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The World this Week
Trump’s Middle East Peace Plan, WHO's emergency declaration on the Coronavirus, Europe’s soft strategy towards Huawei, and BREXIT finally
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GP Team 1 February 2020
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The World This Week, Vol.2, No.5
Lakshmi V Menon, Harini Madhusudan, Parikshith Pradeep, Sourina Bej and Sukanya Bali
Trump’s Middle East Peace Plan
What happened?
On 28 January 2020, the US President Trump unveiled his long-awaited Middle East peace plan, the much-trumpeted “deal of the century”. The response from Israel and Palestine has been contrasting: The President of Palestinian Authority (Mahmoud Abbas) has rejected the plan as the “slap of the century”. In contrast, the Prime Minister of Israel (Benjamin Netanyahu) has welcome it as the “opportunity of a century”.
Based on available information, Trump’s plan focus on the following:
- It offers an “a viable path” to Palestinian statehood by designating comparably sized land to Gaza and West Bank for a future Palestinian state, doubling the land currently utilized by Palestinians while securing a four-year “land-freeze” agreement from Israel.
- Jerusalem would continue as an undivided city and the sovereign capital of Israel. In contrast, the Palestinian state’s capital would lie in East Jerusalem (north of Israel’s West Bank barrier) including Abu Dis, Shuafat and Kafr Aqab.
- A large majority of Israeli settlements will become contiguous Israeli territory. Those in Palestinian territory would also become part of Israel through transportation grids.
- Jordan valley, “critical for Israel's national security” will be under Israeli sovereignty.
- Palestinian refugees can choose to live within future Palestine, integrate into current states of residence, or resettle in a third state.
- Mutual recognition of both “nation-states”.
- A demilitarized Palestine
- Israel to hold security charge west of Jordan river and the US to work towards reducing Israel’s security footprint .
The global responses to the plan are not uniform. The UK has welcomed it; Turkey and Iran strongly have condemned it. Putin reserved his judgement. From the immediate region, Qatar has welcomed brokering efforts for "longstanding and just peace", Jordan has given a muted response, Egypt advised "a careful and thorough examination of the US vision". At the same time, Saudi Arabia appreciated Trump's efforts calling for direct Palestinian-Israeli talks.
What is the background?
The “deal of the century”, a Trump-Jared initiative, is the newest in the series of numerous peace initiatives since the birth of Israel. Before the unveiling, US recognition of occupied Golan Heights as Israeli territory, the Jerusalem vote, statements recognizing occupied West Bank as Israeli territory all confirmed Netanyahu’s victory. It pushed Palestinians further away from the negotiating table.
While, Jared Kushner, son-in-law and adviser to Trump, in the past four years, frequented various Arab states brokering peace between them and Israel, his stopovers at international meets such as the recent World Economic Forum in Davos, were aimed at mobilizing international support for the peace plan from Europe, Arab states and others.
What does it mean?
With the Trump plan, Israel has gained significantly – an authorization to expand occupation and international recognition for its claims over Golan Heights, Jordan valley, settlements and Jerusalem while blurring the borders of a sovereign, independent future Palestinian state. As per the proposal, Palestinian-Israeli interactions, in terms of networking and transportation, forces close coordination at the security supervision of Israel by a demilitarized Palestine – a complete no-no for the Palestinian Authority.
The intra-Israeli effect includes greater security and contiguity with certainty about settlements; while intra-Palestinian aspects such as destiny of PA, Abbas and Hamas may depend heavily on a rejection of the plan. Although Palestinians’ collective memory refutes its acceptance, in all fairness, it is a plan that is realistic.
For Trump, it means ensuring the financial backing and votes of White Evangelical Christian Americans. For Netanyahu, as Israeli opposition critiqued, the timing boosts his domestic political leverage. For Palestinians, the plan and subsequent lack of opposition from the Arab world mean shattering of hope and prolonged conflict. With less hope and strong dismissal from Palestinians, hard-liners and extremists will be intensified.
WHO declares Public Health Emergency; China is confident of containing the virus
What happened?
On January 30, the Emergency Committee of the WHO was convened by its Director-General. According to the WHO statement, “The Director-General declared that the outbreak of 2019-nCoV constitutes a PHEIC (Public Health Emergency of International Concern) and accepted the Committee’s advice and issued this advice as Temporary Recommendations under the IHR (International Health Regulations)”
As on 31 January 2020, there have been more than 250 cases of confirmed deaths and more than 10,000 cases of infections within China. Outside China, until 31 January, no death has been reported due to the virus. However, there have been cases reported in Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and Thailand.
