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Ola Drives Into London With Fanfare But Will Passengers Continue To Climb Aboard?

NEW DELHI: “Namastey London” is the title of a Bollywood film that was released over a decade ago. The title was attractive enough for Bhavish Aggarwal, co-founder of Ola cabs, to use it when he opened Ola operations in the British capital last month.

The London launch was the culmination of global foray by the Bengaluru-based company which saw it begin operations in the rest of the UK in 2018, Australia and New Zealand before finally opening up shop here. According to company representatives, the response has been good with over 25,000 drivers registered on the platform.

We chose these countries because they have similarities in the ways of doing business,” Aggarwal explained at the recent Asia-Economic Dialogue in Pune, about 150 km south east of Mumbai. He pointed out that, The legal systems are similar, the political system are similar and Indian companies are highly respected in these countries. Finally, all these countries are highly relevant in the global context in the mobility industry.”

Aggarwal’s entry into London could not have come at a better time since his main competitor Uber lost its licence to conduct operations in London. That combined with new innovations for safety – Ola representatives say the company has introduced the OTP system along with facial recognition technologies to improve passenger safety. 

“We have to do this if we want to be relevant as a company 10 years down the line. There’s a lot of disruption happening in the car mobility space right now in areas such as electrification of cars and self-driving. If we want to remain relevant and global, we have to think about these things,” Aggarwal said.

But entering these markets has not come cheap. Reports suggest that Ola has invested $60 million apart from providing incentives to drivers, allowing them to keep all of their earnings for the first six weeks of their operation. Passengers too were offered £25 credit (about Rs.2,400) for the first week after launch. This could hurt Ola unless its service catches on with the public.  Nevertheless, Ola and its founders deserve full credit for taking on a venture of this kind so far from Indian shores.

 

New Role For India’s Defence Attaches

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NEW DELHI: Defence exports of Rs 35,000 crore, that’s the target India has set out to achieve by 2025. An impetus to Make in India, co-opting private defence manufacturers and redefining the roles of defence attaches posted with India’s missions abroad are some of the steps taken by the government to meet the self-imposed deadline. Given the new scheme of things, where do the defence attaches fit in? And do they have the resources to go about the expanded brief? In this episode of ‘Simply Nitin’, StratNews Global Editor-in-Chief Nitin A. Gokhale has the answers.


U.S.-Taliban Deal: For All The Wrong Reasons… Or The Right Ones?

NEW DELHI: As U.S. troops marched into Kabul alongside the rag-tag militia of the Northern Alliance in 2001 and the Taliban melted away into the countryside, Afghan émigrés from across the world came flooding back into the city. Kabul Inter-Continental hotel was a hive of activity; the well-heeled, foreign-educated Afghan rubbing shoulders with powerful warlords and their side-kicks, all vying for public office after years of Taliban’s oppressive, misogynistic rule.

One of the high-profile residents of the hotel on the hill to whom everyone gravitated towards in those heady days filled with hope of a better future was Zalmay Khalilzad. Well before his formal appointment as the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan two years later, the Afghan-born, U.S. educated diplomat always had a great sense of his place in history.

Nineteen years on, this February, everything that ‘Zal’ Khalilzad believed he had worked for—an Afghanistan ruled by moderate Afghans—seemed to have come to fruition. Or had it?

For a giddy 24 hours last Saturday, it looked as if he had pulled off a deal to finally hold off the enemy that had preyed on NATO and ISAF-backed Afghan forces with impunity. But the Taliban’s new political chief Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar didn’t even wait for the ink to dry on this ‘peace’ deal with the non-existent Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan—the name of the Taliban state when they held Kabul from 1996 to 2001. It was back to business as usual with Taliban forces on the rampage, first in Kunduz and then Helmand.

It smacked of the first U.S. president, former President Barack Obama, openly declaring a troop withdrawal in December 2009, only to find they couldn’t.

Is this where Trump is headed? Making an announcement that will win him plaudits at home but will be impossible to keep?

With Khalilzad playing to the aspirations of only two of three stakeholders—the United States, whose president wants a quick exit of troops as a boost to his electoral campaign; the Taliban, who just want an emirate; the Afghan political leadership left rudderless—it’s a deal that is more optics than reality.

Khalilzad and Donald Trump may want to avoid a repeat of the last time a superpower exited this ‘graveyard of empires’, as in 1988-1989, when the Soviets became sitting targets for the U.S.-armed mujahideen. U.S. troops cannot become a target of the Taliban and its affiliate the Haqqani network who have especially close ties with Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligence. The relationship dates back to the time the Haqqanis evacuated hundreds of ISI operatives from Kunduz to safety, as the U.S. invaded in 2001. Today, they operate with impunity from sanctuaries inside Pakistan and Afghanistan.

In a sign of their continuing influence, Sirajuddin Haqqani (son of the founder, Jalaluddin Haqqani, with the other son Anas, vocal and visible at the Doha talks) authored a piece in the New York Times last week, where he talked up the peace talks. Second in command in the Taliban today and a known ISI hand, he reportedly lives in Peshawar under the ISI’s protection. Was the aim of the op-ed to lull ordinary Americans into the false premise that the Talibs were sincere about wanting peace? How false that supposition is became evident when within 48 hours of the deal, the Taliban had unleashed its firepower on Afghan and U.S. army bases across the country. And the U.S. military hit back.

The U.S. military, unlike the White House, is under no illusion over the Taliban’s intent. As Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the U.S. Joints Chief of Staff said on Monday: “I would caution everybody to think that there’s going to be an absolute cessation of violence in Afghanistan. That is probably not going to happen.”

The Taliban’s time-worn strategy of keeping up the pressure on the battlefield to extract more concessions in the next round of negotiations has been all too clear. If U.S. and foreign forces do begin to exit over the next 14 months as laid down in the deal, reducing numbers from an already pared down 14,000 to 8,600 across five army bases, Afghan forces will be vulnerable, given that the last buffer between them and the Taliban will be gone.

The bigger flaw is that the key third party, the incoming elected government of President Ashraf Ghani, already on the back foot over questions of its electoral legitimacy from main rival Abdullah Abdullah, is chafing at being pushed into doing business with an enemy no one fully trusts. The agreement directs the Ghani dispensation to empower a negotiating team to sit across the table with the Talibs in Oslo on March 10 in an intra-Afghan dialogue that aims to arrive at a permanent cease-fire and a power-sharing agreement between the rival Afghan groups.

