Friday, 29 July 2022

Europe Is Faking Solidarity, and Putin Knows It

Europe Is Faking Solidarity, and Putin Knows It

Opinion

Andreas Kluth
Andreas Kluth -

The 27 national leaders of the European Union love to extol the solidarity that binds their countries together. Even the words signal destiny. “Union” comes via French from the Latin unus for “one,” and solidarity from solidus for “firm, whole and undivided.” Like a good marriage, the bloc is meant to be a solidarity union. In reality, it is no such thing, and Europe’s enemies know it. That includes Russian President Vladimir Putin and autocrats in China and afield. The EU’s biggest problem is the inability to see threats, responsibilities and sacrifices as shared. Right now, the nail-biting is about Putin — both his physical warfare against Ukraine and his hybrid warfare against the EU. His weapon of choice is energy. Putin spent two decades making the EU vulnerable — that is, dependent on Russian natural gas and other hydrocarbons — by building a network of pipelines to gullible nations such as Germany. This year, following his invasion of Ukraine in February, he’s cocked these weapons and put his finger on the trigger. In early summer, he throttled the gas flowing through Nord Stream 1, a big pipeline from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea, to 60% of its capacity. This week, he further reduced that to 20%. He could turn it down more, or off. As a result, Europe’s storage tanks will be emptier than they should be going into winter. Putin is threatening to make Europeans shiver in unheated homes, and to force swathes of Europe’s industry to shut down. As in any of its crises, the question for the EU is what to do about this mess. So the countries most affected — led by Germany in this case — are invoking that famous sense of solidarity. Last week, the European Commission proposed that the entire bloc voluntarily reduce its gas consumption by 15%, with mandatory cuts to follow if necessary. The reaction was inevitable, understandable — and hardly reassuring. Spain, Portugal, Italy, Greece and several other member states don’t rely on Russian gas, and therefore aren’t really at much risk. Moreover, any gas savings they foist on their own companies and consumers wouldn’t help Germans, because there are no pipelines to carry spare gas from Madrid or Malta, say, to Bavaria or Berlin. So why should they say “yes” to coerced rationing? And besides, doesn’t Germany bear responsibility? Many Europeans spent years warning Berlin against building two Baltic pipelines to Russia, and against simultaneously exiting nuclear power. Smugly, Germany ignored its partners and pooh-poohed the threat emanating from the Kremlin. Germans asking Spaniards to take shorter showers now seems a bit rich. And hypocritical. A decade ago, during the euro crisis, the roles were reversed. Financial turmoil that had started in the US caused selloffs in the debt securities of member states like Greece, Spain and Portugal — even threatening an involuntary Grexit. But when these countries asked for solidarity from Germany and other northern countries, they instead got lectures on the evils of their profligacy for having borrowed too much in the first place. The EU was no more enthusiastic about showing solidarity in 2015-16, when more than a million refugees crossed from Turkey to Greece, itself still reeling from the euro crisis. Some member states — including Germany — offered help, but others — led by Poland and Hungary — balked. Ditto in 2020, when SARS-CoV-2 showed up. The instinctive reflex of member states was to slam their borders shut — even for masks and medical gear — turning the EU’s vaunted “single market” into a travesty. Europeans then came perilously close to fighting over vaccines. Eventually, Brussels got its act together, but Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, admitted that “we caught a glimpse of the abyss” — that is, an unraveling of the EU. And what if the invaders were Russian soldiers instead of viruses? Given the EU’s track record, member states on the front line will be forgiven for finding talk about a “European Army” risible. Would the Dutch, Italians and Germans send their sons and daughters to die defending Estonians, Latvians or Poles? Yes, is the answer. But that’s because they’re in NATO and backed by the US, not because they’re in the EU and high on solidarity. The major powers of the world understand this weakness of the EU. Europe’s friends in Washington worry about it; its foes in Moscow and Beijing try to exploit it. To add to the EU’s internal strife, Turkey and Belarus, for example, have tried to concoct renewed refugee crises. European leaders are just as aware, and therefore want to de-emphasize the vulnerability. Take German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. In praising Europe’s “unity,” he doth protest too much. Betraying how little he thinks there is of it, he immediately segues to demanding the end of national vetoes and “individual member states egotistically blocking European decisions.” He had Hungary in mind just then, but others feel that way about Germany. As is their wont, the EU 27 this week settled their latest spat about gas savings in the usual way: They fudged and wangled a compromise. Gas will be saved — somewhere, somehow — but so many countries will have opt-outs, loopholes and exceptions that you’d need a magnifying glass to find the solidarity. Putin saw nothing in Brussels this week to make him nervous. Bloomberg