Countries including the US, Britain, Japan, France have evacuated their citizens from Wuhan and are being carefully monitoring them in quarantines in their countries.
What is the background?
According to the WHO report, the committee “at its first meeting, the Committee expressed divergent views on whether this event constitutes a PHEIC or not.” Developments since the first meeting have led to the second meeting, where the WHO declared a public emergency.
The virus has reached over 15 countries globally. The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies announced that it is scaling up the preparedness to support the outbreak in the region.
The Chinese took up to a week from the first patient sample, to determine a complete vital identification and sequencing if the coronavirus. The identified virus genome sequence has been handed over to Russian counterparts, and according to reports, a Russia-China vaccine is under development.
Countries have also started taking precautions to prevent the spread. The US, Australia, and Singapore have announced denying entry and transit for those who have recently visited China. Airline companies from the US to Europe have stopped flying to China.
Unfortunately, there have also been attacks/abuses against the people of Chinese origin across the globe, for example, in public transports in France, Australia and Canada.
What does it mean?
The development of the vaccine and its release can be expected in a couple of weeks. However, the fact that it is not ready yet shows the global preparedness to meet such emergencies. There has to be a concerted joint effort to deal with medical emergencies such as this.
The evacuation processes may inversely be the cause for more cases. Evacuations, though justified, do not seem like a practical option as the threat of the spread of the virus is more.
The biggest challenge is the misinformation about the cause, the nature of the spread and how to prevent the same. The civil society needs better information from their respective governments, and the latter has to find better ways to reach out to the former.
UK and EU on 5G and Huawei
What happened?
On 28 January, the British Government capped the use of telecom equipment from ‘high-risk vendors’(HRV) at 35 per cent in their 5G operations. In simple words, HRV’s such as Huawei would continue to operate in the UK’s telecom sector in a limited manner. This comes after intense lobbying by the US. The hardware application is restricted to radio access networks that do not handle sensitive technology compared to ‘core networks’ which prove crucial for telecom operations. Additionally, Britain has banned the use of such hardware in military bases and critical locations.
On 29 January, the European Commission laid out recommendations titled ‘Cybersecurity of 5G networks EU Toolbox of risk-mitigating measures’ that address security concerns regarding 5G. Interestingly, the document does not ban the presence of Huawei, instead recommends cybersecurity measures to the 27 members on avoiding 5G risks. Thierry Brenton, the European Commissioner for internal markets, stated the grouping would not ban anyone based on nationality unless they followed security measures.
What is the background?
The recent move is in tune with Britain’s stance on 5G since 2018, that vowed to do away with Huawei’s 4G hardware by 2021 and restrict 5G in ‘core networks’. Alongside Theresa May’s approval of Huawei, the government’s cybersecurity advisory organisation in February, last year, called Huawei’s induction a ‘manageable risk’ that could be mitigated. The official delay owes to the debate on ‘security vs technology’ and apprehensions over the Chinese led tech giant. On a fancy note, Boris Johnson was seen taking photos with a Huawei phone immediately after his anti-Huawei stance at the NATO summit.
5G apprehensions in Europe have culminated with increasing market penetration by the Chinese technology giant. The European Commission’s endorsement follows its March 2019 Commission Recommendation and the Council’s request for examining security issues in 5G. While the 2019 commission document does not make direct reference to Huawei, it highlights the need for ‘strategic autonomy’ mentioning the ‘EU-China, a Strategic Outlook’, a joint document. Additionally, France and Germany’s inclusion of Huawei in their 5G rollout has started setting the trend to the European 5G culture.
Considering Europe’s technological demands, it supports the limited application of vendors, unlike the US, that advocates a complete ban citing intellectual property threat and espionage from the Chinese. Trump has repeatedly advocated for banning products from the Chinese giant. In February 2019, the US State Department pushed the grouping to avoid services from Huawei. Accordingly, Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo had tweeted, ‘We must ensure the security of 5G equipment by limiting authoritarian regimes’ access to, and control over, our networks.’ The US has been persistent in distancing Europe’s 5G from Huawei, for Trump in one of his calls with the British Prime Minister, pressed for cooperation against the telecom giant.
