quinta-feira, 6 de junho de 2024

Putin está cada dia mais desesperado; já nem pensa o que fala

 Russia will supply long-range weapons to countries for "sensitive strikes" against Ukraine's allies

Putin said that "strikes against Russia with the participation of Western countries means their direct war against Russia." He threatened to send long-range weapons to regions from where “sensitive strikes” would be launched against states supplying weapons to Ukraine.

Earlier, Putin said European countries should "remember that they have a large population density" when deciding whether to authorize the use of their supplied weapons for strikes on Russian territory.

Trechos selecionados da entrevista de Rubens Ricupero ao Canal Livre da BandNews TV - Airton Dirceu Lemmertz

 Rubens Ricupero (ex-ministro do Meio Ambiente e da Fazenda) elogiou o governo de Itamar Franco por ter conseguido resolver o problema da hiperinflação: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9HLOGB26jI


A transição da moeda brasileira: “o Real deu certo porque a população não aguentava mais”. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mOYWQPSEVWk

“A Esquerda brasileira, por bons motivos, não aprendeu que gastar além da conta é o pior caminho possível” (sobre a forma de o governo Lula administrar a economia): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmjwkwj1sfY

O ex-diplomata Rubens Ricupero disse que concorda com a taxação de produtos importados de até 50 dólares: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2Whv0dIJiw

Ricupero criticou o judiciário dos EUA, que está “regredindo” ao autorizar que o ex-presidente condenado do país volte a concorrer eleitoralmente: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CV7xvlVuSJU

O acordo entre o Mercosul e a União Europeiahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KwXX6MJhB7w

As questões de planejamento do Brasil e, ainda, que o país precisa investir mais em energia: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90_yDLnswJU

As taxas de desemprego e inflação no Brasil: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZAK-BSMnuPM

A guerra entre Israel e Hamashttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKJbJU-HHVs

quarta-feira, 5 de junho de 2024

D Day, 1944: the greatest generation, 80 years ago - Stephen Collinson, Caitlin Hu and Shelby Rose (CNN Meanwhile in America)

Before endeavors fade

Stephen CollinsonCaitlin Hu and Shelby Rose

CNN Meanwhile in America, June 5, 2024

 

The new world for which the greatest generation sacrificed in the bloody surf of the Normandy beaches is fading into history along with the last of the old soldiers.

 

The 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings observed by President Joe Biden in France on Thursday will likely be the last major decennial commemoration attended by significant numbers of veterans. Even a 19-year-old who stormed ashore in the biggest amphibious operation in history would soon be 100.

 

Biden is certain to cite an unrepayable debt owed to US, British, Canadian and other troops involved in Operation Overlord. He’ll walk among row upon row of white crosses and Stars of David shaded by pine trees and oaks overlooking Omaha Beach. This is where more than 9,000 fallen Americans from all 50 states and the District of Columbia lay at rest thousands of miles from the land they left to save foreigners they’d never met.

 

This year’s memorial ceremony represents far more than a poignant farewell to surviving comrades of more than 150,000 allied troops that forged a beachhead for the liberation of Europe from Adolf Hitler’s Nazis.

 

Presidents, prime ministers and monarchs from NATO nations are gathering at a paradoxical moment. They are unusually united but experiencing growing dread. The alliance has a new sense of mission in opposing another war started by a tyrant bent on territorial expansion — this time in Ukraine. But at no point since June 6, 1944, has US leadership of the West and support for internationalist values that the invasion enshrined been so in question. 

 

Democracy is facing its sternest test in generations from far-right populism on the march on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. Geopolitical empires like Russia and China are meanwhile resurgent and threatening to obliterate the global system dominated by Western values that has prevailed since World War II.

