21 Feb 2019

US missile treaty withdrawal sparks global nuclear arms race

Andre Damon

A half-century after the Cuban Missile crisis that brought human civilization to within a hair’s breadth of destruction, Washington is fueling a global nuclear standoff that is, if anything, even more dangerous.
Last month, the White House announced that the United States would leave the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, which prohibits the deployment of land-based missiles with ranges of up to 5,000 miles.
Military strategists and think-tanks have made clear that the Pentagon has plans to deploy short and medium-range nuclear-capable missiles in Eastern Europe, as well as on islands off the Chinese coast. Earlier this month, the Pentagon said it has accelerated its plans to deploy weapons prohibited by the treaty, declaring it “will start those steps on the systems that they couldn't before.”
On Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Russia would retaliate proportionately “and asymmetrically” to any deployment of US missiles in Europe, making clear that it would target US launch facilities, as well as “command centers,” including Washington and possibly European capitols.
Putin declared that if the United States deployed such missiles, they would be able to “reach Moscow in just 10–12 minutes,” a situation that would be “dangerous for Russia.”
Putin warned that the growing stand-off increasingly resembles the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. The present situation has definite parallels to that event, which was triggered by the stationing of American Jupiter ballistic missiles in Turkey in 1961. In response, the Soviet Union stationed its own medium-range nuclear missiles in Cuba, just over 100 miles from the Florida Coast. Numerous participants have attested to the fact that nuclear war was narrowly averted.
A Tomahawk cruise missile fired from an American mark 41 Vertical Launching System. These launch systems are installed in American "Missile Defense" facilities in Eastern Europe.
US plans for deploying missiles in violation of the INF treaty are already well-advanced. In his speech, Putin alleged that the US missile defense systems installed in Poland and Romania were fully capable of launching medium-range tomahawk missiles armed with a nuclear payload. While Washington’s claims that Russia is operating in violation of the INF treaty remains largely unsubstantiated, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists backed Putin’s claim, declaring, “publicly available information makes it clear that the US Aegis-based systems in Eastern Europe, if equipped with cruise missiles, would indeed violate the INF.”
It adds, “If the Aegis-based systems in Eastern Europe were supplied with American cruise missiles—either the existing Tomahawk or a new missile that Russia claims the United States has been developing—they would become fearsome offensive forces, staged on the frontiers of Russia. And there would be little way for Russia to know whether Aegis systems were loaded with missile defense interceptors or nuclear-armed cruise missiles.”
When pressed on whether the American “missile defense” sites were capable of firing nuclear cruise missiles, the Pentagon responded in the negative, declaring that the facilities’ software prevented them from doing so. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists likewise called this “a false assertion that is incompatible with the engineering design of the system.”
To turn these facilities into launch platforms for cruise missiles would, in other words, require little more than a software update.
A “proportional” response by Russia in violation of the INF would entail placing ground-based missiles within a few hundred miles of the US border: a largely unfeasible project. Putin, made clear that in response to any moves to deploy ground-launched cruise missiles, Russia would be prepared to implement an “asymmetric” response: placing hypersonic missiles on ships and submarines within a few hundred miles of the US border.
“With speeds we are capable of, we can place our ships far away from the territorial waters or even the exclusive economic zone of a certain nation. They can be in neutral waters, far in the ocean,” Putin said. “Nobody can forbid naval ships and submarines to be there.”
In response to American plans to make Europe into a firing range for nuclear missiles, Russia is threatening to turn America’s Eastern Seaboard into a high-stakes skirmish line, in which submarines, ships, and aircraft armed with nuclear missiles jostle for position just a few hundred miles from one of the most densely populated coastlines in the world.
And this will be just one theater of the multipolar nuclear dystopia imagined by the Trump White House, with a similar standoff going on every day in the seas off the Chinese coast.
To make matters worse, all of this will play out not with today’s ballistic weapons, but with hypersonic missiles traveling at 25 times the speed of sound, with a “decision window” of just two or three minutes to determine whether a detected missile launch is a test, a false alarm or a full-scale thermonuclear assault, massively raising the chances of a deadly miscalculation with billions of lives on the line.
Nearly three decades ago, the dissolution of the USSR was greeted with a wave of triumphalism and the declaration that nuclear war had become a thing of the past with the global triumph of “liberal democracy.” The end of the USSR, however, prompted not a “peace dividend,” but rather unending wars in Iraq, Serbia, Afghanistan, Libya and Syria. Now, with the Pentagon’s doctrine of “strategic competition,” the US is preparing for a full-scale war against nuclear-armed “great powers” like Russia and China.
The United States and NATO have pushed their forces hundreds of miles east, to the very borders of Russia, intent on reducing the country to the status of a semi-colony. The Russian oligarchy, incapable of making any appeal to anti-war sentiment within the United States or globally, alternates between fruitless appeals to their American “partners” to come to their senses and bellicose nuclear threats.
While the Trump administration is the most aggressive purveyor of the global nuclear arms race, the process is universal. A recent report by the Munich Security Conference declared that, “the role of nuclear weapons” is “growing.” It adds, beyond the US and Russia, all of the nine nuclear weapons states are adding to or upgrading their arsenals, apparently intent on gaining an edge in a period of new uncertainty.” In Germany, which had previously eschewed the development of nuclear weapons, the demand for an independent nuclear force is growing stronger every day within the ruling elites.
For his part, Trump is continuing and intensifying the policies of his predecessor, Barack Obama, the candidate of “hope and change,” who launched a trillion-dollar nuclear modernization program to produce “low-yield,” “usable” nuclear weapons that have started to roll off the assembly lines this year.
The universality of the new global arms race makes clear that it is not the outcome of the political conjuncture of one or another country, but an expression of a universal process gripping the crisis-ridden capitalist system. All over the world, the ruling classes see in war, plunder, and conquest, together with the promotion of nationalism and xenophobia, the means to divert outward intense internal class pressures, expressed in a growing strike movement by the international working class.
But this growing movement of the working class offers the means to oppose the homicidal war aims of the ruling elite through its mobilization on a socialist program to put an end to the capitalist system: the root of war, dictatorship and social inequality.

