#conflict

anonymiss@despora.de

“Conflicts Are Multiplying”: U.N. Chief Warns of #World at #War as General #Assembly Kicks Off

Source: https://www.democracynow.org/2024/9/23/headlines/conflicts_are_multiplying_un_chief_warns_of_world_at_war_as_general_assembly_kicks_off

Secretary-General António Guterres: “Conflicts are raging and multiplying, from the #MiddleEast to #Ukraine and #Sudan, with no end in sight. Our collective security system is threatened by geopolitical divides, nuclear posturing and the development of new weapons and theaters of war. Resources that could bring opportunities and hope are invested in death and destruction.”

#conflict #military #politics #uno #news #future #diplomacy #weapon #peace

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

A Debate Tip for the Candidates — There’s a Correct Answer on Weapons to Israel

The correct answer is this: The United States will abide by its own laws and policies on any weapons sent to any ally.

https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/09/10/debate-tip-candidates-theres-correct-answer-weapons-israel

Several of those laws, and the policies that derive from them, curtail American weapons going to countries that have violated or are violating the rules governing war. The federal Foreign Assistance Act prohibits security assistance to any government that restricts the delivery of U.S. humanitarian aid. The better-known Leahy laws, championed by now-retired Vermont Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy, prohibits weapons from going to military units that have committed gross violations of human rights.

#human-rights-watch #human-rights #hrw #debate #israel #palestine #gaza #west-bank #war #conflict #weapons

anonymiss@despora.de

#Pentagon: U.S. 'strengthening' Middle East #military presence amid soaring tensions

Source: https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2024/08/12/Lloyd-Austin-Yoav-Gallant-call/3401723437686/

He told Gallant of the Biden administration's moves to strengthen the U.S. military posture capabilities throughout the Middle East due to the escalating regional tensions, and said he has ordered the USS Georgia guided missile submarine to the Central Command region.

#usa #conflict #Iran #Israel #MiddleEast #news #war

anonymiss@despora.de

US sending more fighter jets and warships to Mideast amid threats from #Iran -led axis

Source: https://www.timesofisrael.com/us-sending-more-fighter-jets-and-warships-to-mideast-amid-threats-from-iran-led-axis/

The US will move a fighter jet squadron to the #MiddleEast and maintain an aircraft carrier in the region, the #Pentagon said Friday, beefing up the American military presence to help defend #Israel from possible attacks by Iran and its proxies and safeguard US troops.

#news #military #navy #conflict #defense

anonymiss@despora.de

#Israel has enacted laws that give the appearance of a legal framework for arrests, but in reality allow total arbitrariness. For example, the "Incarceration of Unlawful Combatants Law" allows the military to imprison Palestinians it deems dangerous for as long as "hostile acts against the State of Israel persist." #OHCHR correctly notes that in the context of decades of occupation and armed #resistance, this amounts to a free pass for the #military.

Source: https://www.ohchr.org/en/documents/reports/detention-context-escalation-hostilities-gaza

#news #gaza #humanrights #crime #torture #conflict #law #politics #justice #war #terror #palestine

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

A New Nuclear Arms Race?

This is madness!

Nuclear weapons are extremely dangerous. At the height of the nuclear arms race between the USSR and the US, there were enough nuclear warheads ready to be delivered to their targets to kill every human several times. Several times nuclear weapons were almost used.

A question that I've thought about for decades is, "Did the deployment of nuclear weapons (including the ones on our FBM submarine) deter nuclear war or make it more likely?" Am I alive today because we were all very lucky or because deterrence works? Let's suppose it works. Is it the only strategy we should use to make another nuclear war less likely?

In fact, deploying nuclear weapons has never been the only way that governments have tried to make nuclear war less likely. Nuclear arms reduction treaties have also been negotiated, ever since the 1990s. They have been very successful! There are far fewer nuclear warheads stockpiled and far fewer ready to be delivered than there were in 1990.

