disposal. The case of Helsinki Europe is very instructive. To be frank, it was the over-extension of the superpowers who contested one another all over the globe, which eventually brought them to the negotiation table. Importantly, it was also a constant, resolute call of the European public that alerted governments on both sides of the default line. Once the political considerations were settled, the technicalities gained momentum: there was – at first – mutual pan-European recognition of borders which tranquilized tensions literally overnight. Politico-military cooperation was situated in the so-called first Helsinki basket, which included the joint military inspections, exchange mechanisms, constant information flow, early warning instruments, confidence–building measures mechanism, and the standing panel of state representatives (the so-called Permanent Council). Further on, an important clearing house was situated in the so-called second basket – the forum that links the economic and environmental issues, items so pressing in Asia at the moment. Admittedly, the III OSCE Basket was a source of many controversies in the past years, mostly over the interpretation of mandates. However, the new wave of nationalism, often replacing the fading communism, the emotional charges and residual fears of the past, the huge ongoing formation of the middle class in Asia whose passions and affiliations will inevitably challenge established elites domestically and question their policies internationally, and a related search for a new social consensus – all that could be successfully tackled by some sort of an Asian III basket. Clearly, further socio-economic growth in Asia is impossible without the creation and mobilization of a strong middle class – a segment of society which when appearing anew on the socio-political horizon is traditionally very exposed and vulnerable to political misdeeds and disruptive shifts. At any rate, there are several OSCE observing nations from Asia[15]; from Thailand to Korea and Japan, with Indonesia, a nation that currently considers joining the forum. They are clearly benefiting from the participation[16]. Consequently, the largest continent should consider the creation of its own comprehensive pan-Asian multilateral mechanism. In doing so, it can surely rest on the vision and spirit of Helsinki. On the very institutional setup, Asia can closely revisit the well-envisioned SAARC and ambitiously empowered ASEAN[17] fora. By examining these two regional bodies, Asia can find and skillfully calibrate the appropriate balance between widening and deepening of the security mandate of such future multilateral organization – given the number of states as well as the gravity of the pressing socio-political, environmental and politico-military challenges. In the age of unprecedented success and the unparalleled prosperity of Asia, an indigenous multilateral pan-Asian arrangement presents itself as an opportunity. Contextualizing Hegel’s famous saying that ā€œfreedom is…an insight into necessityā€ let me close by stating that a need for the domesticated pan-Asian organization warns by its urgency too. Clearly, there is no emancipation of the continent; there is no Asian century, without the pan-Asian multilateral setting. ——– About the authorĀ Prof. Anis H. Bajrektarevic, Chairman Intl. Law & Global Pol. Studies (authored 6 books on geopolitics, technology, security and energy) Vienna, 18 May 2018. anis@bajrektarevic.eu   References: Bajrektarevic, Anis, ā€œVerticalization of Historical Experiences: Europe’s and Asia’s Security Structures – Structural Similarities and Differencesā€, Crossroads, The Mac Foreign Policy Journal, Skopje (Vol. I Nr. 4) 2007 Bajrektarevic, Anis, ā€œInstitutionalization of Historical Experiences: Europe and Asia – Same Quest, Different Results, Common Futuresā€, Worldviews and the Future of Human Civilization, (University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, November 2008) Malaysia (2008) Bajrektarevic, Anis, ā€œDestiny Shared: Our Common Futures – Human Capital beyond 2020ā€, the 5th Global Tech Leaders Symposium , Singapore-Shanghai March 2005 (2005) Bajrektarevic, Anis, ā€œStructural Differences in Security Structures of Europe and Asia – Possible Conflicting Cause in the SEA Theaterā€, The 4th Viennese conference on SEA, SEAS Vienna June 2009 (2009) Duroselle, J.B., ā€œHistoire Diplomatique – Ɖtudes Politiques, Ɖconomiques et Socialesā€, Dalloz Printing Paris (first published 1957), 1978 Friedman, George, ā€œThe Next 100 Yearsā€, Anchor Books/Random House NY (2009) Fromm, Erich, ā€œThe Art of Lovingā€, Perennial Classics, (page: 76) (1956) Hegel, G.W.F., PhƤnomenologie des Geistes (The Phenomenology of Mind, 1807), Oxford University Press, 1977 (page: 25 VII) Mahbubani, Kishore, ā€œThe New Asian Hemisphereā€, Public Affairs, Perseus Books Group (page: 44-45) (2008) Sagan, S.D. and Waltz, K.N., ā€œThe Spread of Nuclear Weapons: A Debate Renewedā€, (page: 112) (2003)   ABSTRACT: Following the famous saying allegedly spelled by Kissinger: ā€œEurope? Give me a name and a phone number!