Wednesday, 22 November 2023

Growing Chinese influence in Asia

The new economic framework of United States was intended to counter China’s influence in the Indo-Pacific region. But the increasingly inward-looking Washington is no longer a champion of free trade, says S Rajaratnam School of International Studies’ Kevin Chen.

Three of the four Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) pillars may have been completed, but the inability of United States to see through the trade deal aimed at countering China’s economic influence is a strategic failure.

Hopes of an agreement were dashed last week at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, even before former US president Donald Trump threatened to knock out the initiative if he were to return to power.

The IPEF was supposed to fill the policy gap left by the Trump administration’s withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) in 2017.

It was styled as a novel economic agreement that provides a template for future economic engagement after years of rudderless drifting in the Indo-Pacific.

“You can count on the United States,” said Joe Biden at APEC. At its most basic level, the IPEF aimed to reassure America’s partners that it is still interested in a meaningful economic relationship with them. However, it has ostensibly fallen short of even that.

Southeast Asian observers should recognize that for domestic political reasons, Washington is no longer a champion of free trade. While they should continue engaging with the US on security issues, they should also be mindful that their region’s economic agenda is increasingly diverging from that of Washington’s.

The IPEF was challenging to negotiate from the outset, its demands and constraints a product of US domestic politics.

The lack of access to the US market removed a key incentive from the American negotiating toolkit. It was an effort to avoid a sensitive political issue: American public opinion has become generally less supportive of free trade due to the perception that cheap foreign goods are displacing American products, especially in key swing states and unions.

Believing that deep trade liberalization failed to protect American jobs and capacity, Biden’s administration bucked decades of free trade promotion to aggressively subsidise favoured industries in its competition with China. US$39 billion in manufacturing incentives was allocated under the CHIPS Act alongside US$370 billion in investments for clean energy under the Inflation Reduction Act to grow the US industrial base.

Meanwhile, labour and environmental standards were always a hard sell to partners such as Vietnam and Indonesia. These US demands tapped on these growing sentiments against free trade.

A common rallying call was that trade deals need to ensure strong labour and anti-dumping standards so American workers can compete on a level playing field – not just with Chinese workers, but with supply chains linked to China as well.

Yet, the IPEF was still vulnerable to the domestic forces it sought to appease. As a White House initiative, the IPEF was unlikely to garner financial support from a split Congress and could also be cancelled with a simple executive order by a future president.

Negotiators likely understood that the odds were stacked against them. The timeframe to complete IPEF negotiations was also relatively short at two years, compared to seven years for the TPP.

 

Gaza disaster exposes double standards

Saudi Arabia emphasized on Wednesday that the Gaza disaster has exposed the double standards and selective application of international laws and UN resolutions by the global community.

In his speech, on behalf of Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman, at the virtual summit of the leaders of the G20 countries, Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan said the Israeli military escalation and violence are raging in the besieged Gaza in flagrant violation of international laws and it had resulted in one of the history’s worst humanitarian catastrophes.

“The Gaza conflict would inevitably lead to consequences that go beyond this crisis and jeopardize the credibility of the current international system, which will have a negative impact on the world’s future ability to maintain international peace and security,” he said.

Al-Jadaan stressed Saudi Arabia’s categorical rejection of targeting civilians, infrastructure, residential and medical facilities, and displacing Palestinians from Gaza. He reiterated the Kingdom’s demand to spare bloodshed and stop Israeli military operations immediately.

He underlined the need for urgent and safe access of relief and medical supplies to the residents of the Gaza Strip, and create conditions to restore stability and achieve a peaceful solution that guarantees the Palestinian people’s access to their legitimate rights and the establishment of their independent state within the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

The virtual meeting comes as a continuation of G20 summit of leaders, held in New Delhi, India in September, and it aimed to discuss the outcomes of its final statement and a number of topics, including the role of multilateral development banks, climate action and green finance, technical transformation, digital infrastructure, and the role of women in development.

