miércoles, 24 de julio de 2019
¿Cambio de estrategia?
El diario estadounidense The New York Times sorprendió al mundo hace tres días con una nota de opinión en la que insta al gobierno de su país a mejorar las relaciones con Rusia, a los efectos de contener la "amenaza china". La nota, breve y elemental si se quiere, no está firmada por un opinólogo cualquiera: es el "Editorial Board" quien la redacta, por lo que uno presume que se está preparando un giro copernicano en el clima de opinión de ese país. Cuando los vendedores de humo más importantes del planeta te salen con una de estas, conviene estar alerta. Acá va:
Título: What’s America’s Winning Hand if Russia Plays the China Card?
Epígrafe: The two adversaries are growing closer, posing a strategic challenge to the United States.
Texto: One of the striking warnings in a recent Pentagon white paper on the growing strategic threat from Russia is that its president, Vladimir Putin, could pull a “reverse Nixon” and play his own version of the “China card” with the United States, a reference to the former president’s strategy of playing those two adversaries against each other.
Until recently, any relationship between Russia and China could largely be dismissed as a marriage of convenience with limited impact on American interests. But since Western nations imposed sanctions on Russia after it invaded Ukraine in 2014, Chinese and Russian authorities have increasingly found common cause, disparaging Western-style democracy and offering themselves as alternatives to America’s postwar leadership. Now China and Russia are growing even closer, suggesting a more permanent arrangement that could pose a complex challenge to the United States.
“The world system, and American influence in it, would be completely upended if Moscow and Beijing aligned more closely,” John Arquilla, a professor at the Naval Postgraduate School, wrote in the report, to which Defense Department officials and other analysts contributed.
The latest evidence of warming ties was a meeting last month in Moscow at which Mr. Putin thanked the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, for enabling the two countries to do more than $100 billion worth of trade in 2018, up 30 percent from the previous year, and an implicit rebuke to America’s trade standoff with China. The two countries also signed more than two dozen agreements. That meeting came shortly after Mr. Xi called Mr. Putin his “best and bosom friend.”
The leaders have met almost 30 times since 2013. Russia recently agreed to sell China its latest military technology, including S400 surface-to-air missiles and SU-35 fighter jets.
While China and Russia have conducted joint military exercises intermittently for more than a decade, they began naval maneuvers in the Mediterranean in 2012 and last fall, staged what Russia called their biggest war games in decades in eastern Siberia. They plan to hold joint exercises on a regular basis in the future.
With melting ice opening new opportunities for oil and gas exploration, researchers from the two nations recently agreed to open a joint Arctic research center. They often vote alike at the United Nations and have similar positions on Iran and North Korea. Both have become much more active in the Middle East, where Russia is trying to regain its standing as a major power and China is trying to cultivate relations with energy suppliers like Iran.
The Pentagon white paper, and a separate report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, warn that the United States and its allies are not moving fast enough to counter efforts by Russia and China to foment instability with “gray zone” tactics that fall short of military involvement — the use of proxy forces, political and economic coercion, disinformation, cyberoperations, and jamming technologies against American satellites.
In his State of the Nation address in February, Mr. Putin expressed confidence that ties with China would enhance Russian security and prosperity, especially as he aligns his Eurasian Economic Union plan with China’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative, a colossal infrastructure program designed to link China with Asia, Africa and Europe.
Given its economic, military and technological trajectory, together with its authoritarian model, China, not Russia, represents by far the greater challenge to American objectives over the long term. That means President Trump is correct to try to establish a sounder relationship with Russia and peel it away from China. But his approach has been ham-handed and at times even counter to American interests and values. America can’t seek warmer relations with a rival power at the price of ignoring its interference in American democracy. Yet even during the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union often made progress in one facet of their relationship while they remained in conflict over other aspects.
The United States and Russia could expand their cooperation in space. The United States is already dependent on Russian rockets to reach the International Space Station. They could also continue to work closely in the Arctic, as members of the Arctic Council that has negotiated legally binding agreements governing search and rescue operations and responses to oil spills. And they could revive cooperation on arms control, especially by extending the New Start Treaty. It was encouraging that top State Department officials met their Russian counterparts twice in recent weeks, including in Geneva on Wednesday, although there was no immediate sign that the two sides made any progress on arms control or other major issues.
Given their history, China and Russia may never reach a formal alliance. The two have been divided by war and ideological rivalries and even now compete for influence in East Asia, Central Asia and the Arctic. Their contrasting trajectories would also make an alliance difficult. China is a rising power and the dominant partner; Russia is declining. China has the world’s second largest economy; Russia’s is not even in the top 10.
Still, their shared objectives could increase, further threatening Western interests. America needs to rally its democratic allies, rather than berate them, and project a more confident vision of its own political and economic model.
miércoles, 17 de julio de 2019
Ebola, otra vez
La Organización Mundial de la Salud acaba de declarar una situación internacional de emergencia en relación con el brote de Ebola que está ocurriendo en la República Democrática del Congo. Acá va la declaración:
Título: Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern
Texto: WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus today declared the Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC).
