A personal view of Australian and International Politics
Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
With
Donald Trump set to return to the White House, the international
outlook is in for a major shake-up. Perhaps even a wild ride.
The
most dramatic change would be regarding the war in Ukraine. The only
way that Ukraine has been able to hold off Russia's push towards Kyiv
has been due to the huge financial support of NATO.
While
Ukraine is not a member of NATO, the support of this alliance has
allowed it to match a much larger and better-resourced army.
The
US is the biggest funder of NATO, and Trump has made clear his
disregard for the alliance. He believes the US has for too long carried
many countries in NATO that have not paid their fair share.
Trump
appears to have a closer relationship with Putin than he admits. He
will not say whether he has had contact with Putin over the past year.
This
becomes important when it comes to Ukraine. Trump declared on CNN in
May 2023 that he could end the Ukraine war "in 24 hours".
"They're
dying, Russians and Ukrainians," Trump said. "I want them to stop
dying. And I'll have that done — I'll have that done in 24 hours."
Pushed on that, Trump said he would meet Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
From
my trips to Ukraine since Russia's invasion in February 2022, it's been
clear that both Ukraine's leadership and public have been fixated on
this US presidential election.
There
is a strong sense in Ukraine that to end the war in 24 hours, or at
least quickly, Trump would get both leaders together and tell them that
they needed to put down their guns and walk away with what they
currently have — which would be disastrous for Ukraine.
On
that scenario, overnight Ukraine's territory would shrink by 20 per
cent, which is what Russia has already taken. This in turn would most
likely lead to enormous divisions and recriminations inside Ukraine —
people would be angry that they lost thousands of people fighting a war
which a US president then rewarded Russia for beginning, by gifting to
them one-fifth of Ukraine.
Many
would blame Zelenskyy for not having delivered victory. And many would
blame the West — particularly the US — for not allowing Ukraine to
attack inside Russia and not providing Ukraine what it most needed,
particularly fighter jets such as F-16s.
Changes with China that would send shock waves globally
The
second major likely change in international affairs regards China.
Kamala Harris would most likely have continued a more predictable
approach to China — strategic competition, economic competition but an
attempt to keep conflict at the lowest level possible.
But
Trump is likely to be much different. He's made clear during the
campaign that he sees China as the biggest threat to US economic
prosperity.
That
would cause major convulsions to world trade. A new and bruising trade
war between the US and China would not just damage both countries but
damage confidence around the world.
Australia
would not be hit as badly as many countries. Whatever Trump's
unpredictability, he and much of the senior US political leadership
regard Australia as a loyal ally.
During
Trump's first presidency, Australia managed to navigate Trump's tariff
push, with Australian aluminium and steel being largely exempted. Credit
for this goes in large part to then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull.
Trump will be more supportive of Israel
And
finally, the Middle East. Kamala Harris would have been tougher on
Israel than Trump will be. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
recently visited Washington — during a meeting Harris made clear she was
unhappy with the number of civilians being killed by Israel in Gaza.
In contrast, Trump has made clear on several occasions that Israel should be allowed to "finish the job".
Few people seem to know what exactly that means.
But what is clear is that Trump would be much more supportive of Israel than Harris would have been.
"Wild" is one of Donald Trump's favourite words.
The world can now brace for what may be a wild ride.
Donald Trump elected 47th president of the United States
Israel's
military has conducted at least 40 strikes in parts of Lebanon, hitting
a number of Hezbollah strongholds in southern Lebanon.
Meanwhile,
the head of a UN aid agency for Palestinians is warning an Israeli ban
on its operations will "collapse the UN humanitarian response".
The Israeli government's ban on the UNRWA has sparked alarm internationally, including from the United States and Britain.
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Israel
has launched strikes across Lebanon as part of its months-long campaign
against Hezbollah, with at least 38 people killed in just one region.
Forty
Israeli strikes on Lebanon's Baalbek-Hermel region on Wednesday have
killed 38 people and wounded 54, its governor Bachir Khodr said on X.
Further strikes were reported in south Beirut, a stronghold for Hezbollah, according to the AFP news service.
There was no immediate report on the number of casualties.
The
attack happened shortly after Hezbollah secretary general Naim Qassem
said he did not believe that "political action" would bring about an end
to hostilities.
He said there could be a road to indirect negotiations if Israel stopped its attacks.
One of the strikes triggered a loud explosion which was heard across much of the capital, witnesses said.
Israeli
military spokesman Avichay Adraee had warned residents to evacuate the
southern suburbs of Burj al-Barajneh, Laylaki and Haret Hreik in a post
on X.
"You are located near
facilities and interests affiliated with Hezbollah, against which the
(military) will act in the near future," Mr Adraee said, as a speech by
Hezbollah's new leader Naim Qassem was being broadcast.
