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biden's blood for oil sold to the Chinese…..Last week, Reuters reported that over five million barrels-worth of crude from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve released by the Biden administration to help ease gas prices in the United States had instead been shipped to refineries in Europe, India and China. Some 950,000 of the oil released from the SPR to cope with spiraling gasoline prices may have wound up in depots controlled by Sinopec, the Chinese state-owned energy giant which Hunter Biden co-founded capital market firm BHR Partners has a $1.7 billion stake in, the Washington Free Beacon has reported, citing Department of Energy (DoE) data and information previously disclosed by Chinese and US business regulators.
In a press release in April detailing President Biden’s release of one million barrels of oil per day from the SPR amid the energy crunch, the DoE indicated that Unipec America, Inc., a subsidiary of Sinopec, had been awarded 950,000 barrels of oil as part of the US’s “price-competitive sale of 30 million barrels of SPR crude oil.”
A source told Reuters last week that at least one tanker load of crude from the SPR had been sent off to China. Oil tankers typically carry between 190,000 and 345,000 barrels of oil (8-14.5 million gallons), according to the US Energy Information Administration. However supersize tankers can transport up to 2 million barrels’ worth. Last November, amid growing scrutiny of the Biden family’s finances over reports based on information from the laptop Hunter Biden accidentally left behind at a Delaware computer repair shop in 2019, the younger Biden’s lawyers assured the New York Times that the president’s son “no longer holds any interest, directly or indirectly,” in BHR Partners, which he cofounded in 2013.
However in March, a Washington Examiner investigation of business records from China’s National Credit Information Publicity System showed that Hunter Biden continued to hold a 10 percent stake in BHR Partners via his company Skaneateles LLC. US business records indicated at the time that he was the sole owner of Skaneateles. The Examiner admitted that it was possible that the Chinese business registry had failed to update the possible sale of BHR Partners by Mr. Biden, but also implied that the records raise questions about his finances, and possible continued links to foreign entities, despite his representatives’ assurances.
GOP Wants Blood Republican lawmakers and candidates for the upcoming November midterm elections expressed outrage over the Free Beacon’s report, and said that it may be time to “impeach” the president. “President Biden reportedly sold oil from American reserves to China’s Sinopec which Hunter Biden may still be tied to via his financial ventures in China,” Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa, coauthor of a 2020 Senate probe into the younger Biden’s finances, tweeted. “If the report is correct, that’s OUTRAGEOUS,” Grassley wrote, adding that he and Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin had highlighted Hunter’s alleged business connections to China in their 2020 report. “At a time when Americans must pay record prices at the pump, President Biden should NOT be selling our strategic oil reserves to Communist China. This misguided and harmful action is the latest example of Biden’s failed energy policies, and needs further scrutiny, especially if his son’s China business could benefit,” Grassley wrote. “Hunter is still business partners with the [Chinese Communist Party] and they are buying our oil. Can we impeach Joe Biden now???” Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene tweeted. Joe Biden sold 1 M barrels of oil of our Strategic Petroleum Reserves to CCP owned Sinopec, which Hunter Biden is part owner of through his private equity firm, BHR Partners.
Hunter is still business partners w/ the CCP & they are buying our oil.
Can we impeach Joe Biden now??? — Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene(@RepMTG) July 8, 2022 Congressional candidate from Kentucky Brent Feher echoed Greene’s suggestion, linking to the Free Beacon’s article and writing “Impeach NOW!” in a tweet.
