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War update
Russia launched its biggest aerial attack in weeks on Thursday, hitting targets across Ukraine with a complex barrage of weapons, including its newest hypersonic missiles, in what it said was retaliation for an incursion last week by a pro-Ukrainian armed group in the Bryansk region of Russia. The missile strikes killed at least six people, knocked out power in several areas and damaged three electrical plants, Ukrainian officials said. Another four civilians died in shelling in the country’s south.
It is a little strange that Moscow would use up hypersonic missiles to strike Ukrainian targets. Is Russia running so low on other missiles that it has to fire more expensive and technically sophisticated missiles? Or is it hoping to send some kind of message?
Ukraine is using up ammunition faster than the West can produce or supply it, and making more shells is expensive. European Union defense ministers met on Wednesday in Stockholm to consider proposals to use the E.U. budget to order and purchase up to one million shells for Ukraine at an estimated cost of four billion euros.
Analysis from our favorite expert on the Ukrainian military, Michael Kofman: “What I can say coming back from Ukraine is that artillery ammunition is a big problem. For example, the @KyivIndependent story about mortar shell availability in the battle for Bakhmut tracked with things we had seen and heard.”
U.S. Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines said that Russian President Vladimir Putin likely recognizes the Russian military’s current limited capability to sustain a short-term offensive and may pursue a protracted war. Haines also said that Putin is only temporarily focused on pursuing short-term military objectives in Ukraine and may believe that prolonging the war will increase the likelihood of achieving his strategic goals.
Everything in Russia’s history suggests its grand strategy at this point is a simple one: outlast Russia’s enemies by being willing to take more casualties, more pain, and more suffering than anyone else.
A bombshell
New York Times
report concludes that “new intelligence reviewed by U.S. officials suggests that a pro-Ukrainian group carried out the attack on the Nord Stream pipelines last year.” U.S. National Security Council spokesperson Andrienne Watson criticized the report, saying that the anonymous claims in the report did not come from downgraded intelligence shared by the US government and that sources were not authorized to speak on the US government’s behalf.
That is less than a full-throated rebuttal. Still, it strains credulity that some kind of rogue pro-Ukrainian group could have attacked a target like the Nord Stream pipelines by itself without substantial help from a powerful state actor.
Poland’s defense minister said the country will send 10 more German-made Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine this week.
Poland continues to be the European country most willing to put its money where its mouth is in terms of supporting Ukraine’s defenses.
South Korea announced a plan to compensate Koreans who performed forced labor during Japan’s occupation that doesn’t require Japanese companies to contribute to the reparations. According to South Korean Foreign Minister Park Jin, a government foundation will compensate 15 victims who won legal cases against Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Nippon Steel in 2018. In a statement, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol said that the decision was made to move “toward a future-oriented relationship between South Korea and Japan” and that: “the two countries' governments need to make an effort to help future generations play a pivotal role.”
This will be controversial in South Korea. Civic groups including the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions immediately condemned the plan and said payments through a third-party rather than directly from the Japanese government were unacceptable. (The KCTU called the plan the “worst diplomatic disaster since the founding of the country. Yikes!) That said, if Yoon can make this stick – a big if – it would be a huge shift in South Korea-Japan relations. Yoon can probably hold the line as long as he is leader, but as Moon Jae-in showed, all it takes is the opposite party to take power to throw South Korea-Japan relations into disarray.
On Sunday, outgoing Chinese Premier Li Keqiang emphasized that China must “enhance integration of national strategies and strategic capabilities related to national defense.” A Chinese military/technology think tank assessed that the premier’s statement suggests “China will slow down its defense manufacturing and focus more on research and development of defense-related technologies.” On Monday, the National People’s Congress announced a 7 percent rise in China’s defense budget.
In other words: China has focused on quantity over the last decade instead of quality, especially in terms of buying hardware and weapons systems. Now, China is pivoting to research and development. This is not a military that is spoiling for a fight today: it is one that is preparing for one many years from now. China’s defense spending may sound impressive, but while China has averaged over 10 percent spending hikes since 2014, the U.S. still spends almost 4x China on defense/war-making capabilities.
Whilst giving a farewell address as Chinese premier, Li Keqiang seemed to offer veiled criticism of Chinese President Xi Jinping: “Heaven is looking at what humans are doing. The firmament has eyes." According to an op-ed in Nikkei, Li’s remarks were edited out of China Central Television’s broadcast. On Friday, the Chinese Communist Party unanimously voted to endorse Xi Jinping’s third-term.