Ghani did sign a joint declaration with U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, which pins him down to holding negotiations with the Taliban and gives Afghanistan a security cover during the process. In rejecting the main point of the agreement, the handover of over 5,000 Taliban prisoners kept at Bagram air base in return for 1,000 men being held by the Taliban, Ghani could be flexing his muscles. A negotiating tactic, he may be making it difficult for the U.S to replace him with another Pashtun. With reports indicating that the paperwork to release the Taliban has already begun at Bagram, Ghani’s tenuous position is obvious. He needs the backing of the U.S. to stay on. At the same time, he cannot be seen as the foreign ‘stooge’ that the Taliban accuses him, and indeed, the entire political leadership, of being.

Caught in the middle is the ordinary Afghan, paying the price for this ethnically driven fratricide, rooted in tribal rivalry that pits the majority Pashtun on the one side against the Tajik, Uzbek and the Hazara minorities.

The buzz is that a Pashtun replacement for Ghani could be either former president Hamid Karzai, or Omar Zakhliwal, the current ambassador to Pakistan, who worked with the U.S. and Pakistan to bring about the release of Taliban leader Mullah Baradar, from a Pakistan jail so that he could front the talks with Khalilzad.

Baradar, incidentally, was released from a Pakistan jail last year after being incarcerated for over eight years. But the manner of his sudden arrest in Karachi just as he had reached out to the Karzai government has always given rise to speculation that his descent into a drug-addled zombie while in jail, was to ensure that he would not go against Pakistan’s plans to scuttle Taliban-Afghan peace overtures.

Baradar was one of the few in the top rungs of the Taliban who had repeatedly called for peace talks with the Hamid Karzai government. Said to be Mullah Omar’s brother-in-law, and whom he reportedly drove to safety as U.S. troops came in, he is also said to have saved Karzai when Jalaluddin Haqqani hunted down and killed the one-legged Commander Abdul Haq, with whom Karzai was putting together an anti-Talib force in 2001. In fact, Pakistan’s release of Baradar raises the big question on where Pakistan’s ISI which has long played puppeteer to the Taliban will stand post the inevitable return of hostilities on the ground. And where that will leave India, whose investments to the tune of $3 billion apart and the enormous goodwill it enjoys as a home to thousands of Afghan students, could all be in jeopardy.

The leader of the India-friendly Northern Alliance, Abdullah Abdullah, a target of the Taliban has been a trenchant critic of Pakistan’s active backing of Taliban sanctuaries in North Waziristan that kept the Afghan government’s writ limited to Kabul and the north. There are conflicting reports on the Panjsheri leader being actively wooed by Islamabad, with other insiders saying his grand coalition that draws in Uzbek strongman Abdul Rashid Dostum, former Balkh governor Ata Mohammed Noor, Hazara chief Mohammed Mohaqiq and even Ismail Khan of Herat could see a possible vivisection of the country, that is already effective on the ground.

Adding to the confusion is where that leaves the ambitious Amrullah Saleh, the former intelligence chief in the Karzai government, the chief point of contact between the U.S. and Kabul, for years, and opposed to any overtures to the Taliban that Khalilzad, during his tenure as three time ambassador, repeatedly attempted.

The assassination of former President Burhanuddin Rabbani by the Haqqani network, which operates as an arm of Pakistan’s counter-intelligence unit, was only one of many outreaches that would go awry. Saleh, who contested on President Ashraf Ghani ticket as his vice president, wrote in a recent piece in the New York Times, hours before Khalilzad would close the deal with the Taliban in Doha, of how, despite he and his hapless family including his sister being a target, he was now willing to give the Taliban a chance. Saleh, was once a close aide to Northern Alliance chief Ahmed Shah Massoud, who was eliminated, only days before 9/11, by Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaida, which at the time had been given protection by the Taliban leader Mullah Omar, even after 9/11.

For the Taliban—and their ISI mentors across the border—the deal is exactly what they had hoped for, bringing about a withdrawal of all foreign forces, opening the door to retaking of Kunduz, Kandahar and Kabul, when the time is right.

The presence of the Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi at the Doha venue and his statement thereafter that talks between Pakistan and Afghanistan cannot be mandated by the peace deal is a tell, if needed, that Pakistan has the upper hand and will not be dictated to. Without Pakistani goodwill, the U.S. cannot execute a safe and secure troop withdrawal. That the Taliban have not signed off on to a promise not to provide safe havens to terrorists, denounce terrorism and sever links with Al Qaida and ISIS raises the question on who will police the deal.

The Indian envoy from Qatar’s attendance at the Doha signing, preceded by the visit to Kabul by new foreign secretary Harsh Shringla, and the statements by the Minister of External Affairs S. Jaishankar on adopting a wait and see approach, raise eyebrows on what possible gains could come India’s way, if it means a return of the Taliban. Delhi’s much vaunted push for Afghan products to get market access to India through the Zaranj-Dalaram highway that it built, and to Central Asia through the Iranian port of Chabahar that it hopes to have access to, and through direct flights from Afghan airports, will require a friendly government in Kabul. Given the Taliban’s past propagation of conservative Islam, even India’s soft power through its freewheeling music and Bollywood movies will be severely constrained, in a Kabul where young people of all sexes have thronged its theatres, and profusion of eateries.

Independent analysts like Sumeer Bhasin, says that its time India stops looking at Afghanistan through a Pakistan prism, pointing out that the Taliban have never expressed any interest in taking their subversive movement into Indian territory. Although, it must be said both the Mumbai attack and Kashmir terror infiltration have the imprimatur of the Lashkar-e-Toiba and its offshoots which were born, nurtured and trained in the crucial years when the Taliban allowed Al Qaida to flourish. Bhasin believes that there is a moderate element in the Taliban which wants India to grow into the role of a strategic influencer and counterbalance the hold of Pakistan over its rank and file. There is little proof of that. But with the world watching, Pakistan may no longer be able to provide safe sanctuaries to terror groups like the Haqqani network that are avowedly anti-Indian.

As the U.S. wrestles with the fallout of its military’s domination of foreign policy and the counter-narrative provided by strategic thinkers like Khalilzad who seek to extricate it from Afghanistan, it must know a hasty and ill-considered exit will leave largely lawless Afghanistan open to a complete meltdown.

Simply put, the Doha deal, must be revisited.

(Neena Gopal is a journalist and author. Views expressed in this article are personal.)