I served in Rickover's nuclear navy. Here's what he had to say. https://flaglerlive.com/admiral-hyman-rickover-testimony/

RICKOVER. I think from a long-range standpoint–I’m talking about humanity–the most important thing we could do is start in having an international meeting where we first outlaw nuclear weapons to start with, then we outlaw nuclear reactors, too.

So who are these fools, not just here in the US, but also in China, Russia, and even the UK, that think we need to start spending more on nuclear weapons? Stop this now!


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June 17, 2024

Global Nuclear Spending Surged to $91 Billion in 2023 with U.S. Leading the Charge

The United States is driving a global surge in spending on nuclear
weapons. The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons reports
global spending on nukes jumped 13% to over $91 billion last year. The
United States spent over $51 billion modernizing its nuclear arsenal -
that's more money than all of the other nuclear nations spent last year
combined.


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Originally posted by the Voice of America.
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the public domain.

Spending on nuclear weapons hit $91.4 billion in 2023, watchdog finds

by Lisa Schlein

GENEVA --

The world's nine nuclear-armed states together spent $91.4 billion last
year, or nearly $3,000 per second, as they "continue to modernize, and
in some cases expand their arsenals," according to a report issued
Monday by ICAN, the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

"This money is effectively being wasted given that the nuclear-armed
states agree that a nuclear war can never be won and should never be
fought," Alicia Sanders-Zakre, co-author of the report, told
journalists in Geneva last week in advance of the report's publication.

For example, she said, $91.4 billion a year "could pay for wind power
for more than 12 million homes to combat climate change or cover 27
percent of the global funding gap to fight climate change, protect
biodiversity and cut pollution."

The report shows the nuclear-armed states spent $10.7 billion more on
nuclear weapons in 2023 compared with 2022, with the United States
accounting for 80% of that increase.

ICAN reports the United States spent $51.5 billion, "more than all the
other nuclear-armed countries put together." It says the next biggest
spender was China at $11.8 billion with Russia spending the third
largest amount at $8.3 billion.

The report notes that the United Kingdom's "spending was up
significantly for the second year in a row," with a 17% increase to
$8.1 billion, just behind Russia.

The combined total of the five other nuclear powers, France, India,
Israel, Pakistan, and North Korea, amounted to $11.6 billion last year.

The authors of the report say companies involved in the production of
nuclear weapons received new contracts worth just less than $7.9
billion in 2023. Analysis of data gathered over the past five years
shows that the nuclear-armed states collectively spent $387 billion on
their nuclear arsenals.

"There has been a notable upward trend in the amount of money devoted
to developing these most inhumane and destructive of weapons over the
past five years, which is now accelerating," Sanders-Zakre said. "All
this money is not improving global security. In fact, it is threatening
people wherever they live."

Arms control experts share these concerns and warn of the dangers of a
new arms race as the nuclear powers build up their arsenals in defiance
of the spirit of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons, which aims to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and
weapons technology.

A report in the May issue of Foreign Affairs magazine cites
Washington's concerns about China's rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal.
According to Pentagon estimates, "Under Chinese President Xi Jinping,
Beijing is on track to amass 1,000 nuclear warheads by 2030, up from
around 200 in 2019."

A 2023 report by the Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture
of the United States insists that China's nuclear expansion should
prompt U.S. policymakers to "re-evaluate the size and composition of
the U.S. nuclear force."

The commission also expressed disquiet at Russia's increasingly
aggressive behavior, "including the unprecedented growth of its nuclear
forces, diversification and expansion of its theater-based nuclear
systems, the invasion of Ukraine in 2014 and subsequent full-scale
invasion in February 2022."

International anxiety about an accidental or deliberate tactical
nuclear attack by Russia was on display this past weekend at the G7
summit in Italy and at the peace summit for Ukraine in Switzerland.

In their final communique, the G7 leaders condemned Russia's "blatant
breach of international law" affirming that "in this context, threats
by Russia of nuclear weapons use, let alone any use of nuclear weapons
by Russia in the context of its war of aggression against Ukraine,
would be inadmissible."