Fox News host Tucker Carlson argued that the Reuters report on the export of SPR oil alone was enough for a possible criminal investigation. “So, as gas prices set records in this country, as American citizens who were born here and vote and pay taxes cannot afford to fuel their own cars, the Biden administration is selling off our emergency oil reserves to China. That’s not an indictable offense? It’s certainly an impeachable one and they should impeach him for that. What, are they going to sell the Redwood Forest to China next? How about the water rights to the Great Lakes? That’s the equivalent of what [Biden] just did,” Carlson argued in a segment on Wednesday. The host suggested that a “functioning Congress” would investigate the Biden family’s alleged business ties to China. “The last president was impeached for what? Having a phone call with some corrupt Ukrainian politician. But now, [Congress] can’t be bothered. They’re still yelping about ‘January 6 was an insurrection’. They’re trying to ban your hunting rifle. So the White House is able to ignore the whole thing,” Carlson said. Draining the SPR The White House plans to continue releasing a million barrels of oil from the SPR through October. Last week, updated DoE data showed that the reserve’s inventory had dipped to its lowest level since the mid-1980s, and was sitting at a level sufficient for about 25 days’ worth of consumption if US production and imports were suddenly halted. When he announced the SPR selloff in April, President Biden expressed hope that the move would help stabilize record gasoline prices. Instead, gas prices surged to their highest ever levels, topping $5.10 a gallon in mid-June before dipping to about $4.70 a gallon now, according to the American Automobile Association. Prices remain highest along the US West Coast, with Washingtonians, Oregonians and Californians paying between $5.37 and $6.11, AAA data shows.
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greasing corrupt NATO….
Over the course of the past 15 years, European countries have found themselves with both great opportunities to seize and complex choices to make.
Unsustainable reliance on the United States for trade and investment, as well as the curious distraction of Brexit, led to the steady integration of European countries with Russian energy markets and more uptake of Chinese investment opportunities and its manufacturing prowess.
Closer linkages between Europe and these two large Asian countries, China and Russia, provoked the U.S. agenda to prevent that integration or delay it. This agenda, now deepened during the recent Group of 7 (G7) meeting in Germany and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) summit in Spain, is creating a dangerous situation for the world.
By Vijay Prashad
Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research
This goes back to the financial crisis of 2007–08, which was spurred on by the collapse of the U.S. housing market and several key U.S. financial institutions. The crisis signaled to the rest of the world that the U.S.-centered financial system was untrustworthy. The U.S. could not remain the market of last resort for the world’s commodities.
G7 countries – which saw themselves as the guardians of the global capitalist system – begged states outside their orbit, such as China and India, to put their surpluses into the Western financial system to prevent its total meltdown.
In return for this service, countries outside of the G7 were told that, henceforth, the G20 would be the executive body of the world system and the G7 would gradually disband. Yet, almost 20 years later, the G7 remains in place and has arrogated to itself the role of world leader, with NATO – the Trojan horse of the U.S. – now positioning itself as the world’s policeman.
NATO’s Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has said that the organization will undergo the largest overhaul of its “collective deterrence and defence since the Cold War.”
The NATO member states, now with the addition of Finland and Sweden, will expand their “high readiness forces” from 40,000 troops to 300,000 who, equipped with a range of lethal weaponry, will “be ready to deploy to specific territories on the alliance’s eastern flank,” namely the Russian border. The United Kingdom’s new chief of the general staff, General Sir Patrick Sanders, said that these armed forces should prepare to “fight and win” in a war against Russia.
With the conflict in Ukraine ongoing, it was obvious that NATO would foreground Russia at the Madrid Summit. But the materials produced by NATO made it clear that this was not merely about Ukraine or Russia but about preventing Eurasian integration.
China was mentioned for the first time in a NATO document at the 2019 London meeting, in which it was said that the country presented “both opportunities and challenges.”
By 2021, the tune had changed, and NATO’s Brussels summit communiqué accused China of “systemic challenges to the rules-based international order.” The revised 2022 Strategic Concept accelerates this threatening rhetoric, with accusations that China’s “systemic competition … challenge[s] our interests, security, and values and seek[s] to undermine the rules-based international order.”
Four non-NATO countries – Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea (the Asia-Pacific Four) — attended the NATO summit for the first time, which drew them closer to the U.S. and NATO’s agenda to put pressure on China.
Australia and Japan, along with India and the U.S., are part of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad), often called the Asian NATO, whose clear mandate is to constrain China’s partnerships in the Pacific Rim area. The Asia-Pacific Four held a meeting during the summit to discuss military cooperation against China, erasing any doubt about the intentions of NATO and its allies.