‘We Need To Sit Down And Find Solutions To Contain The Coronavirus’

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PUNE: For tourism dependent countries such as the Maldives the coronavirus emanating from China poses a huge challenge and Fayyaz Ismail, Minister Of Economic Development In The Maldives believes that containing the coronavirus should be the key priority at the moment. Speaking to Ashwin Ahmad, the minister said that Asian nations needed to become more mindful of the common challenges posed by the virus and more solutions needed to be brought to the table. He conceded however that this would prove to be a challenge as bodies such as SAARC had continued to perform below expectations and hence forums such as the Asian Economic Dialogue were especially important for the Maldives as it could make its voice heard.


Malaysia’s New PM Could Get Back To Old Politics

NEW DELHI: The last time Malaysia hit the headlines in India it was when its prime minister Mahathir Mohamad said India had invaded Kashmir, and joined hands with Imran Khan next door. The last word on Malaysia in the same media was about India shutting the doors on the import of palm oil from that country.

When Mahathir Mohamad lost his job last week, it merited only bare bones coverage even though it underscored new uncertainties for India and the region. Muhyiddin Yassin is the new man at the helm. He’s got the king to ensure that parliament meets only after two months. It gives him time to ‘consolidate’ his position (which probably means ‘incentivising’ MPs to join him in forming a government).

Muhyiddin was Mahathir’s ally until a few weeks ago. He turned against him after his government, the Pakatan Harapan, lost a spate of by-elections owing to the poor state of the economy. Muhyiddin joined hands with the UMNO (United Malays National Organisation), which had thrown him out in 2016 for various reasons. UMNO has ruled Malaysia since independence from Britain in 1957 but was soundly defeated in elections in 2018 owing to the 1MDB corruption scandal where then prime minister Najib Tun Razak was implicated.

Muhyiddin is an ethnic Malay nationalist and devout Muslim who is heavily invested in Malay-Muslim supremacy. The government is expected to return to the racial politics practised by UMNO, where Malay Muslims are given favoured treatment including preference in education and government jobs, leaving out ethnic Chinese and Indians.

Muhyiddin could draw on the support of the Pan Malaysian Islamic Party which is driven by one agenda: a strict Islamic penal code for Muslims and stoning to death of adulterers.

Democracy India’s Greatest Asset, Poses Challenge To China: Ex-Foreign Secy

NEW DELHI: Democracy is India’s greatest asset and poses a challenge to the Beijing model, says former Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale. India must remain an independent player in the global strategic affairs game and needs to play to its strengths, he told a seminar in Pune on March 3.

Given below is the transcript of his address at the seminar on ‘India-China Relations in the 21st Century: Challenges & Opportunities’:

I am honoured to address all of you on a topic that will pre-occupy not just our Government, but every segment of our society for the next half century. It is already one of our two most important relationships and it might the subject of our primary interest in the next 25 years.

The topic suggests that we have the capacity to predict what is likely to happen in our relationship with China in this century. The truth is that in the past half-century, predictions about China have rarely been accurate. Few, if any, predicted that a new Communist State would be established in 1949 and that this State would almost tear itself apart during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and fewer still foretold of China’s spectacular rise to global power since then. The fact is that there is a paucity of scholarship on China, including in India. And this deficit is something we can ill afford, if we are to deal with, arguably, the greatest power in this century.

It might be useful to review, briefly, the course of India-China relations since 1949. In the initial years from 1949 until 1962, our policy towards China was based more on sentiment and less on fact. Having secured our independence in a relatively peaceful manner, our idealism led us to squander strategic advantages that we held, without asking for corresponding returns. For example, suo moto, we de-recognise the Republic of China (Taiwan) and removed their Ambassador from New Delhi and we likewise unilaterally made concessions on Tibet without seeking corresponding recognition from the Chinese on Jammu & Kashmir. The Chinese Communists had just won a civil war. Not for them a non-violent struggle, they were used to securing their interests through the use of violence. Lack of information and understanding about the new Chinese Government led to disaster in 1962.

From 1962 until roughly 1998, both India and China turned away from each other. China first turned inwards and then westwards in its search for modernisation. We first turned towards the Soviet Union and, when it collapsed in 1991, then inwards to address our own economic crisis. It is true that there were some important developments during this time—the reinstatement of Ambassadors in 1976 and Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s visit in 1988 after a gap of 34 years but these were episodes neither side looked afresh at the relationship. Our scholarship on China remained focused on old issues like the boundary question or Tibet; there was no real scholarship on the policies that China was laying down for its giant economic leap.

1998 was a turning point. Our nuclear tests and our subsequent capacity to withstand intense international pressure caught the Chinese by surprise. They too had allowed their scholarship on India to atrophy when they turned to the West, and thus under-estimated both our strategic capabilities as well as our subsequent economic resilience. I would say that the year 2000 was the beginning of a new phase—we began to deal with each in a serious way. This is self-evident from facts. Trade grew from just under USD 1 billion in 2000 to over USD 70 billion by 2015; we began joint military exercises and an annual defence dialogue; a framework agreement on the guiding principles and political parameters to deal with the boundary question and CBMs in the border region came forth during this period. We began to engage even where new differences cropped up, like China’s opposition to the 1 2 3 Nuclear Deal in the NSG or their placing “Hold” on the listing of terrorists like Masood Azhar or Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhavi in the UNSC 1267 Sanctions Committee.

I recounted this history because is important to recognise that the trajectory of India-China relations has not been linear in the past. We made some errors of judgements and we neglected scholarship on China. If we do not make up the knowledge deficit, we may again make the same mistakes. Our scholarship on China needs not only to take into account what is happening inside China but also what is happening in other parts of the world.

First, China is the largest global engine of growth and will be so for the next quarter century. The growth rate may slow down and new economic challenges may emerge but the capacity of the leadership to deal with such challenges has been consistently underestimated.

Second, China has a political leadership that has re-focused its attention to quality of life issues—environment, health care, education, innovation, new sciences. It is consciously charting out a path to go up the value chain. You can see the results in electric vehicles, renewable energy, 5G, AI and new materials. The West deluded itself for years that Chinese did not have the capacity to innovate. They overlooked that 3 per cent of the GDP was going into education and R&D for two decades. The Chinese have an army of educated people and are focused on ending the technological superiority of the United States.

Third, the leadership has decided that it’s strong enough to discard the earlier policy of keeping its head down for a new policy of asserting Chinese power. This new assertiveness under President Xi Jinping is manifesting itself in initiatives like the Belt & Road as well as by demonstrating that Chinese can take the pain of trade war with an U.S. economy that is still double the Chinese economy. And they no longer hesitate to deploy their power or to threaten those who resist their rise.