This sentiment was mirrored in a final declaration signed by most of
the 100 countries that attended the Ukrainian peace conference. Notable
holdouts included India, Indonesia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia and South
Africa.

Referring to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, ICAN Executive Director
Melissa Parke warned, "This war has increased nuclear tensions between
Russia and the West to their highest level since the Cold War and there
is now a real threat of nuclear conflict as a result of Russia's
numerous overt and tacit nuclear threats."

ICAN's report, which profiles 20 countries involved in the production,
maintenance and development of nuclear weapons, notes that "Altogether
there is $335 billion in outstanding contracts related to nuclear
weapons work."

While the report shows significant growth in nuclear spending over the
last five years, Susi Snyder, ICAN's program coordinator and report
co-author, observes "there also has been growth in global resistance to
these weapons of mass destruction."

"The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons has signatures from
nearly 100 countries. One-hundred-eleven investors representing about
$5 trillion in assets stated their support for the treaty," she said.

"They demanded that more efforts be made to exclude the nuclear weapons
industry from their business until these countries stop doing things
prohibited by the treaty," she said, noting the treaty is "a clear
pathway forward."

"It is a way to reduce tensions, to condemn threats, and to stop this
new nuclear arms race that we have illustrated here before it surges
any further out of control," she said.


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Originally posted by the Voice of America.
Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America,
a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in
the public domain.

Watchdog: Nuclear-armed nations deepen reliance on nuclear weapons

by Associated Press

COPENHAGEN, Denmark --

The world's nine nuclear-armed states continue to modernize their
nuclear weapons as the countries deepened their reliance on such
deterrence in 2023, a Swedish think tank said Monday.

"We have not seen nuclear weapons playing such a prominent role in
international relations since the Cold War," said Wilfred Wan, director
of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute's weapons of
mass destruction program.

Earlier this month, Russia and its ally Belarus launched a second stage
of drills intended to train their troops in tactical nuclear weapons,
part of the Kremlin's efforts to discourage the West from ramping up
support for Ukraine.

In a separate report, the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear
Weapons, ICAN, said the nine nuclear-armed states spent a combined
total of $91.4 billion on their arsenals in 2023 -- equivalent to
$2,898 per second. The Geneva-based coalition of disarmament activists
won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017.

The group said that figures show a $10.7 billion increase in global
spending on nuclear weapons in 2023 compared with 2022, with the United
States accounting for 80% of that increase. The U.S. share of total
spending, $51.5 billion, is more than all the other nuclear-armed
countries put together.

"There has been a notable upward trend in the amount of money devoted
to developing these most inhumane and destructive of weapons over the
past five years," said Alicia Sanders-Zakre, Policy and Research
Coordinator with ICAN.

The next biggest spender was China at $11.8 billion, she said, with
Russia spending the third largest amount at $8.3 billion.

"All this money is not improving global security, in fact it's
threatening people wherever they live," Sanders-Zakre said.

SIPRI estimated that about 2,100 of the deployed warheads were kept in
a state of high operational alert on ballistic missiles, and nearly all
belong to Russia or the U.S. However, it said China is also believed to
have some warheads on high operational alert for the first time.

"Regrettably we continue to see year-on-year increases in the number of
operational nuclear warheads," said Dan Smith, SIPRI's director. He
added that the trend will likely accelerate in the coming years "and is
extremely concerning."

Russia and the United States have together almost 90% of all nuclear
weapons, SIPRI said. The sizes of their military stockpiles seem to
have remained relatively stable in 2023, although Russia is estimated
to have deployed around 36 more warheads with operational forces than
in January 2023, the watchdog added.

In its SIPRI Yearbook 2024, the institute said that transparency
regarding nuclear forces has declined in both countries in the wake of
Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and debates
around nuclear-sharing arrangements have increased in importance.

Washington suspended its bilateral strategic stability dialogue with
Russia, and last year Moscow announced that it was suspending its
participation in the New START nuclear treaty.

Of the total global inventory of an estimated 12,121 warheads in
January, about 9,585 were in military stockpiles for potential use. An
estimated 3,904 of those warheads were deployed with missiles and
aircraft -- which is 60 more than in January 2023 -- and the rest were
in central storage.

