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DeAnna Calderón
@DCinTejas
·
19 h
I’m starting to think Iran Contra never ended.

The City of London still launders IRGC money and the U.S. allowed their families to move here.
Citat
DeAnna Calderón
@DCinTejas
·
11 apr.
How interesting, Iran’s ties to Marc Rich who sold sanctioned oil to Israel.🧐
https://forbes.com/forbes/2003/07
21/056.html?sh=6fe864911c49

James E. Thorne
@DrJStrategy
Food for thought.

Trump’s Deal With Indonesia: Mahan at the Strait of Malacca

Hu Jintao warned China about this moment more than twenty years ago. In 2003, the then Chinese president coined the phrase “Malacca dilemma” to describe a simple, brutal fact: the country’s economic rise depended on foreign oil sailing through a narrow strait that other powers could, in a crisis, choose to close. Most of China’s imported crude and gas still squeezes through that same bottleneck between Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. The US has just moved to wire that vulnerability, and it is no accident this is happening on Donald Trump’s watch.

Washington’s new Major Defense Cooperation Partnership with Indonesia is being sold in the usual diplomatic euphemisms: capacity building, maritime security, joint training. Strip away the boilerplate and you see something far sharper. The agreement’s focus on maritime domain awareness, subsurface and autonomous systems, and special forces training is about giving Indonesia and by extension the U.S. and its allies, a far richer picture of everything that moves between the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea, and greater ability to shape it in a crisis. As with Trump’s broader Indo‑Pacific posture, this is one more move to reassert the US as the pre‑eminent maritime power of the age, and to ensure China feels that reality every time a tanker clears the Strait.

Hu’s “Malacca dilemma” was never only about a single shipping lane. It was about the geometry of China’s energy dependence. Oil from the Gulf and Africa has to arrive by sea. The shortest, cheapest route runs past India, through Malacca and adjacent Indonesian straits, and then up into waters where the U.S. Navy and its partners have operated for decades. A coalition that can see, track and, if necessary, interdict that flow holds a lever over China’s economy that no amount of rhetoric about multipolarity can wish away.

More than a century ago, Alfred Thayer Mahan argued that sea power, fleets, chokepoints and maritime commerce, would decide the fate of great powers. The Malacca dilemma is Mahan’s theory rendered in modern energy terms: a continental power whose trade and fuel move by sea lives or dies by access to narrow maritime bottlenecks policed by others. Trump’s Indonesia move is pure Mahan: rather than chasing dominance on land, Washington is tightening its grip on the sea lanes and straits through which China’s economic lifeblood must flow.
Beijing has spent two decades trying to escape this trap with pipelines from Central Asia and Russia, a corridor through Myanmar and a “string of pearls” of ports from Gwadar to Djibouti. Yet the volumes tell a less reassuring story: overland routes move at the margin, while the bulk of China’s energy still comes by tanker and still passes through Southeast Asian chokepoints. The dilemma has been managed, not resolved.

That is why Indonesia matters. Jakarta insists it is not choosing sides and will continue to balance between Washington and Beijing. It doesn’t have to do more than that for this pact to bite. As Indonesian officers train with American counterparts and integrate U.S.‑supplied surveillance and patrol systems, the operational environment quietly changes. Chinese planners contemplating a crisis over Taiwan, the South China Sea or even a clash around Hormuz now have to assume that traffic through Malacca and its alternatives will unfold under a web of sensors and partnerships that lean, in practice if not in rhetoric, toward Washington.

Another move by President Trump, in other words. From rebuilding American shipyards to pouring money into Indo‑Pacific maritime forces, the pattern is clear: the United States intends to remain a maritime superpower, and to make China live with Hu Jintao’s old nightmare instead of escaping it. Mahan would have recognised the logic instantly: in the end, it is the power that commands the sea, and the straits, that sets the terms for everyone else.

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Monday Night At The Movies: "The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" (1988)

Join Gagglers for "The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" (1988)"!
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Share all of your thoughts, comments and criticisms on the Live Chat.

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TG 2101: After Islamabad, Trump Threatens Hormuz Blockade

George Szamuely and Peter Lavelle discuss the surprising aftermath of the U.S.-Iran negotiations in Islamabad:President Trump's threat to blockade the Straits of Hormuz.

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TG 2100: Are The Islamabad Talks A Pretext For A New War On Iran?

George Szamuely and Peter Lavelle discuss the upcoming U.S.-Iran talks in Islamabad, and wonder whether there is any chance of their delivering a peaceful settlement.

01:43:17
18 hours ago

@TheGaggle

https://www.thestrad.com/news/violinist-pekka-kuusisto-to-pause-us-engagements-over-political-and-ethical-concerns/21107.article

We played several times with him as a soloist, and two month ago we played a concert with him as a conductor. He is a very special and great musician and a wonderful person.

https://www.sinfonieorchesterbasel.ch/de/konzerte/marchenhaft/11831

Eyes on

Hegseth just hosted Indonesian counterpart and announced a “Major Defense Cooperation Partnership”.

The Strait of Hormuz is 2nd highest volume oil chokepoint on Earth.

What’s the 1st? The Strait of Malacca, INDONESIA (80% of China’s oil imports pass through here).

Global oil shipping chokepoints are being secured by the US MIL and their partners. Trump is securing the board!

It’s happening. https://x.com/WarClandestine/status/2043829296117231780?s=20

January 21, 2023
More Leftie Than Thou
"Jacobin" Magazine Celebrates A Strike Against Ol' Blue Eyes

Here at "The Gaggle" we have very little time for the "more Leftie than thou" school of thought--that's the approach to life according to which the only thing that matters is whether you take the right position on every issue under the sun from Abortion to Zelensky. No one in the world meets the exacting standards of this school of thought; any Leftie leader anywhere is always selling out to the bankers and the capitalists. The perfect exemplar of this is the unreadable Jacobin magazine. 

The other day I came across this article from 2021. It's a celebration of trade union power. And not simply trade union power, but the use of trade union power to secure political goals. Of course (and this is always the case with the "more Leftie than thou" crowd), this glorious, never-to-be-forgotten moment on the history of organized labor took place many years ago--in the summer of 1974 to be exact. Yes, almost half a century has gone by since that thrilling moment when the working-class movement of Australia mobilized and prepared to seize the means of production, distribution and exchange. 

Well, not quite. Organized labor went into action against...Ol' Blue Eyes, the Chairman of the Board, the Voice; yes, Frank Sinatra. Why? What had Sinatra done? Sinatra was certainly very rich, and he owned a variety of properties and businesses. But if the Australian trade union movement were, understandably, searching for the bright, incandescent spark that would finally awaken the working class from its slumber there were surely richer, greedier, more dishonest, more decadent, above all more Australian individuals it could have discovered. Australia was never short of them. Rupert Murdoch immediately springs to mind. Why Sinatra?

 

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