ā€ (when – back in early 1970s – urged by President Nixon to inform Europeans on the particular US policy action), the author is trying to examine how close is Asia to have its own telephone number. By contrasting and comparing genesis of multilateral security structures in Europe with those currently existing in Asia, and by listing some of the most pressing security challenges in Asia, this article offers several policy incentives why the largest world’s continent must consider creation of the comprehensive pan-Asian institution. Prevailing security structures in Asia are bilateral and mostly asymmetric while Europe enjoys multilateral, balanced and symmetric setups (American and African continents too). Author goes as far as to claim that irrespective to the impressive economic growth, no Asian century will emerge without creation of such an institution. [1] Analyzing the Sino-Soviet and post-Soviet-Sino relations tempts me to compare it with the Antic Roman Empire. The monolithic block has entered its fragmentation on a seemingly rhetoric, clerical question – who would give the exclusive interpretation of the holy text: Rome or Constantinople. Clearly, the one who holds the monopoly on the interpretation has the ideological grip, which can easily be translated into a strategic advantage. It was Moscow insisting that the Soviet type of communism was the only true and authentic communism. A great schism put to an end the lasting theological but also geopolitical conflict in the antique Roman theatre. The Sino-Soviet schism culminated with the ideological and geopolitical emancipation of China, especially after the Nixon recognition of Beijing China. Besides the ideological cleavages, the socio-economic and political model of the Roman Empire was heavily contested from the 3rd century onwards. The Western Roman Empire rigidly persisted to any structural change, unable to adapt. It eroded and soon thereafter vanished from the political map. The Eastern Empire successfully reformed and Byzantium endured as a viable socio-economic and political model for another 1,000 years. Feeling the need for an urgent reshape of the declining communist system, both leaders Gorbachev and Deng Xiaoping contemplated reforms. Gorbachev eventually fractured the Soviet Union with glasnost and perestroika. Deng managed China successfully. Brave, accurate and important argumentation comes from diplomat and prolific author Kishore Mahbubani (The New Asian Hemisphere, 2008, page 44-45). Mahbubani claims that Gorbachev handed over the Soviet empire and got nothing in return, while Deng understood ā€œthe real success of Western strength and power … China did not allow the students protesting in Tiananmen Squareā€. Consequently, Deng drew a sharp and decisive line to avoid the fate of Russia, and allowed only perestroika. China has survived, even scoring the unprecedented prosperity in only the last two decades. Russia has suffered a steep decline in the aftermath of the loss of its historic empire, including the high suicide and crime rates as well as the severe alcohol problems. Gorbachev himself moved to the US, and one vodka brand labels his name. [2] The membership might be extended in the future to East Timor and Papua New Guinea. [3] Symbolic or not, the ASEAN HQ is located less than 80 miles away from the place of the historical, the NAM–precursor, the Asian–African Conference of Bandung 1955. [4] Comparisons pose an inaccuracy risks as history often finds a way to repeat itself, but optimism finally prevails. Tentatively, we can situate the ASEAN today, where the pre-Maastricht EU was between the Merge Treaty and the Single European Act. [5] The acronym was originally coined by Jim O’Neill, a chief global economist of Goldman Sachs, in his 2001 document report: ā€œBuilding Better Global Economic BRICsā€. This document was elaborating on countries which may provide the West with the socially, economically and politically cheap primary commodities and undemanding labor force, finally suggesting to the West to balance such trade by exporting its high-prized final products in return. The paper did not foresee either creation of any BRIC grouping or the nomadic change of venue places of its periodic meetings. O’Neill initially tipped Brazil, Russia, India and China, although at recent meetings South Africa was invited (BRICS) with the pending Indonesia (BRIICS). [6] Tuvalu, a country composed of low-laying atoll islands, faces an imminent complete loss of state territory. This event would mark a precedent in the theory of intl. law – that one country suffers a complete geographic loss of its territory. [7] Detailed environmental impact risk assessments including the no-go zones are available in the CRESTA reports. The CRESTA Organization is powered by the Swiss RE as a consortium of the leading insurance and reinsurance companies. [8] The intriguing intellectual debate is currently heating up the western world. Issues are fundamental: Why is science turned into religion? Practiced economy is based on the over 200-years old liberal theory of Adam Smith and over 300-years old philosophy of Hobbes and Locke – basically, frozen and rigidly canonized into a dogmatic exegesis. Scientific debate is replaced by a blind obedience. Why is religion turned into political ideology? Religious texts are misinterpreted and ideologically misused in Europe, ME, Asia, Americas and Africa. Why is the secular or religious ethics turned from the bio-centric comprehension into the anthropocentric environmental ignorance? The resonance of these vital debates is gradually reaching Asian elites. No one can yet predict the range and scope of their responses, internally or externally. One is certain; Asia understood that the global (economic) integration can not be a substitute for any viable development strategy. Globalization, as experienced in Asia and observed elsewhere, did not offer a shortcut to development, even less to social cohesion, environmental needs, domestic employment, educational uplift of the middle class and general public health. [9] ā€œObama, the first seating American president to visit Laos, recalled that the US has dropped more than 2 million tons of bombs on this country during the heights of the Vietnam war – more than it dropped on Germany and Japan combined during the WWII. That made Laos, per capita, the most heavily bombed country in human history. ā€˜Countless civilian were killed… especially innocent men, women children. Even now, many Americans were unaware of their country’s deadly legacy here’ – the president said in Vientiane in 2016.