Huawei’s CEO Ren Zhengfei at the Word Economic Forum in Davos stated that the company could ‘survive further attacks’ taking a direct jab at the US. There has been consistent tension with a slew of events including the US blacklisting of Huawei, the arrest of CFO Ming, Google’s android ban on Huawei and techno-legal disputes.
What does it mean?
First, this development could prove the US’s international efforts in banning Huawei’s 5G advancements ineffective. Evident is Trump’s support to PM Boris Johnson and this move comes at a crucial time for Britain, considering its exit from the EU and the US’s importance. Further complicating are the EU guidelines that could widen gaps and create new irritants. This could also disembark the ‘Five Eyes’ intelligence grouping that includes the UK and the US with Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. A long-range assessment of the situation would not overlook arm twisting diplomacy by big powers.
Second, it could prove too early to raise concerns regarding Britain’s technological capacity building in non-critical telecom sectors, but Huawei’s expertise and digital boom in Europe raise questions. While this could hamper bilateral security arrangements, it furthers concern regarding the participation of Chinese tech in non-telecom sectors. This makes it important for countries to materialise tech transfers and cooperation towards digital independence.
Third, in the 5G debate, China has distanced Huawei in rhetoric. But the US could see this through their trade dispute with China considering the recently concluded ‘Phase One’ of the deal.
Finally, this is a testimony to Chinese inroads into developed countries despite its history with less developed ones across South America and Africa. While one should not discredit the Chinese progress, it is imperative advanced countries tread carefully in establishing ties given technology’s role in the changing world.
Finally, the BREXIT: The “UK Dream” comes true
What happened?
After three years of political turmoil, the United Kingdom left the European Union on 31 January 2020. Boris Johnson said: “The country was divided and for many, this moment they thought would never come, but it is my job to keep the country together.”
The UK enters an 11-month transition period during which it will continue to adhere to the EU rules. Its departure from the EU came after the European Parliament on 29 January approved the withdrawal resolution passed by the Westminster after a debate off mixed warm words of love and hard-headed warnings to the country.
What is the background?
The referendum in 2016 followed by the withdrawal deal of former Prime Minister Theresa May started the tumultuous ordeal for the UK to leave the European Union. Rejected three times by the British Parliament between January 2017 to March 2019, several filibusters and May’s resignation made the Brexit process unduly long. They conflicted without much hope of an agreed outcome.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson replaced Theresa May in July 2019; since then, he embarked on the mandate to ‘Get Brexit done at any cost.’ His bold moves cemented his political standing within the Tories and with a political agenda to pass the Brexit in the Westminster, Johnson became one of the few British Prime Ministers to announce on 28 August the suspension of the Parliament with the consent of the Queen.
During August-October 2019, Johnson removed the controversial backstop deal for Northern Ireland to reach a compromise with Brussels. The new Brexit deal made Northern Ireland as a border check for goods entering EU member Ireland and the UK. Northern Ireland would not only remain in the single market of the EU but also within the customs of the UK. The subsequent election in December 2019 gave the public mandate to Johnson, and on 20 December the MPs passed Johnson’s withdrawal deal paving the way for the UK to leave the EU on 31 January 2020.
What does it mean?
The post-Brexit UK will look a lot more challenging and different for the country, the European Union and the rest of the world.
First, for the United Kingdom, a post-Brexit scenario means structural and social changes. From the colour of the passport to coins, the old structure from 30 years back is set to return. The terms of the European healthcare insurance, extradition agreement within the EU countries, pension rules and the ease of travel or work will have to be renegotiated during the 11-months transition period. Also, Britain will face the question of nationalism. A split in the United Kingdom is likely to arise as Scotland’s case for independence will become harder to ignore. Simultaneously Britain’s policy to make Northern Ireland a dual border will push the cause of the Irish unification.
Second, the UK’s relations with the EU will enter a new phase of arduous negotiation over the trade deal. The UK member of the European Parliament will lose their seats after the Brexit ushering the moment when the UK progresses to leave all of the EU’s political institutions and agencies. The UK will continue to abide by the EU rules during the transition period, and the European Court of Justice will continue to have the final say over legal disputes. The discussion on trade will take centre stage for Britain. For the EU countries, especially France and Germany, demand for level playing ground of investments will dictate the trade talks with the UK. The UK will be able to start talking to countries around the world about setting new rules for buying and selling goods and services. It has not been allowed to hold formal trade negotiations with countries like the US and Australia while it remained an EU member. A question remains, how much will this independence in trade policy cost Britain.