Earlier
Wednesday, Lebanon's official National News Agency reported Israeli air
strikes on the Bekaa Valley in the east and the southern city of
Nabatiyeh.
An AFP correspondent in the eastern city of Baalbek reported intense strikes in and around the city.
Israel's army had issued evacuation warnings for some but not all of the regions hit on Wednesday.
The Israeli army said Hezbollah had fired about 120 projectiles across the border.
More
than a year of clashes that escalated into war in September have killed
at least 3,050 people in Lebanon, according to health ministry figures.
UN aid agency for Palestinians facing its 'darkest hour', agency boss says
The
head of a United Nations agency delivering aid to Palestinians says the
organisation is facing its "darkest hour" after the Israeli
government's decision to ban it.
Israel
has accused employees of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency
(UNRWA) of participating in the October 7 attacks by Hamas last year,
which led to the deaths of 1,200 Israelis and kidnapping of over 200
more.
A series of probes found
some "neutrality related issues" at UNRWA, and determined that nine
employees "may have been involved" in the October 7 attack, but found no
evidence for Israel's central allegations.
UNRWA head Philippe Lazzarini told the General Assembly on Wednesday implementing the ban would "have disastrous consequences".
"Without intervention by member states, UNRWA will collapse, plunging millions of Palestinians into chaos," he said.
"In
the absence of a capable public administration or state, only UNRWA can
deliver education to more than 650,000 girls and boys in Gaza.
"In the absence of UNRWA, an entire generation will be denied the right to education."
Israel's
parliament approved a proposal to shut down UNRWA's operations despite
condemnation from the international community, including its ally the
United States as well as Britain and Germany.
Washington
warned Israel on October 15 that it had 30 days to increase the amount
of aid reaching the Gaza Strip or it would consider withholding some
military assistance to its key ally.
Polio vaccination drive in Gaza completed, Israeli military says
Meanwhile, the Israeli military on Wednesday said aid organisations had completed a second round of polio vaccinations in Gaza.
The
drive to vaccinate children in Gaza began in early September after the
World Health Organisation (WHO) said a baby was partially paralysed by
the virus.
It was the first case of polio in Gaza in 25 years.
On
Tuesday, WHO representative Rik Peeperkorn said the mass evacuations
from areas in northern Gaza where the Israeli military has been
operating for more than a month, had made it difficult to estimate the
number of children who might be missed in the north.
The
Israeli military said after a humanitarian pause earlier this week, 1.1
million vaccinations had been administered in the enclave, achieving 90
per cent coverage.
The October
7 attack by Hamas has sparked an ongoing war between the terror
organisation and the Israeli military, which has since spread to
Lebanon.
American inventor Thomas Edison described the linotype machine as the eighth wonder of the world when it was introduced in 1886.
The
technology revolutionised typesetting to make printing more efficient
by creating a line of type at once, rapidly increasing newspaper
circulation.
Today, the
linotype makes up many pieces of equipment still in working order on
display at the Federal Standard Printing Works in the small historic
town of Chiltern in north-east Victoria.
Established in 1859, it is one of the few intact provincial newspaper printing works from the gold rush era.
It is brought back to life each month by resident volunteer printer Robert Martin.
Mr Martin and his wife Mary have volunteered at the printing works for the past 20 years.
"I did my trade at the Yarrawonga Chronicle many, many years ago," Mr Martin said.
"All this machinery here, I operated basically exactly the same machinery in my apprenticeship."
Piece of history
The discovery of gold in Chiltern in 1858 drew thousands of people to the region.
The Federal Standard newspaper was founded the year after.
It operated from the printing works for the next 110 years.
Various
papers from around the district were also printed and published from
the site, including Albury's first newspaper, The Border Post, and The
Ovens Constitution at Beechworth.
The National Trust of Australia (Victoria) bought the printing works in 1972.
Chiltern Properties coordinator Vaughn Clarke said the printing works was one of the most influential of its time.
"I think at one point they printed the papers in a 40-mile radius," he said.
Mr Clarke said the printing works played a major part in the route on which the railway lines were built.
"The
railway didn't come here until 1873, and the editorials and the papers
written here about that were crucial in the consideration of where the
railway line would operate," Mr Clarke said.
"In
the day there was lots of advertising, lots of information about what
was happening in the town, and new businesses, death notices, when
properties were being sold and the goods sold."
Among the first owners was George H Mott, whose family's newspaper business became a dynasty.
They had involvement in owning and publishing more than 40 newspapers in a period of 112 years.
The
building still houses many pieces of equipment, including a Wharfedale
press, the century-old linotype machine and metal text and graphics in
original type cases.