 

European nations that were already rattled by presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump’s constant attacks on NATO in his first term have been further rocked by his recent comment that he’d let Russia do “whatever the hell they want” with allies that he regarded as failing to “pay their bills” on defense spending. The comment weakens the foundational NATO creed of mutual self-defense, without which the alliance has no meaning. Some of Trump’s ex-advisors have warned that he might try to exit the alliance if he wins a second term in November. Even if Biden wins, there are growing indications that America’s willingness to maintain the security guarantees — even to former enemies like Germany and Japan that bought 80 years of peace — may be waning.

 

Trump’s “America First” philosophy has taken deep root in the Republican Party that once prided itself on winning the Cold War. Some GOP figures, led by the ex-president, now appear to have more empathy for Russian President Vladimir Putin than for the liberal European democracies that the United States rebuilt after World War II. And the months-long delay in funding Biden’s most recent aid package for Ukraine has raised doubts that Washington will always stand up for democracy in Europe.

 

 

Call for papers: Janus.Net, especial number on Brazil's international role - June 2024

Call for papers: Janus.Net, special number on Brazil

 

Dear Colleagues and Friends,

 

Brazil is a major economy of Latin America that acts with increasing prominence on the global economic and political stage. Brazil has over 200 million people. It is a member of international groups as diverse as G20, Mercosur and BRICS. Brazil has diversified sectors and abundant natural resources. It continues to be a global leader in the export of agricultural commodities and present promising economic growth indicators. The country has also in recent decades managed to expand its industries and service sector, attracting both domestic and foreign investments. The political landscape of Brazil is a complex one. While the country has witnessed economic growth and social progress, it has also been confronted with major challenges related to social inequality, corruption and political trust. Against this background, JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations will be publishing a special issue that discusses Brazil in a greater context. It is hoped that this initiative will bring together experts and scholars interested in the Federative Republic of Brazil and its international forays, asking what the future holds for emerging partners hailing from as far as the People’s Republic of China. Therefore, you are kindly invited to contribute.

 

Francisco Leandro: fleandro@um.edu.mo (University of Macau)

Kaian Lam: kaianlam@um.edu.mo (University of Macau)

Yichao Li: liyichao@zjnu.edu.cn (Zhejiang Normal University)

 

 

How War in Ukraine Made Russia China's Slave; Why China Wants to Attack Russia; How the US and UK’s Aid Package to Ukraine Will Destroy Putin - The Military Show

Military Show continua com seus vídeos instrutivos: 

1) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTGmEZDBo7w

How War in Ukraine Made Russia China's Slave

The Military Show
In the early days of the People’s Republic of China, Mao Zedong was treated as Stalin's puppet during his visit to Moscow in 1949. However, China was determined to correct historical humiliations. Now, 70 years later, the tables have turned, and China holds the upper hand in its relationship with Russia. How did this drastic power shift occur? Watch to find out! 🇨🇳🇷🇺 #China #Russia #History #PowerDynamics #Geopolitics #MaoZedong #Stalin #GlobalPolitics #ColdWar


2) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXTPSXX2r-o

Why China Wants to Attack Russia

The Military Show
Dive deep into the intricate geopolitical histories of Russia and China! 🤝💔 Explore their economic ties, historical conflicts, and the potential for a Sino-Russian war. 🤔 What factors could lead to an attack, and who would emerge victorious? 🌐🔍 Uncover the century-long disputes over territories and treaties, and how current events in Ukraine and the melting Arctic ice could reshape global dynamics. 🌊❄️ Join the discussion on the possible future alliances and conflicts shaping the new world order! 