Third, as Britain sets to renegotiate its relations with the EU, its relation with the US will look a lot more transactional as two similar patterned leaders, Johnson and Trump will begin negotiating on another trade deal between the two countries. This was evident in the manner Johnson went ahead in allowing 5G telecommunications network on 29 January in Britain evading Trump’s warnings just before the trade talks. In all likelihood, Trump is not going to cut Johnson any favours in the trade deal that Johnson would have hoped for. Similarly, the British prime minister will not be content in merely being an ally of the US.
Also, during this week….
Despite John Bolton’s unpublished book, Senate votes in favour of Trump
John Bolton's new book did not affect Trump's impeachment trial; on 1 February Senate voted overwhelmingly in favour of President Trump with only two of the four Republicans voting for the Democrats. The final verdict on whether to acquit Trump will be on 5 February. On 27 January, the impeachment proceedings took a turn. Bolton's unpublished book has revealed Trump's role in setting up the pressure in Ukraine.
Pentagon wants to place Patriot missile system in Iraq
The US has asked Iraq to place the Patriot missile system at the base hosting US troops to improve the protection of the US defence personnel. The US has 5000 troops in Iraq to train and advise Iraqi security forces.
European Parliament postpones its resolution on India’s Citizenship Act
On 29 January 2020, the European Parliament has postponed (by 271 votes in favour and 191 against) the vote on resolutions against India's Citizenship Amendment Act. Six resolutions have been moved by different groups, including the European United Left/Nordic Green Left. The vote has been postponed to March 2020; Modi is likely to visit Europe in early March.
Netanyahu talks Syria and Trump's "Deal of the Century" with Putin
On 30 January Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on his way back to Israel made an impromptu stop in Moscow to met the Russian President Vladimir Putin. The meeting coincided with Russia's pardon of the Israeli national Naama Issachar who was sentenced to seven-year prison for drug trafficking. Putin has reserved his statements on the new peace deal and Syria
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Elections in Colombia and Brazil: Re-emergence of the Pink Tide
Padmashree Anandhan
Elections in France, Sweden, and Italy: The rise of the right
Janardhan G
North Korea: Missile Tests Galore
Sapna Elsa Abraham
China and the Middle East: Xi Jinping’s visit towards a “new era†and “China-Arab communityâ€
Avishka Ashok
The Taiwan Strait: Political and military assertions
Anu Maria Joseph
Ethiopia: Uncertainties despite ceasefire
Apoorva Sudhakar
Tunisia: The end of the Jasmine Revolution
Rashmi BR
Iraq: Deadlock and breakthrough
Kaviyadharshini A
Iran: Anti-government protests
Avishka Ashok
China: 20th Party Congress and Xi Jinping's consolidation
Chrishari de Alwis Gunasekare
Sri Lanka: Political and Economic Crises
Aparupa Bhattacherjee
Myanmar: The coup and after
GP Team
Thaw in China-Australia relations, and the return of Ramaphosa in South Africa
GP Team
The US-Africa Leaders Summit and the FTX CEO's arrest
Xi's visit to Saudi Arabia and Peru's political instability
GP Team
The Taiwanese local elections and the legacies of Jiang Zemin
Vignesh Ram
Anwar Ibrahim: Malaysia's new Prime Minister
GP Team
G-20 and COP-27 Summits: Key Takeaways
GP Team
Brief updates from around the world
GP Team
Elon Musk's Twitter deal and Putin's Valdai address
GP Team
China's 20th Party Congress and Former Prime Minister Liz Truss' resignation in the UK
GP Team
UN deems Russia’s referendums illegal
GP Team
The US easing sanctions on Venezuela, OPEC's production cut, and the WTO report on global trade
GP Team
The new DART Mission: A new era of planetary defence
GP Team
Putin and Russia's New Ukraine Strategy
GP Team
The SCO Summit, and the Sweden Elections
GP Team