ā€ It took a good 40 years to the US press to fairly report on it, too. /Landler, M. (2016), Obama seeks to Heal scars of War in Laos, International New York Times, September 07, 2016, (page 6)/ [10] The Soviet Union was enveloped in secrecy, a political culture, eminent in many large countries, which the Soviets inherited from the Tsarist Russia and further enhanced – a feature that puzzled Americans. It was the US cacophony of open, nearly exhibitionistic policy debates that puzzled Russians – and made both sides unable to predict the moves of the other one. The Soviets were confused by the omnipresence of overt political debate in the US, and the Americans were confused by the absence of any political debate in the USSR. Americans well knew that the real power resided outside the government, in the Soviet Politburo. Still, it was like a black-box – to use a vivid Kissinger allegory, things were coming in and getting out, but nobody figured out what was happening inside. Once the particular decision had been taken, the Soviets implemented it persistently in a heavy-handed and rigid way. Usually, the policy alternation/adjustment was not coming before the personal changes at the top of the SU Politburo – events happening so seldom. On the other hand, the Soviets were confused by the equidistant constellation of the US executive, legislative and judicial branches – for the Soviet taste, too often changed, the chaotic setup of dozens of intelligence and other enforcement agencies, the role of the media and the public, and the influential lobby groups that crosscut the US bipartisanism – all which participated in the decision prep and making process. Even when brokered, the US actions were often altered or replaced in zigzagging turns. The US was unable to grasp where the Communist Party ended and the USSR government started. By the same token, the Soviets were unable to figure out where the corporate America ended and the US government started. Paradoxically enough, the political culture of one prevented it from comprehending and predicting the actions of the other one. What was the logical way for one was absolutely unthinkable and illogical for the other. [11] As Waltz rightfully concludes: ā€œConventional weapons put a premium on striking first to gain the initial advantage and set the course of the war. Nuclear weapons eliminate this premium. The initial advantage is insignificantā€¦ā€ā€¦ due to the second strike capability of both belligerents. (ā€˜The Spread of Nuclear Weapons: A Debate Renewed’ by Scott D. Sagan and Kenneth N Waltz, 2003, p. 112). [12] It is assumed that Pakistan has as few as 20 combat/launching ready fission warheads, India is believed to have some 60, and Korea (if any, not more than) 2-3 only. Even China, considered as the senior nuclear state, has not more than 20 ICBM. [13] Israel as a non-declared nuclear power is believed to have as many as 200 low-powered fission nuclear bombs. A half of it is deliverable by the mid-range missile Jericho II, planes and mobile (hide and relocate) launchers (including the recently delivered, nuclear war-head capable German submarines). Iran successfully tested the precision of its mid-range missile and keeps ambitiously working on the long-range generation of missiles. At the same time, Iran may well have acquired some vital dual-use (so far, peaceful purpose) nuclear technologies. There is a seed of nuclear ambition all over the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia and Turkey as the least shy ones. [14] ā€œThe Art of Lovingā€, Erich Fromm, 1956, page 76. Fromm wrote it at about the time of the Bandung conference. [15] The so-called OSCE–Asian Partners for Cooperation are: Japan (1992), Korea (1994), Thailand (2000), Afghanistan (2003), Mongolia (2004) and Australia (2009). Within the OSCE quarters, particularly Thailand and Japan enjoy a reputation of being very active. [16] It is likely to expect that five other ASEAN countries, residentially represented in Vienna, may formalize their relation with OSCE in a due time. The same move could be followed by the Secretariats of both SAARC and ASEAN. [17] In Europe and in Asia – even when being at the HQ in Jakarta, I am often asked to clarify my (overly) optimistic views on the ASEAN future prospects. The ASEAN as well as the EU simply have no alternative but to survive and turn successful, although currently suffering many deficiencies and being far from optimized multilateral mechanisms. Any alternative to the EU is a grand accommodation of either France or Germany with Russia – meaning a return to Europe of the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries – namely, perpetual wars and destructions. Any alternative to the ASEAN would be an absorptive accommodation of particular ASEAN member states to either Japan or China or India – meaning fewer large blocks on a dangerous collision course. Thus, paradoxically enough in cases of both the EU and of ASEAN, it is not (only) the inner capacitation but the external constellations that make me optimistic about their respective success.