One wonders how much Li risks by offering a salvo like this on his way out the door. Li’s power and influence has been steadily eroded by Xi, who purged Li’s acolytes and assumed greater control over the Chinese economy, including usurping several roles historically delegated to the premier. Heaven high…but the emperor is here.
According to
The Financial Times, the U.S., Australia and the UK will soon unveil a program to supply Canberra with nuclear-powered submarines that will culminate in the development of a next-generation boat based on a British design. The critical elements of the so-called AUKUS security pact, which will stretch for decades, will include the provision of US submarines to Australia while its own fleet is developed, according to four people familiar with the agreements.
We’ll wait until we have more details to offer more, but it looks like AUKUS is finally getting off the ground.
The International Monetary Fund said that Sri Lanka had secured financing assurances from China, India and all its major bilateral creditors, setting the stage for final approval of the IMF's $2.9 billion, four-year bailout for the island nation on March 20. The Export-Import Bank of China would only go so far as to say publicly that it will try to finalize its “debt treatment” of Sri Lanka in the weeks ahead.
So much for Chinese debt trap diplomacy? China said Sri Lanka will not have to pay the principal and interest due on its loans “immediately” but that China would still consider how to handle Sri Lanka’s debt over a medium to long-term basis.
India's fuel demand hit its highest level in at least 24 years in February. Consumption of fuel rose by more than 5% to 4.82 million barrels per day in February, its 15th consecutive year-on-year rise.
According to a crude analyst at Kpler, the strength in Indian demand highlights a combination of profitable refining from record Russian crude imports in February, total utilization for primary distillation across India and still-robust domestic consumption. Either way, it is interesting to note that crude prices still seem to be shrugging at increased demand from China after its COVID-19 reopening and record-high Indian demand.
U.S. President Biden released a $6.8 trillion budget proposal that he said would reduce the deficit, raise taxes on the rich, bolster military spending and prepare the U.S. for competition with China. The budget calls for a new 25 percent minimum tax on billionaires, an increase in the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from 21 percent and quadrupling a tax on stock buybacks to 4 percent from 1 percent. Biden claims the budget will trim the federal budget deficit by $3 trillion over the next 10 years, largely by increasing tax revenues by $5 trillion.
This is a starting point for negotiations with a hostile Republican House of Representatives. What eventually became the Inflation Reduction Act promised trillions of federal spending; now it seems deficit-politics is back in vogue, and Biden is trying to lay ground for an argument that shows the Democrats care at least a little about reining in spending.
U.S. oil executives made headlines for their pessimistic takes at an energy conference this week. According to The Wall Street Journal, the chief executive of ConocoPhillips claims that the world is going “back to a world we had in the ‘70s and ‘80s” when OPEC was the dominant oil producer in the world due to a combination of lack of investment in shale oil exploration and depletion in the most lucrative wells in the Permian over the last few years.
Rob and I discuss this briefly on the podcast and oil is the next big research project for geopolitical research, but our first reaction to this piece is that to a certain extent, the oil producers are “talking their book.” The Shale Revolution took off during an era of extremely low interest rates; now, with capital becoming more expensive, that model does not work as well. If U.S. oil production does indeed plateau, it will have significant geopolitical ramifications, not least of which would be a return to restrictions on U.S. energy exports and perhaps even increased U.S. dependence on foreign supply. That is a big if that warrants much more additional analysis.
The United States Trade Representative requested formal trade consultations with Mexico over U.S. objections to Mexico’s plans to limit imports of genetically modified corn and other agricultural biotechnology products. The consultations are the first formal step toward a U.S. request for a dispute settlement panel under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade (USMCA) that could ultimately lead to retaliatory tariffs if the dispute is not resolved. U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said Washington will do whatever is necessary to ensure U.S. farmers and exporters have "full and fair access" to the Mexican market.
Stern words from Vilsack, and example of the kind of disruption in Mexico-U.S. trade ties that AMLO’s more nationalist/populist approach to politics entails.
Russian oil firm Rosneft's CEO Igor Sechin met with Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel amid an acute fuel shortage that has left service stations temporarily shuttered and caused hours-long gasoline queues. The longer the U.S. continues its Cold War-era stance toward Cuba, the longer countries like Russia and China can cement their influence over the island nation. Cuba saw surprisingly widespread protests last year, but despite rising food and energy prices and even shortages, those protests appear to have been quelled for the time being.