 

Oil price tumbles nearly 4% as OPEC Plus meeting delayed

Crude oil prices fell nearly 4% on Wednesday as OPEC Plus producers delayed a meeting on output planned for Sunday, raising questions about the future course of crude production cuts. Brent crude futures declined 3.7%, to US$79.40 a barrel by 1313 GMT and WTI crude futures were down 3.82%, to US$74.80.

OPEC Plus delayed its ministerial meeting scheduled for November 30, OPEC said in a statement, without giving a reason for the postponement.

Earlier on Wednesday, Bloomberg News reported that the OPEC Plus meeting could be delayed for an unspecified period of time after Saudi Arabia expressed its dissatisfaction with other members about their output numbers.

Analysts had predicted before the delay that OPEC Plus was likely to extend or even deepen oil supply cuts into next year.

Both Brent and WTI oil benchmarks have fallen for four straight weeks.

 

Tuesday, 21 November 2023

Two ships divert course away from Red Sea

Two commercial ships that diverted their course in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden were connected to the same maritime group whose vessel was seized by Yemen's Houthis, according to shipping data and British maritime security company Ambrey.

Israel on Sunday said the Houthis had seized a British-owned, Japanese-operated cargo ship in the southern Red Sea, describing the incident as an Iranian act of terrorism with consequences for international maritime security.

The Houthis, an ally of Tehran, confirmed that they had seized a ship in that area but termed it Israeli.

Japan's top government spokesperson on Monday confirmed the capture of the Nippon Yusen-operated ship Galaxy Leader, adding that Japan was appealing to the Houthis while seeking the help of Saudi, Omani and Iranian authorities to work toward the swift release of the vessel and its crew.

Two other ships also listed as commercially managed by Ray Car Carriers, Glovis Star and Hermes Leader, diverted their sailing routes, Ambrey said on Monday.

"The vessel continued to sail back to where it had come from, providing a new AIS destination as Hambantota, Sri Lanka," Ambrey said. "The vessel incurred a minimum four-day business disruption and sailed an additional 1,876 nautical miles."

The Glovis Star drifted for a number of hours in the Red Sea before continuing its journey, AIS ship tracking data showed on Monday.

Isle of Man registered Galaxy Maritime, which is the registered owner of the Galaxy Leader, said in a statement on Monday that the vessel was illegally boarded by military personnel via a helicopter on November 19.

When asked about the other two vessels diverting, a company spokesperson said it was not commenting further on political issues.

Houthi leadership last week said their forces would make further attacks on Israel and they could target Israeli ships in the Red Sea and the Bab al-Mandeb Strait.

US maritime administration MARAD in an advisory said the Galaxy Leader had been hijacked approximately 50 miles west of the Houthi-controlled port of Hodeidah, adding that ships should exercise caution when transiting this area.

"We saw yesterday a new record - for the first time we saw an official announcement of pirates taking over a ship on the high seas, which I think is a major threat to international law and order," Israeli President Isaac Herzog said in comments on Monday, referring to the Galaxy Leader.

 

Iran aims boosting trade with Pakistan

The Islamic Republic of Iran is aiming to expand its economic and trade relations with Pakistan through establishing joint free zones and trade centers with the country, IRIB reported.

According to Ahmad Jamali, the deputy secretary of Iran’s Free Zones High council, Tehran has reached an agreement with Islamabad to establish a joint free zone on the border between the two countries.

“We have identified 200 investment opportunities in potential joint free zones with Pakistan which can be used to boost export to the country,” Jamali said in a meeting held on Monday by the Trade Promotion Organization (TPO) for exploring Iran-Pakistan business opportunities.

Noting that Chabahar free zone in Sistan-Baluchestan Province is a good platform to develop exports from Iran to Pakistan, the official added, “Identifying investment opportunities in free zones can lead to the prosperity of businesses and trade of the two countries’ economic operators.”

Jamali further noted that Iran has considered significant incentives for the exporters to Pakistan and the government fully supports business operators active in the mentioned country.