International Kotinos award for Diplomat Magazine

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                            Kotinos International Award inĀ collaboration with theĀ United Nations International Charitable Organization and the World Sand FoundationĀ was given out for theĀ first time in the Middle East, indeed in the Emirate of Dubai, UAE.Ā 
Ā 
Kotinos International AwardĀ considered one of the most prestigious awards internationally and comes original from Greece.Ā  It’s a rewarding program for excellence in the fields ofĀ businesses,Ā and personalities that successful in their own fields. The award was held in Dubai inĀ 2018.Ā H.E. Dr. Rasha Feidi opened the award ceremony by a speechĀ regardingĀ the power of rewarding, followed by an allocution ofĀ H.E DrĀ  Efi Papastylou speakingĀ about combining philanthropyĀ and businesses.Ā At the end H.E.Ā Ambassador Ismael Abu Zaid discussed the subject about humanity and the meaning of giving to the needy.
H.H. Sheikh Mohammed bin Maktoum Al Maktoum, President of the Chess Union, and Eng. Mahmoud Al BoraeiĀ presented the awards to the winners alongside H.E Dr Rasha Feidi, H.E. Dr Efi Papastylou and H.E. Ambassador Ismael Abu Zaid.
The first award was given to Sheikha Fatma bint Hasher binĀ Dalmouk for her “Centre of Hands of Giving”Ā as best charity organisation in UAE , HRH Princess Nejla bint Asem of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan as best jewelry designer 2018, HRHĀ  Princess Sophie ofĀ Romania as best photographer for 2018, H.E. Henri Estramant as best diplomatic personality for 2018 in connection to Diplomat Magazine, Ā Mahmoud Al Boraei award of Excellence in Creative Ideas in Real Estate 2018,Ā  Artist Suzan Najim AldeenĀ was granted theĀ Award of Excellence in Community Philanthropic & Artistic Contributions , Sharjah International Holistic Health Centre as best holistic health Centre for 2018, Dr Rola Mashni award of Excellence in Aesthetic Medicine, Dr Roona Rabah as best dentist 2018 , Dr Mahra Lutfi award of Excellence in stem cells research in UAE, Dr Zahra RefaeiĀ  as best plastic surgeon for 2018,Ā  ArchitectĀ Tarek Ibrahim award of Excellence in Architecture 2018, Gulnora Mukhedinova as best new fashion designer for 2018, VerVie Cosmetic brand as best organic cosmetics in the Middle East, Reena Abdulrahim as best makeup artist 2018, Eng. Fares Saeed asĀ  Best Sustainable Project in Real Estate, Mr. Osama Alwadeya Award of Excellence in Management Consultancy 2018,Ā Mr. Rami HachemĀ received theĀ Award of Excellence in commercial real Estate 2018, Bianca Events as best event management for 2018.
For further information: http://phil-int.org/princess-sophie-from-romania-receives-the-international-kotinos-prize/