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3788011/andreas-kluth/europe-faking-solidarity-and-putin-knows-it

Saudi Crown Prince Meets with UNESCO Director-General

Saudi Crown Prince Meets with UNESCO Director-General

Gulf

Paris - Asharq Al-Awsat
The Crown Prince and Azoulay discussed Saudi cultural initiatives. SPA

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz met on Friday, at his residence in the French capital, with Director-General of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Audrey Azoulay, the Saudi Press Agency reported. During the meeting, they reviewed Saudi cultural initiatives and mutual cooperation with UNESCO, as well as ways of enhancing it, SPA said.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3788006/saudi-crown-prince-meets-unesco-director-general

Spielberg Heads Starry Toronto Festival Line-up

Spielberg Heads Starry Toronto Festival Line-up

Entertainment

Asharq Al-Awsat
Steven Spielberg's eagerly awaited and deeply personal "The Fabelmans" will be among the hottest tickets during the Toronto International Film Festival Robyn Beck AFP/File

Steven Spielberg, Jennifer Lawrence and Harry Styles will bring their world premieres to Toronto, as North America's largest film festival signaled a return to full strength with the unveiling of a star-studded lineup Thursday. The Toronto International Film Festival, which bills itself as "the world's biggest public film festival" and has launched countless Oscar winners, will welcome back A-listers to glamorous red carpets and exclusive after-parties after two heavily scaled-back editions during the pandemic, AFP said. Spielberg's eagerly awaited and deeply personal "The Fabelmans" will be among the hottest tickets during the festival, which begins September 8. Based on the revered director's childhood in Arizona, exploring the family secrets of a young man with an early passion for filmmaking, the coming-of-age drama stars Michelle Williams, Paul Dano and Seth Rogen. Director Rian Johnson launches "Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery," a whodunit sequel from Netflix in which Daniel Craig's gentleman sleuth meets a new star-studded cast including Edward Norton, Ethan Hawke and Jada Pinkett Smith. Peter Farrelly, whose 2018 race drama "Green Book" began its path to Oscars glory at Toronto, will bring "The Greatest Beer Run Ever," another world premiere. Zac Efron plays a merchant seaman who travels to Vietnam in the 1960s to deliver a case of beer to his army buddies, alongside co-stars Bill Murray and Russell Crowe. TIFF is a key part of the fall festival lineup, along with Venice and Telluride, at which movies hoping to build early Oscars momentum typically hold lavish premieres. Toronto's annual People's Choice Award has become an increasingly accurate Oscars bellwether, predicting eventual best picture winners such as "Nomadland," which took home the Academy Award in 2021, and "Green Book." Last year, organizers held a reduced in-person event over Covid-19 fears, while a year earlier the festival took place almost entirely online. Stars expected to return to the Toronto red carpets this year include Oscar winners Jessica Chastain and Eddie Redmayne -- in "The Good Nurse" -- and pop mega-star Harry Styles, who plays a closeted 1950s cop in "My Policeman." Jennifer Lawrence stars in "Causeway," a drama about a solider suffering from a traumatic brain injury, while Viola Davis plays "The Woman King," and Nicolas Cage appears in "Butcher's Crossing." Ewan McGregor and Hawke will feature in the world premiere of "Raymond & Ray," produced by Alfonso Cuaron for Apple which -- fresh from its historic best picture win with "CODA" -- is also bringing a Sidney Poitier documentary produced by Oprah Winfrey. "Sidney" will feature Halle Berry, Morgan Freeman, Denzel Washington and Quincy Jones. Billy Eichner's "Bros" -- billed as the first gay rom-com from a major studio -- will have a splashy first showing, as will movie mogul Tyler Perry's "A Jazzman's Blues." Additionally the festival will play host to several major movies expected to premiere weeks earlier at other festivals, including Sam Mendes' "Empire of Light," Darren Aronofsky's "The Whale," and "Women Talking" starring Frances McDormand. TIFF runs from September 8-18.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3786461/spielberg-heads-starry-toronto-festival-line

Brazil's Lula Keeps Wide Lead over Incumbent Bolsonaro

Brazil's Lula Keeps Wide Lead over Incumbent Bolsonaro

World

Asharq Al-Awsat
Brazil's former president and presidential frontrunner Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva waves during an annual meeting of the Brazilian scientific community at the University of Brasilia, in Brasilia, Brazil, July 28, 2022. REUTERS/Adriano Machado