All these will have a bearing on how we deal with China.

Beyond China, we also live in a strange world. Usually, the established power tries to preserve the status quo; the emerging power seeks to create a new arrangement. From 2016, however, we have the unusual phenomenon of the status quo power, the United States itself challenging the very global instruments and facilities they have created, and the emerging power trying to defend the status quo wherever it has served Chinese interests (like the WTO) while challenging the post WW II security architecture in the Indo-Pacific. Hence, we are today leaving in a world in which both the major powers are simultaneously disruptive.

Our hope of a multipolar world remains just that, a hope—with the EU damaged by BREXIT, the Russians unable to leverage their vast resources to build a new economic basis for sustained power projections and Japan looking like a power who has let opportunity slip by.

This is the global setting in which we prepare to engage, arguably, with the next global hegemon.

 

The Chinese will deal with us based on how they see us. So, how do the Chinese see India today?

  • Democracy/political system seen as constraint on development;
  • In terms of overall CNP, China does not consider India to be an economic challenger;
  • In military terms, China feels India unlikely to develop independent military capabilities to rival China;
  • As global power, China does not regard India as an equal.

But there are new factors that China has also taken note of:

  • PM Modi is seen as a decisive leader;
  • Strategic culture is changing under PM Modi. India willing to take more risks. Use of force is no longer ruled out;
  • As regional power, India is growing in influence and capacity. It is more likely to challenge Chinese interests in Indian Ocean;
  • India is shedding inhibitions about non-alignment and is willing to exercise leverage as “swing state”;
  • “Democracy” as a value system is used as a tool of foreign policy.

If my assessment is correct, and this of course is open to debate, then I would hazard the guess that China might follow a two-pronged strategy:

  • A soft approach of lessening tensions and tactical concessions to prevent India from tilting towards the United States and remaining neutral; and
  • If that doesn’t work, a harder option of building pressure directly through military-security means on LAC, in North East or through Pakistan.

In either case, we should be clear that China will likely continue to follow its firm policy of strengthening its economic and military presence, whenever possible, in our immediate neighbourhood and Indian Ocean, reducing our wiggle room in the region and circumscribing our global ambitions by denying us space in international forums. In 2019 we saw the manner in which they used their diplomatic power in the UN to keep us on the back foot. This policy has served their interests well, there may be no reason to change that. Simultaneously, they will build an asymmetrical military balance vis-à-vis us, and also strengthen their ally, Pakistan’s, military capacity, as a hard deterrent. There is no reason to presume that if we “behave ourselves” the Chinese will not do any of this. They will do so anyway.

For us, therefore, the scenario I just outlined presents a serious challenge but also opportunities. These are two sides of the same coin provided we can develop a proper understanding of China both within the government and in larger society based on the facts, to deal with China, we need to do some things domestically:

  • There is no substitute for serious economic growth. If we allow the current GDP gap to grow from the current 4:1 to 6:1 by 2030, the window of opportunity will not open at all. You cannot challenge the Chinese if you are economically dependent on them for most intermediate and capital goods. The China-U.S. Trade War is an opportunity for us to expand the share of manufacturing in our GDP;
  • We need to emulate China in building independent R&D and cutting edge technologies without which our talk of strategic autonomy will remain hollow. The global concerns over 5G is an opportunity to join R&D with those that share concerns about China’s economic hegemony;
  • Military modernisation is vital. CDS is taking the lead in bringing jointness and theatre commands. We are building our strategic and space systems. But we are still lagging in the manufacture of military hardware, especially in new means of warfare. We could leverage our swing state status to get foreign participation in our Make in India Defence programme.

In foreign policy terms, if we are to deal with China, it is important that

  • We build a long-term foreign and security policy centred on the Indo-Pacific. We lost once by allowing the West to dominate the waves, we should not lose opportunity a second time to the same failing;
  • We build a closer relationship with the United States while maintaining decisional autonomy. We need not be over-sensitive to Chinese concerns just as they are not so with regard to our concerns about Pakistan. But the partnership with the U.S. should be on “equal” terms;
  • We must revitalise relations with Russia. They remain a trusted and reliable supplier of defence equipment and know-how in a crisis; and
  • We bind our extended neighbourhood through greater connectivity.

In pursuing this approach, we should be mindful that we are an independent player, in the global strategic game, and at the same time, we should not allow our neighbours to play the China “card” to extract unilateral benefits. We cannot outspend the Chinese, nor should we, in our efforts to counter their influence in our neighbourhood. We need to play to our strengths.

Democracy is our greatest asset. Our very existence as a democratic state presents an existential challenge to the so-called Beijing Model. Our success in building our comprehensive national strength through democracy makes it ideologically difficult for the Communist Party to justify its model of non-elected leaderships. This is for China its greatest challenge.

Going ahead, I see some positives but with a preponderance of challenges caused by simultaneous growth in regional influence and China’s unwillingness to practice what it frequently preaches—that is, there is enough space in the world for both China and India to grow together. If our economy grows and we can maintain flexibility in our foreign and security policies with both global powers, I see no reason why we should repeat the errors of the past in our dealings with China in the future.

Thank you.

‘Coronavirus A Global Disease, Urge WTO Members Not To Put Trade Curbs On China’

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PUNE: With the U.S.’s sustained attack on the Appellate Body of the WTO – the body which determines trade disputes between member nations – and President Trump’s statement that countries such as India and China are taking advantage of their “developing country” status to get unfair trade benefits, there is a real danger to the functioning of the international body at the moment. But apart from countering Washington’s contention of unfair trade benefits, Beijing is also worried about the outbreak of the coronavirus from a trade perspective. Ambassador Zhang Xiangchen, China’s Permanent Representative to the WTO, tells Opinion Editor Ashwin Ahmad that his country has urged WTO member nations to remember that the coronavirus is a “global disease” and they must not use it as an excuse to levy non-tariff restrictions on Chinese products. Instead, they must all come together to safeguard global trade for the common good.


U.S. Resumes Strikes Against Taliban After 11 Days, Warns Them To Live Up To Obligations

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KABUL: Gen. Scott Miller, Commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, in a visit to Afghan forces in Kabul on Tuesday said the U.S.-Taliban agreement is a potentially historic agreement for the Afghan people and that “it is fragile if the Taliban are not going to lower violence” and “that causes a risk to the agreement.”