Israeli Flavours

The Embassy of Israel in The Hague, Diplomat Magazine and Crowne Plaza will feature Israeli Flavours from June 7 to June 9. This event will showcase Israeli cuisine by Head-Chef Jonathan Borowitz. He said on choosing to represent Israeli food during the festival: ā€œI decided to take part in the food festival since against all reasonable odds; the Israeli culinary scene is experiencing a tremendous era. After 70 years of Israel, we, Israeli chefs and foodies, are finally starting to see our voice and our ideas spread and heard in kitchens across the world. The influx of immigrants which shaped this country brought with it an animated palate of flavors and scents so for me as a cook I have so much to work with. Food is also a bridge, natural link between people, and I find it a part of my job description, to bring people togetherā€.
Chef Jonathan Borowitz.
His Excellency Aviv Shir-On, Ambassador of IsraelĀ will host the event together with the popular Amit Aaronsohn, from Israel’s Food News. ā€œFor the last ten years I have been combining my love for the culinary world and my profession as a journalist. I have gained extensive experience in all types of media – Television, Radio and Print – both as an editor and a reporter. I was the first TV journalist in Israel to present a weekly news update dedicated entirely to the culinary world and later also a daily culinary news edition – ā€œIsrael’s Food Newsā€.
Amit Aaronsohn, Israel’s Food News.
I also write a weekly restaurant review column in Jerusalem and operate a widely popular Facebook page and Instagram accounts. I have a master degree (MA) in Food, Culture and Communication from the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo, Italy (UNISG, Also known as the ā€œSlow Foodā€ University). I consider myself a culinary adventurer – both in the restaurant world, by constantly searching for new establishments and flavors, and in the privacy of my kitchen, by documenting classic recipes and combining them with new techniques and ingredients.ā€ Diplomat Magazine & Crowne Plaza partnered with embassies to present the best cuisine of the world during all 2018 now from Thursday, June 7thĀ  to June 9th starting at 6:30 pm enjoy the absolute wonderful taste of Israel.

Italy celebrates the 72nd anniversary of the Republic: ā€œUnited for our countryā€