The European Union cleared the way for a subsidy race with the U.S. over crucial technologies, allowing EU member states to “match” multi-billion-dollar incentives as they fight to keep projects in Europe. The overhaul published by the European Commission justifies large scale public funding for green projects if similar incentives are offered outside Europe, a radical departure in how state subsidies have been policed within the bloc. The measures will allow states to pump billions of euros into the production of solar panels, batteries, wind turbines, electrolysers and heat pumps.
The Biden administration sought to repair transatlantic ties when it came into office; ironically, however, the Biden White House’s Inflation Reduction Act is encouraging Europe to discover its own agency and sovereignty for green projects.
Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas’s Reform party secured 31.5 percent of the vote in parliamentary elections, which should allow a pro-EU and pro-Kyiv government to remain in power.
Not surprising. The Baltics have more to lose from a Russian victory than anyone else.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tried to get Germany to withdraw its objection to EU legislation that would ban the sale of new CO2-emitting cars and vans starting in 2035. Von der Leyen said “we are in constructive dialogue” and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said, “This is such a solvable task that we are all quite confident.” The Free Democrats (FDP), which are the smallest party in Scholz’s coalition, blocked approval of the 2035 measure because they want a loophole inserted about cars that run on e-fuels, a synthetic gasoline alternative.
Italy, Poland, and Bulgaria support the German position on this. I don’t have much to add at this point but it is an interesting datapoint and trend to follow.
The Dutch government has not yet defined crucial aspects of new restrictions on chip-technology exports to China including whether ASML Holding NV can service chip-printing machines the company has already sold in the country. According to Dutch Trade Minister Liesje Schreinemacher, "Those details still need to be worked out.”
We are as confused as ASML. We have heard everything from the Dutch curbs are even more stringent than what has been reported to the Dutch government is trying to protect the country’s ability to deal with China even as it symbolically signs on for U.S. restrictions. An ASML spokesperson said the company currently interprets the government's remarks to mean that only a thin additional slice of its second-best product line will now be restricted in China, following a complete ban on its most advanced machines in 2019.
Georgia’s governing party withdrew proposed legislation on “foreign agents” that critics said mimicked a Russian law used by the Kremlin to thwart opposition news media and civil society.
The streets of Tblisi were filled with protesters for two consecutive nights. The Georgian government has not said that it has abandoned its hopes to pass the law – just that it will temporarily suspend pursuing the laws passage to allow for the “emotional background” to subside. The E.U. delegation to Georgia said that it welcomed the decision to withdraw the law and said it encouraged “all political leaders in Georgia to resume pro-E.U. reforms.”
A shooting in Nagorno-Karabakh on March 5 left three Karabakhi Armenian police officers and two Azerbaijani soldiers dead.
Talks over Nagorno-Karabakh ironically seemed to be going well in recent weeks; let’s see if this was just a blip or augurs more violence to come.
Mercosur and the European Union agreed on a work plan to resolve outstanding issues and finalize a long-delayed free trade agreement by the end of the first half of the year.
France has blocked progress on the deal, along with Austria and the Netherlands, ostensibly over environmental concerns in the Amazon but more precisely related to concern about competition from South American agricultural commodities flooding the European market. This seems like a positive step forward in EU-Mercosur negotiations, but until there is a clear signal from France that it has dropped its objections, it is difficult to get too excited about this. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is set to visit Brazil next month.
During a meeting with the Political and Social Council of the Commercial Association of São Paulo, Arthur Lira, the president of the Chamber of Deputies, said the Lula government does not have enough support in Brazil’s legislature to approve laws by simple majority, much less advance constitutional matters like tax reforms. In his words: "We have a government that was elected with a minimal margin of votes and that needs to understand that we have an independent Central Bank, regulatory agencies, the State-Owned Companies Law and a Congress with broader attributions.”
Couldn’t have said it better ourselves, Arthur.
Brazil’s biosecurity agency CTNbio approved the cultivation of genetically modified wheat. The approval request was made by plant genetics company Tropical Melhoramento e Genetica, a partner in Brazil of Argentina's Bioceres, which has developed a variety of water-stress resistant GMO wheat known as HB4.