The U.S. forces conducted an airstrike against Taliban fighters in Nahr-e Saraj, a district in the southern province of Helmand on Wednesday, a spokesman for U.S. forces in Afghanistan Col Sonny Leggett tweeted on Wednesday. The airstrike is the first in 11 days, said Leggett. All sides had agreed to a Reduction in Violence (RIV) plan starting on February 22 that was aimed to create conditions for peace and a permanent ceasefire.

But on Monday the Taliban announced the resumption of their military offensive and increased their attacks on the Afghan National Security and Defense Forces in multiple fronts across the country. At least 16 Afghan Army soldiers were killed in a Taliban attack on Imam Sahib district of Kunduz province, Afghan security sources told Tolo News on Wednesday.

“The U.S. conducted an airstrike on March 4 against Taliban fighters in Nahr-e Saraj, Helmand, who were actively attacking an ANDSF checkpoint. This was a defensive strike to disrupt the attack. This was our first strike against the Taliban in 11 days,” USFOR-A Spokesman Col Sonny Leggett tweeted. “Taliban leadership promised the int’l community they would reduce violence and not increase attacks. We call on the Taliban to stop needless attacks and uphold their commitments. As we have demonstrated, we will defend our partners when required,” said Col. Sonny Leggett.

“To be clear- we are committed to peace, however we have the responsibility to defend our ANDSF partners. Afghans and U.S. have complied with our agreements; however, Talibs appear intent on squandering this opportunity and ignoring the will of the people for peace,” said U.S. Forces in Afghanistan Spokesperson Col. Sonny Leggett. He said there is a need for the Taliban to lower violence in Afghanistan “otherwise, it’s hard to have an agreement.”

The Taliban in a letter on Monday asked their fighters to resume attacks on the Afghan government forces, but not to attack international troops as part of a deal they signed with the United States.

“The period of reduction in violence across Afghanistan was an important period for the Afghan people,” General Miller said. “It’s a start for peace pathway and what I would say is that all sides–but especially the military of all sides–have obligations to make sure that pathway is achievable. We have shown restraint with the Afghan security forces and we have shown restraint because we know that’s the will of the Afghan people.” He added: “The Taliban have obligations and we need them to live up to their obligations and if they don’t, we have the necessary responses.”
In response to a question if the Taliban attacks Afghan forces, will they have the support of their foreign counterparts, Miller said: “Yes, we will send air support when they (Afghan forces) need it… That support continues and we will continue to defend the Afghan security forces.”

The U.S. resuming strikes against the Taliban comes hours after President Donald Trump had a telephone conversation with the Taliban’s deputy leader Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar on Tuesday evening, Qatar time, said Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid.

President Trump, speaking to reporters about the call, said: “We had a good conversation. We’ve agreed there’s no violence. We don’t want violence. We’ll see what happens. They’re dealing with Afghanistan, but we’ll see what happens,” adding “We had, actually, a very good talk with the leader of the Taliban.”

According to the Mujahid’s statement, the Taliban negotiating team as well as U.S. special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, was present during the conversation in which Mullah Baradar welcomed President Trump, saying: “As a representative of the Islamic emirate and the Afghan people, I can say for sure that we can have positive mutual relations in the future if the United States fulfills its commitments.”

“If you stay resolute in the withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan and in future positive relations–and do not allow anyone to act against the agreed commitments,” Baradar said, in a way that would keep the US “engaged in this long war.”

Trump, as quoted by the Taliban, added: “State secretary (Mike Pompeo) will soon talk to Ashraf Ghani in order to remove hurdles from the way of intra-Afghan negotiations.” Trump also said that the U.S. will take “an active role in Afghanistan’s reconstruction in the future,” said Mujahid.


Not Seeking India’s Mediatory Role In Israel-Palestine Conflict: UN Panel Chief

NEW DELHI: At a time when the world is gripped by panic over the Coronavirus pandemic, a United Nations panel has been doggedly visiting world capitals making the case for a seven-decade-old issue, the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people.

Why the UN would want to spend so much money and time over an exercise of this kind is not clear, since its outcome may not be very different from countless General Assembly resolutions and UN Security Council votes. Nevertheless, the team has been on this worldwide effort for the last four years and finally landed up in Delhi.

A member of the committee attributed their visit to India’s “unwavering position on Palestine” while dismissing reports that it was seeking a mediatory role by Delhi. Cheikh Niang of Senegal, who chairs the panel, said India has long favoured a two-state solution with Jerusalem as the capital of an independent Palestinian state.

He made no mention of India siding with Israel in a UN vote last year, on whether the Palestinian NGO Shahed should be given observer status in a UN agency. In doing so, India appeared to endorse Israel’s stand that Shahed had failed to disclose its links with Hamas, the militant Sunni organisation based in the Gaza Strip.

Despite his brief, Cheikh Niang insisted that the panel was “neither pro-Israel nor pro-Palestine”; it was only meant to get Palestinian rights while not being against the state of Israel. How one could be achieved without any cost to the other was not clarified.

He dismissed Trump’s peace plan as one-sided, the Palestinians had not been consulted and “Whatever you do, you have to take into account the global consensus.” Whether a global consensus exists on Palestine when even the Arab states of the region are building ties with Israel is of course another matter. But there is no doubt that given Israel’s steady encroachment on Palestinian land, a consensus needs to be found urgently.

The visit of the panel seemed to lack purpose and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar’s tweet reflected that.”Received delegation from the UN Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People. Exchanged views on the latest developments in West Asia.”

Over to 2021 when India takes its place among the non-permanent members of the UN Security Council, when doubtless, there will be more opportunity to show its steadfast support for the Palestinian cause.

India Is Making A Big Effort To Get The Situation Back To Normal In J&K: Dutch Envoy

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PUNE: External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar’s belief that the India-EU relationship has so far “underperformed” has found a ready echo amongst leaders of member nations of the European Union, all of whom are ready to discuss business and common concerns  on the global geo-political front when Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits Brussels later this month. Speaking about the India-EU relationship, Marten van den Berg, Ambassador of the Netherlands to India, tells StratNews Global Opinion Editor Ashwin Ahmad that while he agrees that the relationship has “underperformed”, he believes that there will be a renowned commitment to the relationship under the new EU parliament and the new Modi 2.0 government. On the anti-CAA resolution, the Dutch envoy stated that this was a matter for the European parliament to vote on and did not echo the views of the European government, who believed that it was an internal matter of India. Coming to Jammu and Kashmir, he added that he, along with other envoys, were invited to go there by the government of India where he thought that all steps to bring it towards normalcy were being taken.