Mentioning an upcoming exhibition of Iran-Pakistan trade opportunities, which is scheduled to be held in mid-January 2024, Jamali said holding such exhibitions would also be another great way to expand economic relations between the two countries.

Also speaking in the same meeting, Director of TPO’s South Asia Department Hadi Talebian-Moghadam announced a plan for establishing trade centers in Pakistan in the coming months, saying: “We are planning to increase the volume of trade between Iran and Pakistan, because the two countries need each other's goods and products.”

Stating that currently the highest level of trade between Iran and Pakistan is nearly US$2.5 billion, he added. “In the two countries’ strategic cooperation roadmap, we seek to increase the level of exports and exchanges between the two countries to five billion dollars bartering and free trade.”

The value of Iran’s non-oil export to Pakistan increased by 62% during the first seven months of the current Iranian calendar year, as compared to the same period in the past year, the spokesman of the International Relations and Trade Development Committee of Iran's House of Industry, Mining and Trade announced.

Ruhollah Latifi said that Iran exported non-oil commodities worth US$1.14 billion to its neighbor Pakistan in the seven-month period of this year.

He also announced that Iran imported commodities valued at US$352.64 million from Pakistan during the first seven months of this year, with 39% drop YoY.

The official has previously announced that Iran’s non-oil export to Pakistan increased by 18% in the previous Iranian calendar year.

Pakistan was Iran’s fifth largest export market in the previous calendar year, importing non-oil products worth US$1.488 billion from Iran, Latifi said in May.

He added that Iran imported non-oil goods worth $842 million from Pakistan last year, up 170% from the previous year.

The intertwining of economic, security, and transit relations between Iran and Pakistan has made the relations of the two countries beyond the neighborhood and turned them into strategic partners with common interests at the regional level.

Having more than 900 kilometers of joint border can lead to closer cooperation between the two countries in areas such as transit corridors and bilateral trade.

Iran and Pakistan signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in mid-January to facilitate bilateral trade between the two countries.

The MoU was signed by the former Head of Iran’s Trade Promotion Organization (TPO) Alireza Peyman-Pak and Head of the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) Muhammad Zubair Motiwala.

Based on the MoU, which was signed on the sidelines of Iran’s Exclusive Exhibition in Karachi, the parties pledged to exchange business information, support each other’s private sectors, and provide the conditions and context for the presence of their trade delegations in the other country.

Speaking at the signing ceremony, Peyman-Pak said that signing this MoU was indicative of the two sides’ determination for removing the obstacles in the way of bilateral trade and prepare the ground for the businesspersons of both sides to bolster cooperation.

He considered the holding of exclusive exhibitions, exchanging trade delegations and investment in joint production units as positive steps for knowing the capacities and needs of the two countries and expressed hope that such events would continue.

 

Monday, 20 November 2023

Israel’s ultimate objective: Occupy Gaza energy resources

An expert on Middle East security and nuclear policy specialist at Princeton University says, the ultimate objective of the extremist regime of Benjamin Netanyahu is to expel Palestinians from their homeland Gaza and get control over multi-billion-dollar energy resources.

To realize this goal, Seyed Hossein Mousavian says, as the war continued with no ceasefire in sight, on October 29 Netanyahu’s government awarded 12 licences to six companies, including BP and Italy's ENI, for natural gas exploration off the Mediterranean Basin area.

Following is the text of the article published on November 15 on Middle East Eye: 

After October 07 Palestinian fighters' attack, which killed around 1,200 people and led to hundreds of hostages being taken to Gaza, Israel responded ferociously. 

It has dropped more than 18,000 tons of bombs on Gaza so far, killing more than 12,000 Palestinians - mostly women, children and elderly people - in more than a month of relentless air strikes.

A top UN official in New York recently resigned calling the events in Gaza a textbook case of genocide in which Western governments have been wholly complicit.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed that his country will not surrender until Hamas is eliminated.

As the horrific onslaught enters its seventh week, the issue of energy resources could add another layer of complexity to the ongoing war.