Former Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva maintains a wide lead over incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro ahead of the presidential election in October, according to a poll published Thursday. Forty-seven percent of those polled by Datafolha said they intend to support Lula, 76, in the first round, the same result as the poll conducted last month by the consulting firm, AFP said. Support for Bolsonaro, 67, only ticked up by one percentage point, to 29 percent, despite a large social spending package approved two weeks ago by the National Congress. But the results showed Bolsonaro had gained three percentage points among the poorest voters, and six among women. Center-left candidate Ciro Gomes came in third at a meager eight percent among those polled, and center-right candidate Simone Tebet had only two percent support. Political analyst Adriano Laureno said that the social measures announced by the government could help "reduce the gap" between Lula and Bolsonaro, but not sufficiently to turn the tides in the far-right president's favor. But Laureno warned this might prompt Bolsonaro to "intensify" his efforts to cast doubt on the country's electronic voting system, which he has claimed without evidence makes cheating easier. The poll consisted of interviews with 2,556 people between June 27 and 28.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3786311/brazils-lula-keeps-wide-lead-over-incumbent-bolsonaro

Thursday, 28 July 2022

Israeli Court Rules Against Evacuating West Bank Settlement

Israeli Court Rules Against Evacuating West Bank Settlement

Arab World

Asharq Al-Awsat
Right wing Israeli activists from the Nachala Settlement Movement erect a temporary structure as part of a protest calling for the establishment of new Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank, at Habima Square in Tel Aviv, July 12, 2022. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)

The Israeli Supreme Court has cleared the way for Jewish settlers of an outpost in the occupied West Bank to remain in their homes, overturning an earlier eviction order that determined the outpost had been built improperly on privately owned Palestinian land. In their decision, a panel of judges found that though the Mitzpe Kramim outpost was built on privately owned Palestinian land, it had been allocated to the settlers in “good faith” by the Israeli government. Therefor, the 40 Jewish families living there remain, the judges said, The Associated Press. Palestinians and human rights groups fear this could set a precedent for future disputes over Jewish settlements built on privately owned Palestinian land. Peace Now, an Israeli anti-settlement watchdog, called the ruling an “absurd decision.” According to the group, an estimated 150 unauthorized outposts dot the West Bank. Peace Now fears that Wednesday’s decision could open the floodgates for more similar rulings. “These outposts in the future might be recognized by Israeli law,” said Mauricio Lapchik, a Peace Now spokesman. “This is the biggest danger.” Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war and has built more than 130 authorized settlements there, many of which resemble small towns, with apartment blocks, shopping malls and industrial zones. The Palestinians want the West Bank to form the main part of their future state. While Israel differentiates between recognized settlements and unauthorized outposts, the international community overwhelmingly views all settlements as illegal and obstacles to peace. Israel refers to the West Bank by its biblical name, Judea and Samaria, and considers it the heartland of the Jewish people. It sees the West Bank as disputed territory and says its fate should be subject to negotiations. Israeli-Palestinian peace talks collapsed more than a decade ago. In 2018, the Jerusalem District Court issued a decision legalizing Mitzpe Kramim, saying the settlers who purchased the land acted in “good faith” and were unaware they were building on privately owned Palestinian property. That ruling was appealed to Israel’s Supreme Court, which ordered residents of Mitze Kramim to be evacuated. Wednesday’s decision by a larger panel allows settlers to remain there.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3786306/israeli-court-rules-against-evacuating-west-bank-settlement

UK Rivals for PM Hold First Clash in Front of Tory Members

UK Rivals for PM Hold First Clash in Front of Tory Members

World

Asharq Al-Awsat
After two head-to-head debates on TV, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak clashed in front of Conservative members for the first time in Leeds Jacob King POOL/AFP