Military exercises in Russia’s Far East, Eastern Economic Forum summit, and India-Bangladesh relations
GP Team
Floods and Emergency in Pakistan
GP Team
Regional round-ups
GP Team
Pelosi's visit to Taiwan, Sri Lanka's appeal to the IMF and Amnesty's report on Ukraine's Human Rights Violation
GP Team
Taiwan and Biden-Xi conversation, and a controversial referendum in Tunisia
GP Team
Putin’s meeting with Khamenei and Erdogan
GP Team
Biden's Middle East visit, and Elon Musk's backtracking on the Twitter deal
GP Team
Boris Johnson's resignation in UK, Shinzo Abe assassination in Japan, and the G-20 meeting in Bali
GP Team
NATO Summit, G-7 Summit, Instability in Israel, and NATO's New Strategic Concept
GP Team
BRICS Summit, Approval of Ukraine's candidature for the EU, and Saudi Arabia-Turkey rapprochement
GP Team
The US federal reserve interest rate increase and its global fallouts
GP Team
India-Nordic Summit, and New EU sanctions on Russia
GP Team
New US assistance for Ukraine
GP Team
China's Boao Forum for Asia, Russia's new ICBM test, and a Cold War in the Solomon Islands
GP Team
Elon Musk and the battle for TwitterÂ
GP Team
New sanctions on Russia, and a new IPCC report on climate change
GP Team
Russia's gas ultimatum to Europe
GP Team
The G7 Summit, and Europe’s new focus on defence
GP Team
War in Ukraine: Strategies of China, Europe and the US
GP Team
Sanctions against Russia and their limitations, and Biden’s State of the Union address
GP Team
Russia’s Ukraine invasion: Three days later
EU-Africa Summit, and France’s exit from Mali
GP Team
The One Ocean summit in France, and the Quad meeting in Australia
GP Team
Escalation and de-escalation in the Ukraine crisis
GP Team
Return of the Normandy Format on Ukraine and a Thaw in China-Australia diplomatic rhetoric
GP Team
US, Russia and the Geneva talks on Ukraine
GP Team
North Korea tests new missiles, and the US remembers 6 January
GP Team
The Complete Compendium for 2021
GP Team
China, East Asia, and South East Asia in 2021
GP Team
The Americas in 2021
GP Team
Europe in 2021
GP Team
Middle East and Africa in 2021
GP Team
South Asia in 2021
GP Team
The Biden-Putin, and Modi-Putin Summits
GP Team
China in Africa, and Elections in Honduras
GP Team
Strategic oil reserves' release, and another migrant crisis across the English Channel
GP Team
Biden-Xi virtual summit, and Russia's ASAT test
GP Team
The Coal compromise in COP 26, Xi’s power consolidation in China, and a Migrant Crisis in Europe
GP Team
COP 26 agreements on methane and deforestation, and elections in Japan
GP Team
China's White Paper on Climate Change
GP Team
China's hypersonic tests, Russia's Afghanistan summit, and EU's Poland challenge
GP Team
India-China military dialogue, G20 summit on Afghanistan, and China-Taiwan tensions
GP Team
Europe's Energy Crisis
GP Team
Biden's infrastructure bill trouble in the US, and a new Prime Minister in Japan
GP Team
The Quad reinvigoration, UN General Assembly meeting, Elections in Russia and Canada, and another political turmoil in Tunisia
GP Team
The AUKUS pact, North Korea's New Missile Test, New SpaceX Mission, and the State of EU address
GP Team
20 years after 9/11, Paris terror trial, and a new government in Lebanon
GP Team
The New Afghanistan
GP Team
Kamala Harris' visit to Southeast Asia
GP Team
Taliban's friendly neighbourhood: China, Russia and Pakistan
GP Team
The rise of Delta variant, and the fall of Afghan State
GP Team
New tensions in South China Sea, an ASEAN envoy to Myanmar, and 76 years after Hiroshima bombing
GP Team
Olympics in Japan, Six months of military rule in Myanmar, and a political opening in Lebanon
GP Team
Nord Stream-2, Floods in India and China, Peru election results, and another COVID origin probe
GP Team
Europe's floods and EU's Climate package, SCO meet on Afghanistan, and Political crises in Lebanon and Nepal
GP Team
Haiti's political crisis, and China's control of tech giants
GP Team
Hundred Years of Communist Party of ChinaÂ
GP Team
The EU Council Summit, the Merkel-Macron proposal on Russia, and Moscow's response
GP Team
G7, NATO and Biden-Putin summits, and the Iran elections