Sri Lanka Rejects UN Special Rapporteur’s Report

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka has rejected Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief, Ahmed Shaheed’s report following his visit to Sri Lanka from 15 to 26 August 2019. Shaheed’s report was presented to the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) yesterday.

The advanced unedited report of the Special Rapporteur (SR) was shared with Sri Lanka, for comments, on 3 February 2020, with a deadline of 28 February 2020, leading to an Interactive Dialogue on Monday.

The facilitation of the visit, at a time of numerous national challenges (barely four months after the Easter Sunday attacks that killed 258 people), was a manifestation of the Government’s policy of open and constructive dialogue with UN human rights mechanisms, Dayani Mendis, Acting Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka in Geneva, told the 43rd session of HRC.

Her statement said the report has, to a large extent, sought to judge the space for freedom of religion or belief in Sri Lanka through the few months that followed the Easter Sunday attacks.

Claiming that the incidents of mob violence that occurred three weeks after the terrorist attacks were not “communally motivated” but caused by “unruly elements”, Sri Lanka said the alleged perpetrators were arrested and brought to justice.

The Lankan government has rejected mentions of “Sri Lankan security forces colluding with mobs and not acting to prevent or stop the violence”; the “lack of response from the authorities against this violence”. It is regrettable that these inaccurate accounts have been included in the report, the statement of Mendis says.

It is also regrettable that the report has sought to portray instances where criminal investigations have been conducted to prevent acts of terrorism in accordance with the law, as an endeavor to violate the freedom of religion or belief, she said.

Rejecting comments made in the report about alleged discrimination based on “supremacy” of Buddhism over other religions, Sri Lanka said no provision in its Constitution or national laws permits discrimination of an individual based on religion or belief in any sphere of public life.

In the SR’s report, certain instances, determinations of the Supreme Court and Constitutional provisions have been inaccurately reflected based on surmise, said Mendis.

Sri Lanka has accused the report of several omissions like

  • incidents of attacks on and vandalizing of Buddhist places of worship
  • positive measures by the government and law enforcement agencies to foster religious harmony
  • resilience and solidarity of Sri Lankans in protecting and assisting fellow citizens of all faiths in the aftermath of the Easter Sunday attacks
  • payment of compensation through the Office for Reparations to victims of violence
  • restoration of damaged churches by the security forces
  • ‘laudable’ role played by independent institutions, such as Human Rights Commission

Sri Lanka remains committed to protecting and promoting the freedom of conscience and religion of its people, in accordance with the Constitution of the country, said Mendis, adding that “we look forward to continuing to engage with the Special Rapporteur and this Council in a constructive and meaningful manner”.

(By arrangement with www.themorning.lk)

 

Taliban Orders Resumption Of Attacks On Afghan Forces; Ghani Non-Committal On Prisoner Swap

NEW DELHI: The more things change, the more they stay the same. Two days after the U.S. and the Taliban signed a peace deal, the latter reportedly announced that the weeklong reduction of violence is over and operations against government forces will resume.

A letter allegedly from the Taliban leadership says “that as per the U.S.-Taliban agreement, our mujahideen will not attack foreign forces but our operations will continue against the Kabul administration forces”.

Despite the reported announcement, the U.S. remains confident. In an interview to ‘Special Report’, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said: “Just watch what really happens. Pay less attention to statements, pay less attention to things people say. Watch what happens on the ground. There’s been a lot of work done at detailed levels about how this will proceed”.

There is another roadblock to progress in the next step: intra-Afghan talks. A day after the U.S. and the Taliban signed the deal, President Ghani appeared at a press conference—for the second time in his five-year term—and said “there is no commitment on the release of the 5,000 prisoners” of the Taliban. The Taliban responded quickly. Top negotiator Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai said:“If the prisoners are not released on time then the intra-Afghan talks will be delayed,” adding that “the U.S. has guaranteed to free the prisoners.”

Ahead Of PM Modi’s Bangladesh Trip, India’s Foreign Secretary Allays Fears On CAA,NRC

NEW DELHI: Returning to a country he described as his “second home”, India’s foreign secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla on Monday sought to assuage concerns in Bangladesh on India’s National Register of Citizens (NRC) and the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) on Monday.

The NRC would have no implications for Bangladesh, he insisted, with the local Daily Star quoting him as saying: “This is a proactive legislation that has been undertaken on humanitarian grounds. In other words, the people who were refugees or faced political persecution and fled to India within a cut off time were allowed fast-track citizenship.”

Was his audience at the Bangladesh Institute of Strategic Studies convinced? Not clear but there was a buzz about the Speaker of parliament cancelling her visit to Delhi over NRC-CAA. Clearly, Shringla was making a valiant attempt to clear the air ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Dhaka later this month. Modi will be taking part in celebrations around the birth centenary of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding father of Bangladesh.

Shringla acknowledged that “As the closest of neighbours with so many shared cultural traits, it is also inevitable that events in each other’s countries create ripples across the border–irrespective of whether there is real justification for this,” adding that “updating the National Register of Citizens in Assam has taken place entirely on the directions and under the supervision of the Supreme Court of India.”

Again he stressed the domestic nature of the NRC. “The Indian leadership has repeatedly confirmed at the highest level to the government of Bangladesh: this is a process that is entirely internal to India. Therefore, there will be no implications for the government and people of Bangladesh. You have our assurance on that count.”

It was Shringla’s second visit to an immediate neighbour (the first was to Afghanistan) after taking over as India’s top diplomat a little over a month ago. He was also high commissioner in Dhaka.

He spoke at length on the Rohingya crisis, appreciating the “spirit of humanism” shown by Bangladesh. “We fully recognise and sympathise with the enormous burden that you are facing,” he said underscoring that “we are consistent in our interventions with the government of Myanmar at all levels on the importance of closing IDP (internally displaced persons) camps, facilitating socio-economic development projects and in offering a conducive environment to encourage displaced persons to return to their homes in Myanmar from Bangladesh.”

While noting that on the Rohingya “there is no difference between India and Bangladesh on the way forward,” the FS then had this prescription to offer: ”All we suggest in this regard is that we encourage diverse stakeholders to lower the rhetoric and find practical and pragmatic solutions, bearing in mind that the priority is finding a fair and dignified humanitarian outcome.”

While the T-word (Teesta) did not come up, Shringla appeared to allude to it when he said, “there is ample room for progress on each of the rivers that we share and it is in this spirit that serious dialogue has resumed between our officials responsible for this important matter since August 2019.”