Ā H.E. Andrea Perugini, Ambassador of Italy Ā during his speech on Il Giorno della Republica at Zuiderstrandtheater. By Guido Lanfranchi. On May 29th, the Embassy of Italy in The Hague decided to celebrate the 72nd anniversary of the Italian Republic together with the diplomatic community of the Netherlands. An incredible amount of guests accepted the invitation of the Ambassador H.E. Andrea Perugini, and convened at the Zuiderstrandtheater to enjoy typical Italian music and food. For additional Robert Huiberts’s pictures, please open the following link: https://www.flickr.com/photos/121611753@N07/albums/72157667631511517
The Fanfara dei Bersaglieri, Sezione di Altamura.
On June 2nd, 1946, in the aftermath of World War II, the Italian people were faced with an historical decision: whether to continue to be ruled by the King Umberto II, or to transition towards a republican form of government. Slightly more than half of the Italian voters decided to opt for the second option, and in June 1946 the Republic of Italy was born. Today, 72 years afterward, while political forces dialogue in order to set up a new government, Italy celebrates the 72nd anniversary of the Republic, and it decided to do so under the motto ā€œUnited for our country.ā€
Ambassador Perugini and Mariska Perugini-Visser, Brigade General, Danilo Morando, Defense AttachƩ, Navy and Air Force AttachƩ and spouse, Tarek Chazli, Advisor and spouse.
In The Hague, the Ambassador H.E. Mr. Andrea Perugini and the Italian Embassy organized a marvelous event in order to celebrate this anniversary, inviting the diplomatic community and the Italian community in the Netherlands to convene at the Zuiderstrantheater in Scheveningen, The Hague. A tremendous amount of guests answered to the call, and started arriving at the theater in the late afternoon of May 29th. Ambassador Perugini, together with Ms. Mariska Perugini-Visser and several members of the Embassy’s staff, stood at the entry and welcomed all the guests, who took place in the reception room.
Mr. Lelio Gavazza, Executive President Bvlgari and his team during the Italian National Day at Zuiderstrandtheater.
Soon, the guests were invited to enter the theater, in order to enjoy the concert given by the Fanfara dei Bersaglieri, Sezione di Altamura. The Ambassador addressed the guests, reminding them of the importance of this anniversary for Italy. H.E. Mr. Perugini praised the efforts of the Italian people to uphold the values of the Constitution, in spite of any challenges. He also stressed the importance of the role of Italy in sustaining the European Union, ā€œan imperative choiceā€ given that the EU ā€œbrought to the continent peace and stability,ā€ which are not to be given for granted. Moreover, the Ambassador praised the incredibly positive bilateral relation between Italy and the Netherlands, of which next year will be the 115th anniversary.
Colonel Stefano dell’Aquila, military attachĆ©, Colonel Anna Maria Mistretta, police attachĆ© and H.E. Alireza Jahangiri, Ambassador of Iran.
The focus moved then from politics to music, as the Ambassador introduced the Fanfara Bersaglieri di Altamura, founded 15 years ago by director Michele Castellano. As the Ambassador welcomed the soldiers-musicians on the stage, he pointed at the special weapons that the Bersaglieri held in their hands: musical instruments. Hopefully, in the future, ā€œall armies in the world should do the same,ā€ the Ambassador said.
Maestro Daniele Difato conducting the Bersaglieri at the Zuiderstrandtheater.
Thanking the guests, the theater, the Italian Embassy, and all the sponsors, the Ambassador officially gave the start to the concert. The Fanfara dei Bersaglieri kicked off the performance with the Italian and the Dutch national anthems. Then, they performed two typical songs of the Italian Bersaglieri, Alla fronte il cappello piumato (The feathered hat on the forehead) and Reggimento di papĆ  (Daddy’s regiment), as well as Forse, forse, forse (Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps), a popular song by the Cuban songwriter Osvaldo FarrĆØs. Maestro Daniele Difato then took the direction stage, and guided the Bersaglieri through the performance of two medleys, one of Ennio Morricone’s pieces, and another of classical music pieces. When Michele Castellano took again the lead, the Bersaglieri performed two famous pieces from Italy (Con te partirò) and the United States (The House of the Rising Sun), before closing the concert with typical Bersaglieri’s songs, such as Bersaglieresca, La ricciolina, and Flik Flok.
Michele Castellano leading the Bersaglieri.
Towards the end of the concert, all the organizations involved decided to show their mutual gratitude. The Italian Embassy in The Hague gifted the Bersaglieri and Maestro Difato with white roses for each musician. In turn, Mr. Giacomo Casanova, President of the Associazione Nazionale Bersaglieri Sezione di Altamura, offered gifts of gratitude to H.E. Mr. Perugini, coming from both his association and the Provincial Government of Bari. Finally, the tradition of the Bersaglieri involved one last ceremony. When a feather spontaneously falls from the hat of a Bersagliere, the fallen feather should be given to a lady in the room, together with a gentleman’s kiss, as a symbol of a gift to all the ladies in the room. The Bersaglieri chose to give the feather to Ms. Perugini-Visser, who received it among the applause of the audience.
H.E. Hector Horacio Salvador, Ambassador of Argentina and Jane Berger de Salvador, H.E. Maria Teresa de Jesus Infante Caffi, Ambassador of Chile, Tatiana Delvalle, H.E. Willys Delvalle, Ambassador of Panama and Mirko Zambelli, ChargĆ© d’affaires, Switzerland.
As Italy is famous worldwide for its food, the Italian Embassy had a hard job in meeting the expectations of its guests with the reception that followed the concert. Nevertheless, they definitely succeeded in doing so. As the guests exited the concert hall, they found a number of different stands organized by Italian restaurants coming from all over the Netherlands. These stands offered a variety of typical Italian dishes, such as orecchiette, panzerotti, cannoli, prosciutto di Parma, as well as many innovative recipes by the Italian chefs living in Holland, all accompanied by wine and other drinks. The guests remained for a long time in the Zuiderstrantheater, and enjoyed the conversations among each other while tasting the Italian flavors.  