In the wake of the revelations of the 2007–08 financial crisis and the G7’s broken promises, the Chinese adopted two pathways to gain more independence from the U.S. consumer market.
First, they improved the domestic Chinese market by increasing social wages, integrating China’s western provinces into the economy and abolishing absolute poverty.
Second, they built trade, development and financial systems that were not centered around the U.S. The Chinese participated actively with Brazil, India, Russia and South Africa to set the BRICS process in motion (2009) and put considerable resources into the Belt and Road Initiative or BRI (2013). China and Russia settled a long-standing border dispute, enhanced their cross-border trade and developed a strategic collaboration (but, unlike the West, did not formulate a military treaty).
During this period, Russian energy sales to both China and Europe grew and several European countries joined the BRI, which increased mutual investments between Europe and China.
Earlier forms of globalization in Eurasia were limited by colonialism and the Cold War. This marked the first time in 200 years that integration began to take place on an equitable foundation across the region. Europe’s trade and investment choices were utterly rational, as piped natural gas through Nord Stream 2 was far cheaper and less dangerous than liquified natural gas from the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Mexico.
Considering the chaotic Brexit situation and difficulties in getting the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership off the ground, much of Europe saw Chinese investment opportunities as far more generous and dependable than other alternatives. In contrast, risk-averse and rent-seeking private equity from Wall Street became less attractive to the European financial sector.
Europe was drifting inexorably towards Asia, which threatened the basis of the U.S.-dominated economic and political system (also known as the “rules-based international order”).
In 2018, U.S. President Donald Trump publicly chastised NATO’s Stoltenberg, telling him,
“we’re protecting Germany. We’re protecting France. We’re protecting all of these countries. And then numerous of these countries go out and make a pipeline deal with Russia, where they’re paying billions of dollars into the coffers of Russia. … Germany is a captive of Russia… I think it’s very inappropriate.”
While NATO’s language has turned to threats of war against China and Russia, the G7 has pledged to challenge China-led initiatives by developing the new Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (PGII), a $200 billion fund to invest in the Global South.
[Related: The US & China’s Belt & Road Initiative]
Meanwhile, the leaders at the BRICS summit, held at the same time, offered a sober appraisal of the times, calling for negotiations to end the Ukraine war and measures to stem the cascading crises experienced by the world’s poor. There was no talk of war from this body which represents 40 percent of the world’s population and BRICS’s strength may well grow as Argentina and Iran have applied to join the bloc.
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The U.S. and its allies seek either to remain hegemonic and weaken China and Russia or to erect a new Iron Curtain around these two countries.
Both approaches could lead to a suicidal military conflict. The mood across the Global South is for a more measured acceptance of the reality of Eurasian integration and the emergence of a world order based on national and regional sovereignty and the dignity of all human beings, none of which can be realized through war and division.
Anticipations of a war at a scale not seen before evokes “A Personal Song” by the Iraqi poet Saadi Yousif (1934–2021), written just before the U.S. started its deadly bombardment of Iraq in 2003:
Is it Iraq?
Blessed is the one who said
I know the road which leads to it;
Blessed is the one whose lips uttered the four letters:
Iraq, Iraq, nothing but Iraq.
Distant missiles will applaud;
soldiers armed to the teeth will storm us;
minarets and houses will crumble;
palm trees will collapse under the bombing;
the shores will be crowded
with floating corpses.
We will seldom see Al-Tahrir Square
in books of elegies and photographs;
Restaurants and hotels will be our roadmaps
and our home in the paradise of shelter:
McDonald’s
KFC
Holiday Inn;
and we will be drowned
like your name, O Iraq,
Iraq, Iraq, nothing but Iraq.
Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter. He is an editor of LeftWord Books and the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research. He is a senior non-resident fellow at Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China. He has written more than 20 books, including The Darker Nations and The Poorer Nations. His latest books are Struggle Makes Us Human: Learning from Movements for Socialism and, with Noam Chomsky, The Withdrawal: Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, and the Fragility of US Power.
This article is from Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.
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https://consortiumnews.com/2022/07/08/the-dangerous-us-opposition-to-eurasian-integration/
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