"There
are other printing presses around but it is the only newspaper with the
equipment in its original location," Mr Clarke said.
"So,
there are other printing works that are now closed and used for other
things that don't have their original equipment intact and things like
that."
Passion for printing
Mr Martin, whose career was in printing, said his passion for the trade was as strong as ever.
He said the linotype remained a stand-out piece of equipment for him.
It became obsolete due to emerging technologies after being widely used for about a century.
"I
think the interesting point to make is that probably up until 1970,
letterpress printing was the main source of information and education
for well over 300 years," Mr Martin said.
He said the introduction of offset printing and phototypesetting resulted in a quick demise in the use of the equipment.
"It basically died out in two decades," he said.
Mr
Clarke said Chiltern Properties would not be able to operate the
machines without Mr Martin's extensive knowledge of the equipment.
"So,
one of our challenges going forward is to train people so we get more
volunteers to come on board so we can open more often," he said.
Town's rich history
Chiltern is also home to two other buildings owned by the National Trust (Victoria) — Dow's Pharmacy and the Lake View House.
The
three buildings give it the claim to having the most National Trust
registered buildings of any Victorian town in a 1-kilometre radius.
The pharmacy, like the Federal Standard, opened the year after the discovery of gold in the town.
The shop closed in 1968, with everything inside intact including original medication bottles and packaging on display.
Mr Clarke said the pharmacy and the printing works had a wonderful connection.
"A
lot of the information we have about the early pharmacists is from
bottles that we've found with their details stamped onto the glass," he
said.
He said there were also advertisements in the Federal Standard Newspaper talking about the new pharmacists and new operators.
"Otherwise, prior to 1876 there was no Pharmacy Act so you didn't have to be a registered pharmacist," he said.
The United Nations will set up an expert panel to investigate how nuclear war would impact all facets of society.
It's the first study of its kind since 1989 and has been prompted by concerns about geopolitical tensions.
What's next?
The panel will deliver its final report in 2027 and make recommendations for future research.
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You don't need to watch too many apocalyptic blockbusters to realise that nuclear war would be devastating.
But when it comes to understanding the impact of a modern nuclear exchange, our data is nearly as old as The Terminator.
The
last comprehensive United Nations study into nuclear war was published
in 1989, back before the Soviet Union collapsed and before the first
internet browser was released.
In the decades since, new nuclear powers have emerged and weapons technology has advanced.
The lack of holistic research into the consequences of nuclear conflict has the scientific community worried.
An atomic fact-finding mission
In
light of these concerns, the UN First Committee last week voted to
establish a panel of 21 international experts to assess how nuclear war
would impact all facets of life, from public health and population to
economics and agriculture.
The
panel will harness the expertise of UN agencies, such as the
International Atomic Energy Agency, while also soliciting data from
governments and organisations like the Red Cross.
It will explore the role of new technology, such as artificial intelligence, and new risks, such as cyber-attacks.
And after consulting with "the widest range of scientists and experts", a final report will be delivered in 2027.
Australia
was one of 144 voters to support the move, while 30 abstained and three
nuclear-armed nations opposed: the UK, France and Russia.
New Zealand and Ireland introduced the resolution.
"At
a time of elevated risk of nuclear conflict, there is a clear need to
publicly establish an accurate and up-to-date understanding of the
impacts of a nuclear war," they said.
Is nuclear war more likely today?
Nuclear
war may seem a fading relic of the Cold War era, with global stockpiles
declining from around 70,000 weapons in the 1980s to just over 12,000
today.
But many disarmament treaties are no longer in force, and new nuclear powers are expanding their arsenals.
Historic rivals India and Pakistan had only just established their nuclear programs when the last UN report was released.
They now have more 300 weapons between them.
China has added hundreds of weapons to its arsenal in recent decades, while becoming an economic and military rival to nuclear leader the United States.
North Korea has also joined the nuclear club,
while two long-standing nuclear nations, Israel and Russia, have been
fighting conflicts that have threatened to spiral out control.
Today,
the world is arguably closer to a nuclear strike than at any time since
the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, according to University of Queensland
international relations expert Marianne Hanson.
"We have nine nuclear weapon states now, and all of them have actually threatened to use them," Dr Hanson said.
"We really are on the brink of a potential nuclear war unless some decision is taken to halt this madness."
Nuclear powers 'don't want the world to know' the real risks
Nuclear
disarmament advocates have welcomed Australia's support for the UN
study, especially given the opposition of its ally, the UK.
The
UK Foreign Office told The Guardian the world did not need an
independent scientific panel to know that "nuclear war would have
devastating consequences".
But Dr Hanson said the nuclear powers "don't want the world to know just how devastating a nuclear war will be".
"Or indeed the fact that we've had numerous close calls," she said.