According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), significant reservoirs of oil and natural gas have been found off the Gaza Strip and elsewhere under the occupied West Bank. 

"The Occupied Palestinian Territory lies above sizeable reservoirs of oil and natural gas wealth, in Area C of the occupied West Bank and the Mediterranean coast off the Gaza Strip. However, occupation continues to prevent Palestinians from developing their energy fields so as to exploit and benefit from such assets," said the study conducted by UNCTAD in 2019.

In this context, the issue of sovereignty over Gaza’s gas fields is vital for Israel.

The Oslo II Accord signed in 1995 gave the Palestinian Authorities (PA) maritime jurisdiction over its waters up to 20 nautical miles from the coast, therefore, the PA signed a 25-year contract for gas exploration with the British Gas Group (BGG) in November 1999.

In 2000, two wells drilled by British Gas off the coast of Gaza revealed gas reserves estimated at 1.4 trillion cubic feet. Sixty percent of those reserves belong to Palestinians. 

In July 2000, the Israeli prime minister granted BGG security authorisation to drill the first well, Marine 1, as part of political recognition by Israel that the well was under PA jurisdiction. 

After Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Europe tried to secure alternatives to Russian energy supplies, and revived a Palestinian initiative to extract natural gas off the coast of Gaza. It was hoped that the US$1.4 billion project - involving the Palestinian Authority, Egypt, Israel and Hamas - could launch gas production by March 2024. 

Such a project could have laid the groundwork for a win-win collaboration between the Palestinians and Israel.

The new resources of oil and natural gas finds in the Eastern Mediterranean are valued at an astounding US$524 billion.

But as the Israel-Palestine conflict has dramatically escalated in recent weeks, that no longer appears to be on the horizon, with the project frozen for the foreseeable future. 

Instead, on 29 October, as the war continued with no ceasefire in sight, Netanyahu’s government awarded 12 licences to six companies, including BP and Italy's ENI, for natural gas exploration off the Mediterranean Basin area.

The new resources of oil and natural gas finds in the Eastern Mediterranean are valued at an astounding US$524 billion. However, according to the UN report, a significant portion of those assets will have to be sourced from within the occupied territory of Palestine.

In addition, during the G20 summit in New Delhi this September, the US and EU announced their backing for a plan to build an economic corridor linking India with the Middle East and Europe - a massive project to rival China’s Belt and Road Initiative. 

Netanyahu described it as a cooperation project that is the greatest in our history, adding, “Our country Israel will be a central junction in this economic corridor; our railways and our ports will open a new gateway from India through the Middle East to Europe, and back.”

Israel’s plan is to become a major exporter of gas and some oil. In the past 20 years, the country has been transformed from a net importer of fossil fuels to an exporter of natural gas.

Netanyahu’s October 2023 declaration of war on Gaza is a continuation of Israel’s previous invasion of Gaza in 2014 when at least 2,104 Palestinian were killed, including 1,462 civilians. The underlying military objective of the occupation of Gaza is the expulsion of Palestinians from their homeland.

Israeli defence minister, Yoav Gallant, has said the plan is to eliminate everything and another minister, Gideon Sa’ar, said Gaza must be smaller at the end of the war. Moreover, an Israeli government concept paper proposed to transfer the Gaza Strip's 2.3 million people to Egypt's Sinai Peninsula. 

However, the ultimate objective is not only to demolish Hamas and/or exclude Palestinians from their homeland, but to confiscate Gaza's multi-billion-dollar gas resources.

 

Saudi Arabia-China currency swap agreement

The Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) has signed a three-year currency swap agreement with the Central Bank of China, marking a milestone in financial cooperation between the two nations.

The accord establishes a maximum swap value of 50 billion Chinese yuan.

This strategic agreement reflects the commitment of both central banks to enhance collaboration and strengthen ties founded on mutual interests.

The three-year duration underscores the long-term nature of this financial partnership, showcasing the enduring commitment of Saudi Arabia and China to bolstering their economic relations.