GP Team
G7 Summit, China's new anti-foreign sanctions law, Peru Elections, and France's Sahel exit
GP Team
China's Three Child policy, the US ban on investments in China, Biden's support for COVAX, and Israel's new government
GP Team
Another US investigation on COVID origin, Russia's Belarus embrace, Mali's second coup, and Europe's Africa apology
IPRI Team
EU's China investment freeze, Arctic Council meeting, Cryptocurrency crash, and a BBC apology
GP Team
China's new census, Cyber attack on a US energy grid, and 100 days of military rule in Myanmar
GP Team
100 days of President Biden, and three years of inter-Korean dialogueÂ
GP Team
Biden's climate summit, Putin's new redlines, China's media clampdown in Hong Kong, and India's alarming COVID case
GP Team
Return of the Iran nuclear talks, Pak-Russia rapprochement, Greenland elections, and Russia-Ukraine tensions
GP Team
The WHO Report on COVID-19, and Brazil's political crisis
GP Team
Fifty years of India-Bangladesh relations, Israel's elections and North Korea's new missile tests
GP Team
Quad Summit, Ten Years of Fukushima and China's Two Sessions
GP Team
The case against MBS, the Ireland trouble post-Brexit and the Pope's Iraq visit
GP Team
India-Pakistan Ceasefire, US-Saudi Arabia reset, Afghan dialogue in Doha, and the Australian new media law on Facebook/Google
GP Team
US-Iran restart, Munich Security Conference, Libya ten years after Gaddafi and the US Cold Storm
GP Team
India-China border disengagement, Senate acquittal of Donald Trump, UAE’s Mars mission success, and the WHO’s findings on the COVID
GP Team
Biden's new US foreign policy priorities, Russia-EU tensions over Navalny, and China's redline on Xinjiang, Hong Kong and Taiwan
GP Team
The Daniel Pearl case in Pakistan and the new vaccine complications in Europe
GP Team
The US returns to the Paris Agreement, and India reengages the region through a Vaccine diplomacy
GP Team
North Korea's Party Congress, Houthis as terrorists, and Elections in Uganda
GP Team
Disorderly transition in the US, Breakthrough over Qatar, Enrichment in Iran and Arrests in Hong Kong
GP Team
The Year of COVID, Protests and Elections
GP Team
India-Bangladesh reset and China's Chang'e-5 success
GP Team
Morocco recognizes Israel, Maduro consolidates in Venezuela and No-deal Brexit gets reals
GP Team
UK Vaccine approval, China-Australia spat, and an intra-Afghan agreement
GP Team
The Joshua Wang trial in Hong Kong, and a worsening conflict in Ethiopia
GP Team
Trump's setbacks in Georgia and Pennsylvania, hectic American engagements in the Middle East, and the race for the COVID-19 vaccines
GP Team
Impending catastrophe in Yemen, Elections in Myanmar, and another crisis in Hong Kong
GP Team
Joe Biden as the new American President, Pan-European measures against Islamic Extremism, and Civil-Military tussle in Myanmar elections
GP Team
A new India-US defence agreement, another terrorist attack in France, and a looming Russia-Turkey Cold War
GP Team
Anti-government movement in Pakistan, Emergency in Thailand, and new Israeli settlements in the West Bank
GP Team
The Quad summit in Japan, the World Bank report on South Asia and the European Parliament on Saudi Arabia
GP Team
An ugly Presidential debate in the US, a new bill to prevent Islamic separatism in France, and new EU sanctions against Turkey
GP Team
The Second COVID Wave in Europe, Japan's rapprochement in East Asia and a SAARC summit in South Asia
GP Team
The Abraham Accords in the Middle East, a new PM in Japan, and a TikTok deal in the US
GP Team
The new Brexit crisis, India, China and the SCO meeting in Moscow, and the Wildfires in the US
GP Team
India-China Border Standoff, Second Wave in South Korea, and Russia-Europe tensions over Navalny poisoning
GP Team
Greece-Turkey Tensions, Iran and the UNSC, China and the South China Sea and Shinzo Abe's resignation in Japan
GP Team
Selecting Kamala Harris in the US, Arresting Jimmy Lai in Hong Kong and Facing the Second Wave in Europe
GP Team