How the US and UK’s Aid Package to Ukraine Will Destroy Putin

The Military Show

Ukraine has faced immense challenges in its war with Russia, with significant losses including Avdiivka. However, new aid packages from the U.K. and U.S. are set to turn the tide. Massive military support is boosting Ukraine's defenses, potentially derailing Putin's ambitions. Join us as we explore how this seismic shift could reshape the war's outcome. 🌍✊ #UkraineWar #StandWithUkraine #UKAid #USAid #Putin #MilitarySupport #TurningTheTide #


Book: Zeno Leoni. Grand Strategy and the Rise of China (2023) - Review by Zhiqun Zhu (H-Diplo)


H-Diplo: New posted content

From Amazon

During four decades of fast-paced economic growth, China’s ascent has reverberated across the full social spectrum, from international relations to technology, from trade to global health, from academia to climate change. Despite disrupting the long-established cultural and political constructs of the postwar liberal international order, Beijing’s power remains uneven and limited internationally, whereas the rise of China has been the object of much frenzied reaction within Western civil society. The hostility and new cold war with the United States is a major factor in fuelling debate and speculation.

This book explores the uncertainties and dilemmas China’s rise has fuelled for both the US-sponsored liberal order and the Chinese communist elites that are responsible. It provides the tools to understand the contemporary political and media turmoil about China, its causes and its trajectories. It interprets the rise of China through the lenses of global politics and the uneven and combined development of capitalism and its encounter with the authoritarian, one-party system of the Chinese polity.


Graham Allison on Thucydides Trap - The South China Morning Post

Graham Allison on Thucydides Trap - The South China Morning Post 

My Interview With The South China Morning Post

 

The South China Morning Post interviewed me a couple of weeks ago after I returned from Beijing. Overall, it reflects my current thinking about how the U.S. is meeting the China challenge.

  • The interview captures my optimism about the remainder of 2024 based on my reading of what Biden and Xi accomplished at the summit in San Francisco last November. As that reading predicted, we are now seeing increased numbers of serious conversations between their subordinates—including this past weekend between Secretary of Defense Austin and his Chinese counterpart, Defense Minister Dong Jun. Dong’s talking points could have come directly out of the Biden administration’s desired script. For example, whereas earlier Chinese leaders were saying that as long as the U.S. insisted on competition, they would not talk to their counterparts, Dong now said: “We believe that it is precisely because the two militaries have differences that they need to communicate more.” Indeed, the two Secretaries reaffirmed their plans to reopen direct lines of communication. 

  • They asked me whether the Biden administration has a coherent strategy for trying to meet the China challenge. I answered yes and offered my best, short description of it. It consists of three components: fierce competition, deep communication, and serious cooperation.

  • And to what end? To the end of a long-term, peaceful competition in which over the next quarter-century or half-century we will see which of the two systems more successfully delivers what people want.

  • On America’s strategic trilemma, I agreed that we have a fundamental problem. The U.S. certainly has the greatest military force in the world. But if our capabilities and attention must be divided into three components: China, Russia’s war against Ukraine, and the Middle East, then what?  

  • Facing a China that is focused on just one set of scenarios, namely the Taiwan Straits and their peripheral waters, and a Russia focused on Ukraine, not to mention Iran and its proxies surrounding Israel—yikes.

  • As I conclude: “The hardest problem American foreign policy will face over the next decade will be to try to pay less attention to some things in order to pay more attention to others.”  

If you have reactions, we will be interested to receive them.
 

Graham Allison
Douglas Dillon Professor of Government, Harvard Kennedy School

Follow me on Twitter


Lançamento-debate com embaixador Rubens Ricupero, que recém publicou suas Memórias (Editora Unesp) - Japan House, 15/06, 10hs

Sábado, 15 de junho, às 10h

Sala de Seminários da Japan House

Av. Paulista, 52 – 1° andar – São Paulo (SP)

 

As ideias conservadoras (novamente) explicadas a revolucionários e reacionários - livro de João Pereira Coutinho - Martim Vasques da Cunha

 Edmund Burke foi o nosso Virgílio nos labirintos da ideologia política

They understood that wisdom comes of beggary.