Japan accredits mission to NATO

Jens Stoltenberg & Shinzo Abe – Picture by nato.int. Thursday, 24 May 2018, Brussels:Ā The North Atlantic Council agreedĀ to accept Japan’s behest to accreditĀ its Embassy to the Kingdom of Belgium as its mission fully accreditedĀ to NATO. The Ambassador of Japan to Belgium, H.E. Hajime Hayashi, thusĀ  shallĀ become the firstĀ Head of the Mission of Japan to NATO. Until nowĀ he had merely been the Nipponese Government’s Representative to NATO without the status of a fully accredited ambassador.

In 2011, the AllianceĀ decided to invite all partner nations to establish missions to NATO. Since then more than two dozen partners have done so, in order to further deepen ties with the Alliance.

Japan is NATO’s longest-standing partner outside Europe, with deepening cooperation since the early 1990s. Over the years, the Alliance and Japan have worked together to stabilize Afghanistan, to counter piracy off the coast of Somalia, and to strengthen partners like Georgia, Ukraine, Moldova, and Jordan.

Today, Japan has liaison officers at NATO, including at theĀ Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe in Belgium, and Maritime Command in the United Kingdom. Japan also contributes a staff officer in support of the Alliance’s work on Women, Peace and Security.

For further information: Embassy of Japan to Belgium, Mission to NATO (HE Ambassador Hajime Hayashi): http://www.be.emb-japan.go.jp/itprtop_en/index.html  

Current developments on the Korean peninsula

Mr. Michel Kerres, NRC newspaper, Mr. Sico van der Meer, Research Fellow, Clingendael Institute, Mr. Remco Breuker, Professor of Korean Studies at Leiden University and Director Leiden Asia Centre,Ā  H.E. Lee Yun Young, Ambassador of the Republic of Korea, Dr. Jun Bong-Geun, Advisor on the Inter Korean Summit 2018, Republic of Korea and Mr. Peter Potman, Director Asia and Oceania, Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs. By Roy Lie Atjam. Current developments on the Korean peninsula- Such was a theme of a seminar co-hosted by Leiden Asia Centre, the Embassy of the Republic of Korea, and the Clingendael Institute. The seminar was held at Societeit De Witte The Hague on Tuesday 22nd May 2018.
Mr. Sico van der Meer, Research Fellow, the Clingendael Institute.
  The focus of the seminar was on providing academics, diplomats, media, the general public and others with some insight into the recent developments on the Korean peninsula. Furthermore, a summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump is hopefully going to take place in Singapore on 12 June 2018.
Current developments on the Korean peninsula.
  Speakers at the seminar: Ā H.E. Lee Yun Young, Ambassador of the Republic of KoreaĀ in the Netherlands Mr. Remco Breuker, Professor of Korean Studies at Leiden University andĀ Director Leiden Asia Centre The Korean Peninsula after the Inter- Korean Summit 2018’ Dr. Jun Bong-Geun, Advisor on the Inter Korean Summit 2018, Republic of Korea What role for the European Union on the Korean Peninsula?’ Mr. Sico van der Meer, Research Fellow, the Clingendael Institute The Netherlands and the Korean Peninsula: Supportive Diplomacy’ Mr. Peter Potman, Director Asia and Oceania, Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Michel Kerres, during Q&A session, at the table Remco Breuker and Peter Potman.
The organizers of the seminar were unaware that President of the USA Donald Trump was about to pull out of the North Korea Summit with Kim Jong-un on that day. Now with the ongoing summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump, on June 12 in Singapore, details of the seminar are on hold.    