Alleged hacking of Australian parliament feeds anti-China frenzy

Peter Symonds

Unsubstantiated claims that a “sophisticated state actor” hacked into the Australian parliament’s computer network this month make clear that the upcoming national elections due in May will take place in a political climate poisoned by xenophobia, directed above all against China.
In a statement on Monday, Prime Minister Scott Morrison relayed allegations by the intelligence agencies that the Parliament House computers and all three major parties—the ruling Liberal and National parties, and opposition Labor Party—had been targeted. “Our cyber experts believe that a sophisticated state actor is responsible for this malicious activity,” he said.
Alistair McGibbon, head of the Australian Cyber Security Centre, provided few details of the alleged breach. He said it was too early to tell what information had been accessed but declared that it had been the right decision “in terms of risk management, to go publicly with this issue before we knew the full extent.”
Neither Morrison nor McGibbon explained why their statements would assist in “risk management” given that so little is known about the hacking. Moreover, parliament and all parliamentarians, as well as presumably the entire intelligence-defence-police apparatus and other state agencies, would have been informed of the breach when it was identified on February 8.
The decision to go public was made not on security grounds but as part of the intensifying campaign to brand China’s alleged interference in Australian politics as a national security threat in the lead up to the election. McGibbon declared that the sophistication of the hacking was such that only a “state actor” from “a limited list of countries” could have carried it out. He admitted, however, that “we have low confidence at being able to publicly state who we think it is.”
Other “security experts” quickly filled in the blank for the breathless media accounts of the hacking—it had to be China.
A comment in yesterday’s Australian by Peter Jennings, executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, for example, was headlined “Suspicion for parliamentary hack must fall on China.” On the basis of no additional evidence, Jennings concluded that “China is the one country with the means and the motive to take on the risk of attacking Australia’s political parties.”
Jennings simply cited previous unsubstantiated allegations of hacking and “seeking to suborn Australian political parties through donations and otherwise engage in bullying tactics to shut opponents up.” A former deputy defence secretary with close ties to intelligence/military agencies in Canberra and Washington, Jennings has been in the forefront of the hysterical campaign denouncing alleged Chinese “interference” in Australian politics.
This campaign is a component of Australia’s involvement with the Trump administration’s escalating confrontation with China over trade and economic issues, as well as the continuing military build-up in the Indo-Pacific, begun under Obama, in preparation for war.
Last year the Morrison government and the Labor opposition joined forces to enact draconian “foreign interference” legislation, which vastly expands police powers that are the basis for war-time measures to crack down on anti-war opponents, “enemy aliens” and any industrial action.
In a foretaste of what is being prepared, billionaire Chinese entrepreneur Huang Xiangmo was stripped of his permanent residency status this month and prevented from returning to Australia after being deemed an agent of foreign interference.
Significantly, the hacking allegations have been prominently published in the US and international press, including the New York TimesWall Street Journal and Financial Times, to feed the growing frenzy of anti-Chinese propaganda. Unsubstantiated claims of Chinese interference in Australian politics over the past two years have been picked up by the American political establishment and media to justify their own aggressive actions towards China.
China has vigorously denied the allegations. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told the media: “One should present abundant evidence when investigating and determining the nature of a cyberspace activity, instead of making baseless speculations and firing indiscriminate shots at others.”
Geng warned: “Irresponsible reports, accusations, pressurising and sanctions will only heighten tensions and confrontation in cyberspace and poison the atmosphere for cooperation.” He called for international cooperation to deal with cybersecurity threats—an appeal that will be ignored in Canberra and Washington
Significantly, top cybersecurity adviser MacGibbon told the New York Times that Australian agencies had blocked the hacking activities before determining the identity of the hacker. That defensive action, he said, “also does other unpleasant things, like remove some of the forensic evidence we’re interested in.” In other words, who carried out the hacking can no longer be determined with any certainty.
The accusations being made against China are utterly hypocritical. Edward Snowden, a former employee of the US National Security Agency (NSA), revealed the vast extent of its spying operations not only on rivals like China and Russia, but on its allies, international organisations, such as the UN and European Union, as well as on tens of millions of its own citizens.
The NSA collects and stores many billions of emails, phone calls, texts, video-conference and webcam recordings, facial images and credit card records. As part of the “Five Eyes” network, Australia together with Britain, Canada and New Zealand, is a key component of US mass surveillance operations.
Australia and other key US allies have banned Chinese corporations like Huawei from any involvement in the new 5G networks that are being rolled out around the world. While the stated pretext is to guard against the China’s spying and other malevolent cyber activities, it is far more likely that the NSA is deeply concerned that Chinese equipment will compromise its surveillance activities. It collaborates closely with American tech corporations.
Despite the many unanswered questions about the reported hacking attack, the Australian media and political establishment has uncritically echoed the allegations presented by the government and intelligence agencies. Labor opposition leader Bill Shorten immediately supported the government’s claims, declaring that other countries such as the US had been subject to electoral interference and “we are not exempt or immune.”
As Morrison admitted in his statement “there is no evidence of any electoral interference.” Nor have the intelligence agencies provided any indication of what was accessed by the hacker or for what purpose. None of this, however, will halt the rising drum beat of anti-Chinese propaganda as the federal election draws closer.