W.B.Yeats, “The seven sages”

A reedição brasileira de um livro como As ideias conservadoras (novamente) explicadas a revolucionários e reacionários (Editora Almedina), de João Pereira Coutinho, é de grande importância para o nosso mundo intelectual não porque o autor seja meu amigo (afinal, somos obrigados a fazer full disclosure de nossas relações em homenagem à honestidade intelectual que nos une), mas sim porque o seu assunto, mesmo que pareça cifrado ou distante demais do nosso cotidiano, é essencial para que se entenda as engrenagens políticas que estão em jogo, seja no aspecto nacional como internacional. 

O tópico sobre qual é o significado destas palavras repletas de insinuações maliciosas – conservadorismoconservadorreacionáriofascista – chegou a tal ponto de incompreensão, para não dizer de estultice, que a mera leitura de algumas páginas deste pequeno e elegante volume é uma lufada de ar fresco em um debate que não existe mais – e, se alguma vez existiu, é certeza de que já começou viciado.

João Pereira Coutinho tem um estilo claro, direto que, sobretudo, não banaliza o assunto – muito pelo contrário, ele faz algo improvável para um livro de apenas 107 páginas: contribui com novas ideias, faz o leitor pensar em novas perspectivas e, mais, o retira daquela zona de conforto da qual a suposta “nova direita” tupiniquim sempre caiu, constituída no binômio maniqueísta do “nós” contra “eles” quando, na verdade, todos estão no mesmo barco e ignoram se rumam ou não rumo a um naufrágio.

Todavia, ao mesmo tempo, o livro apresenta um problema, cuja culpa não é sua ou a de seu autor, mas sim do leitor que irá encarar suas linhas. A pergunta que ficará para este sujeito será a seguinte: E o que eu tenho a ver com isso? Porque o livro não dialoga – e nem é mesmo a sua intenção primeira – com o público brasileiro, sequer o lusitano, apesar de ser escrito justamente na língua de ambos os países. O seu público é o anglo-saxão – e isto não é uma má notícia. Pelo contrário: Pereira Coutinho nos apresenta a um mundo que todos nós deveríamos ter acesso – e que foi infelizmente negado por causa de anos de lobotomia em uma cultura da estupidez institucionalizada. E quando falo de “mundo anglo-saxão”, não estou a falar de The Smiths, Echo & The Bunnymen, Lennon & McCarthy e Monty Phyton; falo do filósofo Roger Scruton, do cientista político Anthony Quinton, do grande Michael Oakeshott – e do honorável Sir Edmund Burke (1729-1797), considerado o pai do conservadorismo e, no caso de Pereira Coutinho, “o seu Virgílio nos labirintos da ideologia política”.

O honorável Edmund Burke falando ao deserto da Wasteland...


Ditaduras sempre querem reescrever a História. deformá-la ou suprimi-la: O massacre da Praça da Paz Celestial não será esquecido

 

Taiwan quer preservar memória de massacre chinês
Folha de S. Paulo | Mundo
05 de junho de 2024

TAIPÉ (TAIWAN) | AFP E REUTERS

No dia em que o Massacre na Praça da Paz Celestial completa 35 anos, nesta terça -feira (4), o novo presidente de Taiwan, Lai Ching-te, afirmou que a violenta repressão chinesa na praça Tiananmen "não desaparecerá na torrente da história", ao recordar o evento que pode ter deixado mais de mil mortos em 1989, segundo estimativas.

"Nós continuaremos trabalhando de maneira árdua para manter viva essa memória histórica e alcançar todos os que se preocupam com a democracia chinesa" afirmou Lai em publicação numa rede social.

A declaração de Lai ocorre semanas após a sua posse e depois de a China executar manobras militares ao redor de Taiwan, que Pequim considera uma parte do seu território.

Em Pequim, um porta-voz do Ministério das Relações Exteriores da China, Mao Ning, disse na terça-feira aos repórteres que "se opõe firmemente a qualquer um que difame a China e use Lasso [4 de junho] como pretexto para interferimos assuntos internos da China".

Taiwan é a única parte do mundo de língua chinesa onde a data pode ser lembrada abertamente.

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