British Conservatives Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss Thursday underwent their first grilling in front of party members as they wage a bitter duel to succeed Prime Minister Boris Johnson. The hustings in Leeds, northern England, was the opening bout of 12 nationwide events as the grassroots members elect a new leader, after a cabinet revolt forced scandal-hit Johnson to quit, said AFP. The result will be announced on September 5, and Truss has built up a strong lead in surveys of Tory members after vowing immediate tax cuts as Britain confronts a slump in living standards. Defense Secretary Ben Wallace used an editorial published in The Times daily after the hustings to throw his support behind Truss, saying she was the "only candidate who has both the breadth and depth of experience needed". "From day one the new prime minister needs to know their way around the international community as well as the Treasury. Only Liz can do that," wrote Wallace, a popular figure in the ruling Conservatives. On foreign policy, both rivals used the debate to extend Johnson's staunch support for Ukraine, and to resist China's increasingly authoritarian rise, while profiting from vaguely defined "Brexit opportunities". The foreign secretary went to high school in an affluent suburb of Leeds, while Sunak's Westminster seat lies about an hour's drive north in the same county of Yorkshire. Truss said her Yorkshire upbringing had given her "grit, determination and straight-talking". "And that, my friends, is what I think we need now in Downing Street," she told the hustings audience. She vowed to "channel the spirit of Don Revie" -- referring to a manager of the Leeds football club in the 1960s and '70s whose players were notoriously combative. Revie was also accused of bribery. Former finance minister Sunak has denounced Truss's "fairy tale economics", vowing to tame surging inflation first, but has admitted that he is the "underdog" in the contest. Their two televised head-to-head debates so far were fractious -- although the second on Tuesday was abruptly halted when the TalkTV moderator fainted live on air. In Leeds, there was no such drama, but plenty of hard-nosed questioning from Tory members. The candidates went on stage one after the other, rather than squaring off at lecterns from opposite ends of a TV studio. The members applauded co-chairman Andrew Stephenson when he observed that their party is poised to appoint Britain's third woman prime minister, or its first one of color. Sunak joked that he had got a "great tan" after criss-crossing the Leeds region in rare sunny weather this week, and hailed his ethnic-Indian family's immigrant success story. - 'Groupthink' - The wealthy former financier also hit back at caustic attacks from the Truss camp about his expensive tastes in fashion, which purport to show that he is out of touch with the ordinary public in hard times. "This is not about what shoes I wear or what suit I'm wearing. "This is about what I'm going to do for the country," Sunak said, earning applause, although he was also accused by one questioner of "stabbing Boris Johnson in the back". Truss meanwhile was reminded at the hustings of her opposition to Brexit in 2016, and her student leadership of the Liberal Democrats at the University of Oxford when she called for the abolition of the monarchy. "Almost as soon as I made the (monarchy) speech, I regretted it," she said. "I was a bit of a teenage controversialist." Both the candidates vowed support for Johnson's "levelling up" agenda of revitalizing growth in neglected regions of the UK including around Leeds. Ahead of the hustings, Truss backed a railways investment project to help "turbocharge investment" in northern England, after Johnson and Sunak's Treasury scaled it back on grounds of cost. "The thing about me is I'm prepared to take on the Whitehall orthodoxy, I'm prepared to challenge the groupthink that has, over decades, not put enough investment into this part of the country," she said. Addressing Britain's cost-of-living crisis, Sunak this week staged a U-turn to back more tax relief on household energy bills, which are set to rocket anew in October. "I will grip inflation and get it back down," he said at the hustings, vowing tax cuts in the future.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3786301/uk-rivals-pm-hold-first-clash-front-tory-members

Four Syrian Kurds Killed in Turkish Strike in Northern Syria

Four Syrian Kurds Killed in Turkish Strike in Northern Syria

Arab World

Asharq Al-Awsat
Smoke billows following reported Turkish warplane raids, from a site in the Matin Mountains near the village of Koherzi in the Amadiyah district, northeast of Dohuk in the Kurdish autonomous region of Iraq, on April 28th 2022. (AFP)

A Turkish drone strike in northern Syria killed four Syrian Kurdish fighters on Thursday, the second such attack in recent days, a Kurdish official and a war monitor said. The Kurdish Asayish security forces said that "a drone attacked our forces" in the Ain Issa area in Raqa province, killing "four of our members". The statement condemned "Turkish attacks". The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor confirmed the death toll in the "attack by a drone belonging to the Turkish military" in the north of Raqa province, according to AFP. In recent months, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly vowed to launch a new offensive in Syria's north. Ankara has launched successive military offensives in Syria. Most have targeted Kurdish fighters that Ankara links to a group waging a decades-long insurgency against it. Turkey has increased the frequency of its drone strikes in Kurdish-controlled areas of Syria since a July 19 summit with Iran and Russia, according to Kurdish officials and the Britain-based Observatory, a monitoring group with a network of sources on the ground. Four fighters including three commanders from the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces were killed on July 22 in a drone strike blamed on Turkey. Russian and Iranian leaders urged Erdogan against launching a new Syrian offensive last week, but Turkey has insisted it does not need "permission". Moscow and Tehran have supported the Syrian government in the decade-long conflict, while Turkey has backed various opposition groups.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/3786296/four-syrian-kurds-killed-turkish-strike-northern-syria