Sri Lanka's election brings Mahinda Rajapaksa back, while India and Pakistan respond differently to J&K
GP Team
Forthcoming elections in Sri Lanka, a migrant problem turning political in Italy, and the Second wave in Vietnam
GP Team
China's Economic Recovery, India-China Disengagement, India-Iran Chabahar Challenge and the UK's Huawei ban
GP Team
Half a million COVID deaths in Coronavirus, Russian bounties to Taliban and Putin to remain President till 2036
GP Team
Two years of Trump-Kim personal diplomacy, and the US troop withdrawal from Germany
GP Team
Global Coalition on China, North Korea-US tensions, UAE's jibe at Israel and the COVID Peak in Brazil
GP Team
India-China border standoff, Locust attack in India & the EU's Largest Recovery FundÂ
GP Team
US-China Trade Talks, Locust attacks across Africa and Asia, Iraq's New PM, and finally, a government in Israel
GP Team
Iran’s Military Satellite, Tensions in the South China Sea and Israel’s New Government Â
GP Team
Europe's Rescue Package, Wuhan's Reopening, Saudi Arabia's Yemen Ceasefire and the WHO controversy
GP Team
Taliban Violence in Afghanistan, Lockdown in Germany and the US-China blame-game
GP Team
The Senate acquits Trump in the US; and the Coronavirus impacts Southeast Asia more
GP Team
World Economic Forum, Wuhan Coronavirus, China-Myanmar MoUs, and a new government in Lebanon
GP Team
US-Iran Tensions in the Middle East, 6G in China, Fires in Australia, and a New Nuclear declaration in North Korea
GP Team
Impeachment in the US, Brexit Vote in the UK, an Islamic Summit in Malaysia and a Death Sentence in Pakistan
GP Team
Sui Kyi at the ICJ, Boris Johnson as the new British PM, Greta Thunberg as TIME's person, and none to speak at the COP 25
GP Team
NATO at 70, Protests in Iran, COP 25 in Madrid
GP Team
Protests in Iran and Attacks in London
GP Team
Elections in Sri Lanka and Protests in Georgia, Chile & Czech
GP Team
The Crisis in Bolivia, the BRICS Summit in Brazil, and renewed violence in Israel & Hong Kong
GP Team
US-China Tariffs, Beijing's support for Carrie Lam, India's RCEP exit, Iran's nuclear enrichment, and Russia's new Arctic endeavours
GP Team
Protests in Lebanon, ISIS post-Baghdadi, UK Elections, Afghan QCG meet in Moscow and human trafficking across Europe
GP Team
The new Turkey-Russia axis in the Middle East, Trump Impeachment inquiry, Protests in Latin America and the Oil spill in Brazil
GP Team
Turkey's Syrian Offensive, Spain's Catalonia Crisis, a new Brexit Deal and an increasing divide in Hong Kong
GP Team
Turkey-Syria border tensions, Modi-Xi summit, Ecuador Protests and the Impeachment Inquiry against Trump
GP Team
70 years Celebrations in China, Tipping Point in Hong Kong, a Brexit Roadmap, Protests in Iraq, and Khashoggi's death anniversary
GP Team
Elections in Israel, Violence in Afghanistan, Drone Attacks in Saudi Arabia, and the Climate Change Protests
GP Team
Trump in DMZ, Hong Kong Protests, Violence in Libya, Agreement in Sudan, Taliban's Dual Strategy and Hafiz Saeed Charged
GP Team
Masood Azhar Ban, Venezuela Crisis, Huawei in UK & the Sri Lankan Bombers
GP Team
Elections in Spain, BRI Summit 2.0, Kim's Russia visit and Terror attacks in Sri Lanka
GP Team
Indonesian Elections, North Korea's New Weapon Test, Trump's Yemen Veto, Venezuela Crisis and Climate Change Protests
GP Team
Coup in Sudan, Protests in Algeria & Libya, and another Brexit Extension
GP Team
Brexit Deadlock, Crises in Sudan & Algeria and the Elections in Maldives
GP Team
US-China Trade Talks, Mueller Report, Gaza Anniversary and Thailand Elections
GP Team
The New Zealand Massacre, The JeM discussion in the UN, The Brexit rejection, US-Taliban peace talks and Climate protests
GP Team
India in OIC, India-Pakistan and Trump-Kim Summit
GP Team
Doha Dialogue with the Taliban, Saudi Arabia in Asia and the Crisis in Venezuela
GP Team
US Emergency, Nord Stream-2 and Indo-Pak tensions
GP Team
US, South Korea and Thailand
GP Team
Yemen, Venezuela and US-China
GP Team
Between a Terror attack in Nairobi and a Political Disaster in UK
GP Team
Kim-Xi Meet, US Shutdown & US-China Trade Talks
GP Team