‘There Will Be An Asia-Led World Order, Not A China-Led World Order’

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PUNE: Despite the growth of the American economy and a seeming belief that the U.S. is increasingly determining global affairs today, its position is much weaker than what it used to be since the end of the Cold War. Kishore Mahbubani, Distinguished Fellow, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, tells StratNews Global Opinion Editor Ashwin Ahmad that this has come about through complacency and a series of strategic mistakes by the United States. Rather than fighting “needless wars” as it did in Iraq and lost $3 trillion, the U.S. needed to focus on strategies to contain China when it entered the WTO in 2001  itself which it did not do. On China’s side, Mahbubani believes that Beijing is not interested in changing the international liberal-based world order, as it has benefited most by it, and it must be noted that China’s economy is not the only one’s rising. Despite the blip of the coronavirus and the fact that India must engage in more strategic thinking in order to be a truly global player, an Asia-led world order will dominate geo-politics in the years to come.


‘Afghan-Taliban Talks Give India Opportunity For More Skin In The Game’

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The U.S. willingness to withdraw and the imperative for Afghan peace has created the conditions for the first time in 19 years for both America and the Taliban to reach a breakthrough. India’s former Ambassador to Afghanistan Gautam Mukhopadhaya acknowledges the achievement so far. In conversation with StratNews Global Associate Editor Amitabh P. Revi he outlines the tricky negotiations ahead. On the February 29 (leap year) Doha deal signed by U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad and the Taliban’s Deputy Political Head Mullah Baradar in the presence of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, as well as the Kabul declaration, the ex-envoy feels more leaps of faith will be required. President-elect Ashraf Ghani has already indicated one sticking point in a press conference on March 1: that a prisoner swap deal is not a pre-condition for the expected intra-Afghan talks to begin on March 10.
Ambassador Mukhopadhaya also addresses the question of whether the softening of the Taliban’s language is only on the surface or runs deeper. He notes that the young generation and women’s voices on not relinquishing the gains since 2001 have a resonance the Taliban can’t ignore. The ex-envoy is confident a lot of the Taliban will welcome coming back to Afghanistan and reduce their dependence on Pakistani sponsors. But, he adds, others will hedge against the possibility of a return to conflict. He also feels India now has the opportunity to get more skin in the game.
Gautam Mukhopadhaya served as India’s Ambassador to Afghanistan from 2010 to 2013.

‘Taliban Deal Is A Chance For Peace But Concerns Remain’

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KABUL: A ‘reduction in violence’ that has held for a week and has infused Afghans with hope for a comprehensive ceasefire will continue for the foreseeable future—that’s the immediate bottomline after U.S. Special representative Zalmay Khalilzad and deputy political head of Taliban Mullah Baradar signed a deal in Doha, Qatar. Shabeer Ahmadi, Tolo News Foreign Desk Head and StratNews Global Associate Editor Amitabh P. Revi discuss the roadmap of the peace process after a simultaneous release of a Kabul declaration by President-elect Ashraf Ghani, U.S. Secretary of Defence Mark Esper and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg. Shabeer Ahmadi talks about the intra-Afghan talks that are scheduled to start in Oslo on March 10, the interim confidence building measure of prisoner swaps, the conditional withdrawal of U.S. and foreign troops within 14 months, the Taliban breaking ties with Al Qaida and other terrorist groups, India being one of the first countries to recognise the election results and the Presidential poll controversy.

U.S. And Taliban Sign ‘Agreement For Bringing Peace To Afghanistan’

Following 18 months of negotiations in Doha, the United States and the Taliban on Saturday officially signed a peace deal that will pave the way for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan in exchange for a number of solid assurances by the Taliban to the U.S. and its allies

The agreement states that the U.S. will fully withdraw its forces over the next 14 months and that the current force of about 13,000 troops will be reduced to 8,600 within 135 days. Non-U.S. NATO and other coalition forces will also be reduced proportionally over that time.

Titled the “Agreement for Bringing Peace to Afghanistan,” the “comprehensive peace agreement” has four key parts:

  1.  Guarantees and enforcement mechanisms that will prevent the use of the soil of Afghanistan by any group or individual against the security of the United States and its allies
  2. Guarantees, enforcement mechanisms and announcement of a timeline for the withdrawal of all foreign forces from Afghanistan
  3. After the announcement of guarantees for a complete withdrawal of foreign forces and timeline in the presence of international witnesses and guarantees and the announcement in the presence of international witnesses that Afghan soil will not be used against the security of the United States and its allies, the Taliban will start intra-Afghan negotiations with Afghan sides on March 10, 2020
  4. A permanent and comprehensive ceasefire will be an item on the agenda of the intra-Afghan dialogue and negotiations. The participants of intra-Afghan negotiations will discuss the date and modalities of a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire, including joint implementation mechanisms, which will be announced along with the completion and agreement over the future political roadmap of Afghanistan.

According to the agreement, the United States has committed to withdraw from Afghanistan all military forces of the United States, its allies and coalition partners, including all non-diplomatic civilian personnel, private security contractors, trainers, advisors, and supporting services personnel within 14 months following the announcement of the agreement and will take the following measures in this regard:

The agreement states that the United States is committed to start immediately working with all relevant sides on a plan to expeditiously release combat and political prisoners as a confidence-building measure.

On the prisoners release, the agreement says: “Up to five thousand (5,000) prisoners of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, which is not recognized by the United States as a state and is known as the Taliban, and up to one thousand (1,000) prisoners of the other side will be released by March 10, 2020, the first day of intra-Afghan negotiations, which corresponds to Rajab 15, 1441 on the Hijri Lunar calendar and Hoot 20, 1398 on the Hijri Solar calendar. “

At the start of intra-Afghan talks, the agreement reads: “With the start of intra-Afghan negotiations, the United States will initiate an administrative review of current U.S. sanctions and the rewards list against members of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan which is not recognized by the United States as a state and is known as the Taliban with the goal of removing these sanctions by August 27, 2020, which corresponds to Muharram 8, 1442 on the Hijri Lunar calendar and Saunbola 6, 1399 on the Hijri Solar calendar.”

The agreement also said that the United States and its allies will refrain from the threat or the use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Afghanistan or intervening in its domestic affairs.