Brazil has ambitious plans to become a wheat exporter – it is currently a net wheat importer. According to Reuters, under severe drought conditions, GMO wheat "showed higher yields than conventional varieties across all environments, with an average 43% yield improvement in targeted environments".
Brazilian and Uruguayan officials have reached an understanding whereby the Rivera airport will become binational, a waterway will be developed, and a new bridge will be built over the Yaguarón river.
If Brazil is going to go from underachiever to true South American power, we want to see more Brazilian integration with countries in the region. This is a small step, but it is evidence that Brazil is thinking that way.
Chile’s Chamber of Deputies rejected a major tax reform bill touted by President Gabriel Boric just days after Finance Minister Mario Marcel seemed convinced of the bill’s passage. According to Marcel, the government hasn’t decided yet if they will wait 12 months to submit the bill again to the lower house, or present the same bill to the Senate instead, which would require a higher 2/3 quorum to advance. The tax reform aimed to ultimately collect up to 3.6% of gross domestic product and proposed a mining royalty, which is also being discussed separately.
The good news: We continue to be right about Chile’s political system moderating Boric’s ability to pass major reforms. The bad news is that Chile does need to institute some level of reforms: gridlock is not a sustainable position in the long-term for the Chilean government.
Ecuador's National Assembly voted in favor of a report which recommends opening an impeachment process against President Guillermo Lasso, accusing him of corruption over dealings in public companies.
For a second consecutive week, a top Ecuadorian political official is falling under investigation on allegations of corruption.
Six Turkish opposition parties came back to the negotiating table after their alliance seemed on the verge of collapse last week and agreed to nominate Kemal KılıçdaroÄŸlu as their joint candidate for the presidency. The coalition published a 12-point plan, which includes reversing current President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s reforms that strengthened the powers of Turkey’s executive branch and turning Turkey back into a parliamentary state.
This is a big deal. Remember last week, when it looked like the opposition coalition was going to fall apart at the goal line? They are back on the same page. The deck is stacked against Kilicdaroglu, but he has broad support, all the momentum, and plenty of issues to hammer against Erdogan.
Iran and Saudi Arabia agreed to restore diplomatic relations. The deal, which includes commitments to reopen embassies within two months, was signed in China after days of negotiations between secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani and his Saudi counterpart, the Islamic Republic News Agency reported. Saudi state-run media confirmed the agreement.
Read this item in context of the one that immediately follows it. Saudi Arabia is playing all sides this week. Relations with Iran have been frozen since 2016, when Saudi Arabia accused Iran of being behind an attack on Saudi oil infrastructure. The two sides have taken halting steps at restoring relations in recent years, but they are on opposite sides of the Yemeni civil war and are geopolitical rivals. Now both are willing to deal with each other…and are willing to announce that news in China. We have noted here repeatedly China will have to get more involved in Middle Eastern politics as it becomes dependent on Middle Eastern oil – this is an impressive foray into that morass.
Saudi Arabia asked the U.S. to provide security guarantees and help to develop its civilian nuclear program as conditions for normalization of ties with Israel. Multiple U.S. reports suggested the Saudis were willing to give up a previous demand – an independent Palestinian state – before agreeing to formal diplomatic ties. In a vacuum,this cuts against our view of U.S.-Saudi relations, which we saw going in divergent directions due to U.S. energy production and Saudi Arabia’s increasing dependence on exports to Asia, and especially China. Higher energy prices (and the White House’s obsession with lowering gasoline prices) along with the collapse of hope in normal relations with Iran have created significant leverage for Saudi Arabia. But this isn’t a vacuum – Saudi Arabia made a deal to restore relations with Iran, announced in China…with no strings attached?
Unrest continues in Israel, where protesters blocked roads and attempted to stop the prime minister flying out the country amid nationwide demonstrations against controversial “judicial reforms” (read: decimation of judicial independence).
An op-ed in Haaretz declared, “Israel’s Long-awaited Secular Uprising Is Finally Here.” Unless the Israeli secular left is willing to partner with Israeli Arabs on more than a temporary basis, they simply don’t have the numbers to change anything. They can thwart Netanyahu temporarily, but as he has shown in election after election, the center-right-religious coalition is the only viable grouping that can attract enough seats to form a coalition on its own. Nothing would please me more than to be wrong about this analysis, but it is unfortunately how I see it.
