Sunday had a somewhat ominous feel to it, from a geopolitical perspective, anyway.
As promised, protesters flooded into the streets of Hong Kong again as tens of thousands came out for a re-run of Wednesday’s demonstrations. On Saturday, Chief Executive Carrie Lam suspended the controversial extradition bill at the heart of the tensions, but that’s not enough.
Critics want the bill withdrawn and have demanded Lam resign. Black-clad demonstrators chanting “Retract” charted the same route protestors traversed on Wednesday. “The [extradition bill] is just being delayed. It’s not the matter of what, it’s a matter of when”, opposition politician Claudia Mo said. “So I am comin’ out.”
Yes, Claudia is “comin’ out”. And so were a lot of other people.
Read more: Hong Kong Suspends Extradition Bill After Brush With Disaster, But It Ain’t Over
Meanwhile, India made it official. The country slapped higher tariffs on 28 products from the US including apples, almonds, chickpeas and walnuts. The duties are “worth” (depending on how you define that) $217 million.
On Friday, reports suggested that after a year of delays pending negotiations with the Trump administration, New Delhi had decided to move ahead with the planned levies.
The last straw for India was Trump’s decision to officially yank India’s GSP status, which spared around $5.7 billion in Indian imports from duties in 2017.
As detailed Friday, this is bad news for America’s almond and apple growers, who expressed more than a little consternation last summer when the debate heated up in earnest. This is just more unwelcome blowback from Trump’s insistence on fighting a multi-front trade war with allies and foes alike.
India called the decision “necessary in the public interest”.
Read more: India Poised To Kick America In The Actual Nuts With Tariffs On Almonds — And Also Apples
Speaking of wars – the shooting kind – the Iranian Students’ News Agency reported Sunday that the country’s atomic energy agency is all set to chat with the press on Monday about plans for Tehran to move even further towards non-compliance with the nuclear deal.
Obviously, Iran isn’t particularly enamored with the idea that it should be obligated to comply with an agreement that was unilaterally scrapped by one of the only two parties to the deal that actually matters. Europe’s efforts to preserve the agreement have been admirable but, c’est la vie.
“In the next newsletter of the Atomic Energy Agency about the technical steps taken by Iran to reduce its nuclear liabilities, tomorrow, representatives of the domestic media will visit the manufacturing process at the Arak heavy water plant”, ISNA said. You can read the full post here.
Read more: Dangerous Waters: Trump, Iran On Conflict Crash Course
Europe’s attempts have not been admirable , merely what anyone who watches the Geopolitical front was expecting from the start.(service to the Empire’s attempts to delay the conversation and attempts to weaken Iran’s Economy thus.) C’est la vie….
India…One more Ally alienated by the Disrupter-in-Chief, Tariff Man.
P.S. SNL did a great skit last night with Putin’s Generals questioning Putin wheter Trump was still ‘Putin’s Puppet’. following the Mueller Report of no (criminally-chargeable) collusion.
Don’t see india’s tariff on mere ~$250mn a big deal as compared to mexico, china etc
… it is not a big deal, compared to China.
Yet it is another ally (especially when it comes to China!) alienated for, yeah for what?
Totally unnecessary.
yeah, definitely not the amount that’s the issue here. rather, it’s the message it sends