In Asia, India, Pakistan and North Korea are all pursuing the
capability to deploy multiple warheads on ballistic missiles, the
institute said. The United States, Russia, France, U.K. and China have
that capacity, enabling a rapid potential increase in deployed
warheads, as well as the possibility for nuclear-armed countries to
threaten the destruction of significantly more targets. The ninth
nuclear nation is Israel.

SIPRI stressed that all estimates were approximate and that the
institute revises its world nuclear forces data each year based on new
information and updates to earlier assessments.

#war #peace #nuclear-weapons #nukes #security #national-security #disarmament #weapons-of-mass-destruction #weapons #defense #defence #conflict #nuclear-conflict #arms-race #rickover #nuclear-navy

anonymiss@despora.de

The #hubris of Western foreign #policy

The Western #system won the #ColdWar and this gave rise to a certain sense of superiority among the victors that this system will now prevail #worldwide. Instead of democracies, however, autocracies have prevailed. #Capitalism also works quite well in #China. When it comes to condemning the Russian war of aggression, important states prefer to remain neutral. Bitterly poor Africans can see the Western lifestyle in advertising and would like to live it, but this does not necessarily have to be in a #democracy for them. A democracy brings people like Trump to power and there are irreconcilable differences on important issues such as climate change. It doesn't matter whether you believe in climate change - nature conservation should be a worthwhile goal for everyone. Ultimately, it's not about #climate change, but about the society we want to live in. The desire to at least live in a peaceful world after the Second World #War has not been fulfilled. #Humanity has also failed to distribute #wealth fairly, which is the reason for many of today's conflicts. We are heading towards a new very dark age and we cannot prevent it because we have created an economic system that rewards short-term profits at the expense of the #environment. Since we don't begrudge these profits to others, we can only join in and destroy our own habitat, democracy and #future.

#earth #politics #humanRight #conflict #problem

anonymiss@despora.de

Southern #Gaza aid route to see 'tactical pause' in fighting, says #Israel

Source: https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-tactical-pause-aid-gaza-1.7236611

The "tactical pause" announced by the #military, which applies to about 12 kilometres of road in the #Rafah area, falls far short of a complete #ceasefire in the beleaguered territory that has been sought by the international community, including Israel's top ally: the United States.

So "tactical pause" is the #newspeak for ceasefire 🤔

#war #conflict #news #warfare #politics #Palestine

anonymiss@despora.de

Top UN #court orders #Israel to stop #Rafah #offensive

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crggvmyz03vo

Reading the court's ruling on Friday, Nawaf Salam said "Israel must immediately halt its #military offensive, and any other action in the Rafah Governorate" which could bring about "the physical destruction" of the Palestinians - alluding to what constitutes #genocide under international #law.

#news #justice #conflict #Palestine #politics #humanrights

anonymiss@despora.de

#Norway, #Ireland and #Spain to recognize a Palestinian state

Source: https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/palestinian-state-ireland-norway-spain-1.7210856

Several European Union countries have in the past weeks indicated that they plan to make the recognition, arguing a two-state solution is essential for lasting peace in the region. The decision may generate momentum for the recognition of a Palestinian state by other #EU countries and could spur further steps at the United Nations, deepening #Israel's isolation.

#news #politics #uno #conflict #MiddleEast #Palestine

anonymiss@despora.de

#Congo questions #Apple over #knowledge of #conflict #minerals in its supply chain

source: https://apnews.com/article/apple-iphones-congo-blood-minerals-b1f20aa7bd3a3f4f8cf7fcde19c6f053

A group of international lawyers representing Congo said Thursday that they sent letters to Apple’s CEO Tim Cook and its French subsidiary this week, raising concerns about human rights violations involving the minerals extracted from mines in the country’s troubled east that might end up being used in the company’s products.

#SupplyChain #HumanRights #Economy #business #iphone #smartphone #technology #trade #TimCook justice #crime #news

anonymiss@despora.de