Egypt’s balance of payments improved in the first quarter of FY2022/2023 (July-September), as the current account deficit has narrowed by 20.2 percent to $3.2 billion compared to $4 billion in the same period of the preceding fiscal year, according to recent data published by the Egyptian Central Bank.
It is easy in geopolitics to tell negative stories. It is harder to tell positive ones. Egypt is in the latter camp. Despite immense geopolitical constraints, the government is handling the overall situation very well. Good policy is arguably not a sustainable source of success — but it certainly helps!
Protests in Tunisia were supported by the powerful UGTT labor union. Marching in the streets of central Tunis, UGTT leader Noureddine Taboubi said, “"We will continue to defend freedoms and rights, whatever the cost. We do not fear prisons or arrests."
If the UGTT turns against President Kais Saied – not just a leader or two, but truly turns against him – Saied won’t last long in office.
Sticking with Tunisia for a moment: The World Bank is pausing talks over its future engagement with Tunisia following anti-immigrant comments made by the country’s president, Kais Saied. The bank’s outgoing president David Malpass said Saied’s recent tirade had triggered “racially motivated harassment and even violence,” and that the institution had postponed planned meetings involving Tunisia until further notice.
Yikes!
Kenya is facing an acute foreign exchange crunch, with U.S. dollar reserves dropping to their lowest in eight years as its currency keeps plummeting against major global currencies. According to the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), the plunge of the Kenyan shilling has been so substantial that it has even breached the regional reserves policy.
(The East Africa Community (EAC) forex reserves policy specifies that a member country must have in its coffers at least four months’ worth of forex reserves in terms of imports cover at any given time.) Kenya’s reserves have been below the required levels since Jan. 26.
In its latest weekly bulletin, CBK revealed that the country’s current usable foreign exchange reserves remain at $6.6 billion, down from $6.9 billion reported at the same time in February. This translates to 3.69 months of import cover. According to Bloomberg, Kenya is seeking a $4.8 billion credit facility from a group of banks as it nationalizes the importing of fuel to enable it to defer payments and conserve its depleting foreign-exchange reserves.
The only thing I can say for sure right now is that this is more evidence of impending U.S. dollar strength, but this is more serious than that for Kenya and warrants additional analysis.
The U.S. ambassador to Nigeria seemed to shift U.S. rhetoric about Nigeria’s elections. Where the State Department said last week Nigeria’s democracy was healthy and well, the ambassador noted in an op-ed that, “It is clear that the electoral process as a whole on February 25 failed to meet Nigerians’ expectations….In the coming days, it will be important for the future of this country that Nigerians not let their differences divide them, and that the legally established process for resolving challenges to the election be allowed to take its course.”
I wouldn’t normally put this here – it isn’t important enough – except that I called out the State Department’s hypocrisy in Nigeria last week in the SitRep, which makes it worthy of follow-up. Has this ambassador got a maverick streak, or is the U.S. realizing that Nigeria’s elections actually weren’t so kosher and is backtracking in case of significant political unrest?
More Nigeria election intrigue: The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has postponed the governorship and state assembly elections scheduled to hold on March 11 by one week. The elections will now hold on March 18, 2023.
Not sure what to make of this other than that the INEC continues to call its own competence into question.
Ethiopia and Sudan agreed to accelerate efforts to end the border dispute and reactivate trade between the two countries.
Now that the Ethiopian civil war is over, Ethiopian’s foreign policy is slowly become more normal. Ethiopia’s relations with Sudan are important to watch in the context of Sudanese and Egyptian concern over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam – another issue that may begin to rear its head if Ethiopia’s return to business as usual continues.
At least 36 people were killed during an overnight attack on a village in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. A local official and the head of a civil society group said on Thursday the assailants were believed to be members of the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) – a Ugandan armed group based in eastern DRC that has pledged allegiance to ISIL (ISIS) and wages frequent deadly raids on villages.
Just what the eastern part of the restive DRC needs – some ISIS-related militants.
The Russian government donated 20,000 tons of fertilizer to Malawi and promised up to 260,000 tons of fertilizer to other nations in sub-Saharan Africa if African leaders will press for the abolition of international sanctions against Russia.
I am not sure how much diplomatic heft sub-Saharan African countries have in the grand scheme of things, but there is no denying that Russia has been clear-eyed about deepening ties with African nations even as it has been bogged down in its war in Ukraine.
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