ICC the latest on Al Bashir case

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Al Bashir case: ICC Appeals Chamber invites submissions from Sudan and Mr Al Bashir on legal questions raised by Jordan On 25 May 2018, the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ā€œICCā€ or ā€œCourtā€)Ā invited submissions, by 16 July 2018, from the competent authorities of the Republic of Sudan and Mr Omar Hassan Ahmad Al Bashir on the legal questions raised by the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan (ā€œJordanā€) in its appeal pending before the Appeals Chamber. Jordan’s appeal against Pre-Trial Chamber II’s decision of 11 December 2017 concerns a finding that Jordan, a State Party to the Rome Statute since 2002, had failed to comply with its obligations under the statute by not executing the Court’s request for Mr Al Bashir’s arrest and surrender to the Court while he was on Jordanian territory attending the League of Arab States’ Summit on 29 March 2017. The Pre-Trial Chamber had decided to refer the matter of Jordan’s non-compliance to the Assembly of States Parties and the United Nations Security Council. On 12 March 2018, Jordan appealed this decision. This will be the first time that the Appeals Chamber will consider the matter of a referral of a State Party’s non-compliance to the Assembly of States Parties and the United Nations Security Council. The Appeals Chamber had, on 29 March 2018, invited observations from the United Nations and Regional Organisations (specifically the African Union, the League of Arab States and the Organization of American States), ICC States Parties and Professors of International Law on legal questions raised by Jordan. Order inviting submissions

German-Finnish meeting at Helsinki

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Heiko Maas and the XII President of Finland, Sauli Niinistƶ – Picture by Matti Porre, Tasavallan presidentin kanslia.
German-Finnish meetingĀ at HelsinkiĀ 
Friday, 25 May 2018,Ā Helsinki, Republic of Finland: A foreign affairs meetingĀ was held in Finland at the invitation of the Finnish chief of diplomacy, Timo Soini, for his colleagueĀ hailing from Germany, Heiko Maas. Albeit their counterparts from Sweden and Denmark were due to partake their participation was postponed for a later date to be announced. In fact, the axis bringing together Germany and the Nordic EU-countries has not metĀ since 2016 during a summitĀ held at Berlin. Focus of the bilateral Finnish-German discussions were the common security concerns in the Baltic region but likewise the current affairs of the Iran deal with the EU, the war in Syria, the transatlantic relations as well as the further developmentĀ of foreign and security policy after Brexit. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas was likewiseĀ received byĀ Finland’s President Sauli Niinistƶ for a private audience. Thereafter he held an allocution at Finlandia-Hall in the framework of the celebrations to mark the hundredth anniversary since the setting-up of the Finnish Foreign Ministry. For further information: Embassy of Finland to Germany (Ritva Koukku-Ronde):Ā http://finnland.de/public/default.aspx?contentid=375391&nodeid=37052&culture=de-DE Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (HE Minister Timo Soini):Ā http://formin.finland.fi/public/default.aspx?culture=en-US&contentlan=2