One
of the most famous close calls occurred in 1983, when a Soviet
early-warning system falsely reported missiles flying towards Russia
from the US.
Dr Hanson said the world had been "extremely lucky" to avoid a nuclear conflict.
"Our luck is not going to hold out forever," she said.
Why do we need another study?
Various governments and institutions have studied aspects of nuclear weapons in recent decades.
But
a lot of research has focused on areas of "military relevance",
according to International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons founding
member Tilman Ruff.
"We really
understand very little about the psychological, climatic, economic,
social, political and infrastructure implications of nuclear weapons in
the modern era," he said.
Dr
Ruff said the UN panel would provide authoritative and transparent
research, without the "bias or needs of any particular country".
"It gives it much more credibility and currency. Nations can't say, 'Oh, this doesn't apply to us'," he said.
"This is everybody's work, everybody's business."
Some recent research has already taken advantage of advances in climate modelling.
A
2022 study found a nuclear exchange of less than 1 per cent of the
world's arsenal would throw so much soot into the air, that the
subsequent decline in rainfall and sunlight, and damage to agriculture,
would leave 1.5 billion people at risk of starvation.
"We know now that those effects can happen with a much smaller nuclear war than previously thought," Dr Ruff said.
"And there are still many new effects of nuclear weapons being discovered.
"What happens to the oceans? What happens to marine currents? What happens to fisheries?"
Can a study stop nuclear war?
Whether a UN study will make a difference in the heat of battle remains to be seen.
But
Dr Ruff hoped the panel could do for nuclear disarmament what the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has done for climate change.
"It certainly suits the nuclear armed states for this not to be particularly prominent," he said.
"But it's not going to go away by denial, and the first step to dealing with any important issue is to look at the facts."
Dr Hanson said the UN panel would "get the message out" in a "very, very high-profile" way.
"Sometimes we think, 'What, another report? Another UN campaign? Is it really going to make a difference?'" she said.
"But I wouldn't discount the cumulative impact that it can have.
"It
might have been argued in 1992 or 1993 that the chemical weapons
convention isn't going to make any difference, but it did over time."
A "small engagement" between North Korean and Ukrainian troops has taken place, Ukraine's defence minister said.
President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that the first battles between the Ukrainian
military and North Korean troops "open a new page in instability in the
world".
What's next?
Ukraine is expecting a sharp rise in the number of North Koreans deployed.
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President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy says that the first battles between Ukrainian and
North Korean troops "open a new page in instability in the world",
following a report from his defence minister of a "small engagement".
Ukrainian
Defence Minister Rustem Umerov confirmed, in an interview with South
Korean television, that the first contact had occurred, an apparent
escalation in a conflict that began when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.
Mr
Zelenskyy, in his nightly video address, thanked those in the world
who, he said, had reacted to the dispatch of North Korean troops to
Russia last month "not just with words … but who are preparing actions
to support our defence".
"The first battles with North Korean soldiers open a new page of instability in the world," he said.
He
said that Ukraine, acting with the rest of the world, had to "do
everything so that this Russian step to expand the war with real
escalation fails."
Mr Umerov
told South Korea's KBS television in an interview broadcast on Tuesday
that there had been a "small engagement" with North Korean troops.
"Yes, I think so. It is (an) engagement," Mr Umerov said in English, when asked if a clash had occurred.
The
report, with excerpts from the interview, quoted Mr Umerov as saying
that the engagement was small and not yet systematic in terms of
mobilising soldiers.
Troops in frontline areas
South
Korea's Defence Ministry said on Tuesday that more than 10,000 North
Korean troops had arrived in Russia, with a "significant number" in the
frontline areas, including the Kursk region, where Ukrainian forces
staged an incursion in August.
Mr Zelenskyy quoted intelligence sources as saying on Monday that 11,000 North Koreans were in Russia.
The
Pentagon said at least 10,000 North Korean soldiers were in Kursk, but
it could not corroborate suggestions that they had been engaged in
combat.
The KBS report said Mr
Umerov told the interviewer that identification and other procedures
would take time as the Russian military was trying to pass off the North
Koreans as Buryats, a Mongolian ethnic group from Siberian regions.
Mr Umerov said he expected a sharp rise in the number of North Koreans deployed.
"(There
are) already contacts, but after a couple of weeks, we would see a more
significant number and upon this, we will review it and analyse it," he
said.
Expectations that North
Korean troops would undergo a month's training, he said, appeared to
have been shortened to one or two weeks to allow swifter deployment to
the battlefield.
Russia has not
acknowledged that North Korean troops are on its territory, but
President Vladimir Putin last week did not deny reports of their
presence.
He said it was up to Russia how to implement its defence pact with Pyongyang.