“It is time for the world to take notice and redouble our efforts. We need to work together in solidarity with the DRC to end this outbreak and build a better health system,” said Dr. Tedros. “Extraordinary work has been done for almost a year under the most difficult circumstances. We all owe it to these responders -- coming from not just WHO but also government, partners and communities -- to shoulder more of the burden.”
The declaration followed a meeting of the International Health Regulations Emergency Committee for EVD in the DRC. The Committee cited recent developments in the outbreak in making its recommendation, including the first confirmed case in Goma, a city of almost two million people on the border with Rwanda, and the gateway to the rest of DRC and the world.
This was the fourth meeting of the Emergency Committee since the outbreak was declared on 1 August 2018.
The Committee expressed disappointment about delays in funding which have constrained the response. They also reinforced the need to protect livelihoods of the people most affected by the outbreak by keeping transport routes and borders open. It is essential to avoid the punitive economic consequences of travel and trade restrictions on affected communities.
“It is important that the world follows these recommendations. It is also crucial that states do not use the PHEIC as an excuse to impose trade or travel restrictions, which would have a negative impact on the response and on the lives and livelihoods of people in the region,” said Professor Robert Steffen, chair of the Emergency Committee.
Since it was declared almost a year ago the outbreak has been classified as a level 3 emergency – the most serious – by WHO, triggering the highest level of mobilization from WHO. The UN has also recognized the seriousness of the emergency by activating the Humanitarian System-wide Scale-Up to support the Ebola response.
In recommending a PHEIC the committee made specific recommendations related to this outbreak.
“This is about mothers, fathers and children - too often entire families are stricken. At the heart of this are communities and individual tragedies,” said Dr. Tedros. “The PHEIC should not be used to stigmatize or penalize the very people who are most in need of our help.”
domingo, 7 de julio de 2019
Agua
Desde hace tiempo seguimos los reportes meteorológicos globales que, mes tras mes, ofrece el sitio web Signs of The Times (www.sott.net). Algunas personas se dedican a recopilar lo que ocurre con el clima del mundo a partir de los informativos televisivos de diversas regiones. Está claro que no son exhaustivos, pero gracias al uso masivo de teléfonos celulares se dispone hoy de imágenes que nunca antes hubieran podido ser vistas. Está claro también que los chicos suelen mezclar eventos que no son combinables: una cosa es el comportamiento de la atmósfera y otra muy distinta es la frecuencia de meteoritos que alcanza la Tierra (debida a factores propios del sistema solar) o la incidencia de volcanes en el Cinturón de Fuego del Pacífico (debida a factores tectónicos). Algunos geólogos sostienen que puede haber cierta relación; por ejemplo, la incidencia de centros de baja presión sobre el comportamiento de fallas geológicas ubicadas en el nadir de dichos centros y, en consecuencia, sobre los movimientos telúricos regionales. En líneas generales, sin embargo, son cosas bastante diferentes.
Sobre el cambio climático hay tres factores que suelen confundirse: (1) si está cambiando o no; (2) si ese cambio se orienta hacia el frío o hacia el calor, y (3) si el cambio obedece a causales antrópicas (humanas). La información disponible nos sugiere que hay un cambio climático en ciernes, que ese cambio incluye un aumento de las temperaturas medias del planeta, y que el factor antrópico podría ser uno, aunque no el único, de los causales posibles. Los datos disponibles son coherentes con lo que vemos en estos reportes: si aumenta la temperatura media del planeta, aumenta la temperatura de las aguas superficiales (océanos), por lo que es previsible mayor evaporación y, en consecuencia, mayores precipitaciones. También, es claro que si hay más calor en la Tierra, la disipación del mismo bajo la forma de tormentas adquiere mayor virulencia. Esto explicaría el aumento de, por ejemplo, tornados, huracanes y vientos huracanados que suelen acompañar estas tormentas, en particular en la zona del Caribe.
Lo que queda claro a partir de estos reportes es que las precipitaciones globales están alcanzando records nunca antes vistos, al menos en la historia reciente. No sólo la frecuencia de las mismas, sino los fenómenos conocidos como "flash-floodings", o sea, las inundaciones producto de caídas de agua en proporciones épicas en muy pocas horas. Los flash-floodings son una característica de los tiempos que nos toca vivir, y posiblemente constituyan el factor de riesgo más importante para la supervivencia humana en el futuro. Se trata de los daños que pueden causar en cultivos e infraestructuras de todo tipo: puentes, rutas, viviendas, sistemas de transmisión eléctrica, etc. No se trata solamente de lluvia: estos eventos también consisten en caídas de granizo (con piedras cada vez más grandes, no ya del tamaño de pelotas de golf sino cada vez más frecuentemente de pelotas de tenis), flujos de barro, nieve en temporadas atípicas e incluso de agujeros en la tierra producto de la disolución del sedimento subterráneo.
Para quienes quieran darse una idea de lo que está pasando, acá va el link al último episodio del reporte climático de Sott.net:
https://www.sott.net/article/416295-SOTT-Earth-Changes-Summary-June-2019-Extreme-Weather-Planetary-Upheaval-Meteor-Fireballs
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