Based on the agreement, the Taliban has also committed to the following measures:

  • The Taliban will not allow any of its members, other individuals or groups, including al-Qa’ida, to use the soil of Afghanistan to threaten the security of the United States and its allies.
  • The Taliban will send a clear message that those who pose a threat to the security of the United States and its allies have no place in Afghanistan, and will instruct Taliban members not to cooperate with groups or individuals threatening the security of the United States and its allies.
  • The Taliban will prevent any group or individual in Afghanistan from threatening the security of the United States and its allies and will prevent them from recruiting, training, and fundraising and will not host them in accordance with the commitments in this agreement.
  • The Taliban is committed to dealing with those seeking asylum or residence in Afghanistan according to international migration law and the commitments of this agreement, so that such persons do not pose a threat to the security of the United States and its allies.
  • The Taliban will not provide visas, passports, travel permits, or other legal documents to those who pose a threat to the security of the United States and its allies to enter Afghanistan.

The United States will request the recognition and endorsement of the United Nations Security Council for this agreement.

The agreement suggests that the U.S. and the Taliban seek positive relations with each other and expect that the relations between the United States and the new post-settlement Afghan Islamic government as determined by the intra-Afghan dialogue and negotiations will be positive.

On U.S.-Afghanistan future economic cooperation, the agreement reads: “The United States will seek economic cooperation for reconstruction with the new post-settlement Afghan Islamic government as determined by the intra-Afghan dialogue and negotiations, and will not intervene in its internal affairs.”

(By arrangement with Tolo News)

U.S., Taliban To Sign Deal To Begin The End Of Afghanistan War

NEW DELHI: Later today, a moment in history when the U.S. and Afghanistan’s Taliban make a beginning to end their war now 19 years old. It’s America’s longest conflict, also bittersweet given that this was the very movement Washington blamed for being complicit in 9/11 and which it overthrew in 2001. So full circle.

What’s in the deal? It reportedly sets a deadline of 135 days for the drawdown of U.S. troops in Afghanistan from 13,000 to 8,600; there’s no clarity on the timeline for a complete withdrawal. So far, the Taliban have not publicly said anything about the U.S. demand to keep counter-terrorism forces in Afghanistan.

According to Time magazine, the deal has several “secret annexes” including Taliban denouncement of terrorism and violent extremism, a mechanism to monitor the truce when the warring Afghan parties sit down to negotiate and another about how the CIA will operate in Taliban-controlled areas.

Now here’s a clarification. An influential think tank in Washington describes the deal as a “precursor phase of the Afghan peace process, one that was necessary to bring the Taliban to the table with the Afghan government and political leadership for a substantive dialogue”.

Andrew Watkins of the International Crisis Group says today’s deal will provide a “window of opportunity” for a political settlement and a peaceful end to the conflict, which could take many months.

This is an uncertain moment for India, which explains Foreign Secretary Harsh Shringla’s sudden dash to Kabul to confer with the Ghani government. There were the usual iterations of support and the mantra of “Afghan-led, Afghan owned, Afghan controlled” peace process was sounded. But when a 500-pound gorilla like the U.S. decides it’s had enough and wants out, there’s little for India to do but wait and watch.

India has doubts about the Taliban; it is convinced that it will be a front for Pakistan, terror camps could mushroom like the old times. But South Block also knows that it has advantages and any future Taliban-led government may reach out to India to a) balance off Pakistan and b) ensure continued security and development assistance. That could provide a window for India to preserve its interests in that country.

‘Erdogan May Have Committed The Ultimate Sin, Strategic Overreach’

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NEW DELHI: They are allies or were until the other day when things began to come apart. This is with reference to Turkey and Russia who shared similar goals in Syria, and now are on opposite sides it would seem. Turkey seems to want to consolidate its position in Syria and has its troops actively assisting Islamic extremists battling President Bashar Assad’s forces. Assad has Russia’s backing and this is where it appears Turkey’s President Recip Erdogan is guilty of strategic overreach. In fact, when one looks at Erdogan, he’s meddling in Libya 2000 km away, he has alienated his Mediterranean neighbours over his energy ambitions and has been thumbing his nose at the US for some time. StratNews Global speaks to Talmiz Ahmed, India’s former ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Oman and the UAE to get the sense of Erdogan.


Pulls And Pressures Of The International System Are Most Evident In Trade: Jaishankar

PUNE: External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar underlined the importance of trade in the current international order when he stated, “The pulls and pressures of the international system are today most evident in the trade domain.”

Talking about the increasing focus on trade the minister added that the last few decades there had been what he called a “rebalancing of the world economy.”

He stated: “In the last few decades there has been a rebalancing of the global economy. A primary characteristic of that has been the emergence of more diverse production centres and consecutively, of different patterns of trade.”

“In due course this has also led to growth of new centres of consumption. The changing trade scenario is expressed today in the forging of new partnerships, dependence on sourcing and mapping of supply chains.”

Jaishankar was speaking via video-conferencing, at the inaugural session of the Asia Economic Dialogue (AED) which began on Friday in Pune.

The three-day conference which is being jointly hosted by the Pune International Centre (PIC) and the External Affairs Ministry is one of the three main dialogues that are organised and supported by the ministry. According to former ambassador Gautam Bambawale, the convenor of the AED, the idea of the conference was to create a “Davos-like atmosphere,” which would view the many challenges the world economy faced from an Asian perspective.

The session was moderated by Vijay Kelkar, vice-president of PIC, while the dignitaries were Dr Krishnamurthy Subramanian, chief economic advisor of India, Shehan Semasinghe, state minister of development banking and loan schemes, Sri Lanka; Fayyaz Ismail, minister of economic development, Maldives; and Baba Kalyani, chairman and managing director, Bharat Forge.

Coming to the ministers, the Maldivian minister Fayyaz Ismail called for stronger measures to ensure more equitable growth within Asia while the Sri Lankan minister Shehan Semasinghe said that the continent needed to take a more active role in global trade.

“The international trading system depends on global trading agreements but there will be growing uncertainty due to growing trade tensions between major nations. The good news is that in all this is that Asia’s fundamentals are likely to remain healthy. We however must realise that the world is going through rapid changes economically now and as Asians we should actively be involved in the reform process to ensure that a fairer and more improved multilateral trading system is created.”

Speaking next, chief economic advisor Dr Krishnamurthy Subramanian said that the focus today needed to be on “ethical wealth creation” i.e. wealth creation through the right means.

“Trust is a public good with an important distinction and if trust gets the support of the market, then it will contribute to the country’s prosperity and GDP. The more you use it, the more valuable it gets. It is extremely important to achieve trust in ethical wealth generation.”