9/11 Victim Compensation Fund makes deep cuts to benefits

Sandy English

Last week, the second 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund (VCF), commissioned in 2011 by Congress primarily to address the needs of workers sickened after clearing the debris from the ruins of the World Trade Center that was destroyed in the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001, has announced that it will cut payouts to current applicants in half and applicants after February 2 by 70 percent.
The VCF posted a statement on its website that it has received a surge of applications in 2018, particularly in the last four months. It noted that this was likely because of a Notice of Inquiry it published in October that stated, “funding that has been appropriated to compensate claimants may be insufficient to compensate all claims” but also pointed to “the increased rates of serious illnesses suffered by members of the 9/11 community, the increasing number of deaths that can be attributed to 9/11 exposure.”
The fund’s special master, Rupa Bhattacharyya, told the media, “Unfortunately, the law really leaves us no choice. This is the fairest way we could come up with to do it.”
The fund, which was started with a completely inadequate $7.5 billion, has now depleted more than $5 billion. By most estimates, 10,000 people in New York have been diagnosed with cancer as a result of the attack and its aftermath. Health conditions related to 9/11 have been certified for 43,000 people. Two-and-a-half-billion dollars in the fund remain for 19,000 people who have filed and for the thousands more who are expected to file before the fund closes next year.
The US government has direct culpability in the deaths and illnesses of construction workers who assisted in the clean-up of the site, area residents and other victims of the contaminated environment in the aftermath of 9/11.
On September 14, 2001, Christine Todd Whitman, then the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), announced: “The good news continues to be that air samples we have taken have all been at levels that cause us no concern.” Whitman, the right-wing former Republican governor of New Jersey who was appointed to the EPA by George W. Bush, was ruled not liable for damages in civil court in 2008 for assuring residents of the area on September 18, 2001, that the “air is safe to breathe and their water is safe to drink.” In a 2003 internal investigation, the EPA found no basis for these statements.
Michael Barasch, an attorney who has represented over 11,000 9/11 illness victims, has observed that there has been “an unanticipated explosion of cancers and deaths in the 9/11 community. Many more are expected to get sick as a result of their exposure to Ground Zero toxins in the 8 months after 9/11. … [T]he air was highly carcinogenic, with a chemical composition similar to Drano, mixed with pulverized glass and concrete.”
Barasch noted about the cutting of funds by the VCF: “The only thing these people did wrong was believe the EPA when they said the air is safe. They were lied to by our government. Then they were promised this compensation, and now the rug is being pulled out from underneath them.”
New York politicians who sponsored the 2011 bill, Democratic Representatives Jerrold Nadler and Carolyn Maloney and Republican Peter King, responded with a promise to introduce a “Never Forget the Heroes: Permanent Authorization of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund Act” that would continue to fund victims.
Whether funding is restored or not, this gesture is more of the patriotic hoopla about heroes and sacrifice that has polluted the phony, and now discarded, war on terror since September 12, 2001.
The 9/11 attacks were the product of American foreign policy. The nearly 3,000 people killed outright and the tens of thousands sickened in the aftermath are its victims. The state that has ravaged the Middle East for decades gives them jingoistic cheers in great quantities but is not much interested in healing the terrible wounds it has caused.
The real priorities of America’s ruling elite were on display the same day that the fund made its announcement as President Trump bragged in a press conference in the Rose Garden about the large amount of funding allocated to the Department of Homeland Security, which was created as a result of 9/11 attacks: “We have so much money, we don’t know what to do with it. I don’t know what to do with all the money they’re giving us. It’s crazy.”

Alleging “Russian influence,” Facebook bans left-wing pages

Andy Thompson

On February 15 Facebook suspended four pages run by Maffick Media, including In the Now, Soapbox, Back Then and Waste-Ed, which posted content critical of US foreign and social policy.
Facebook removed the articles after CNN ran a report alleging that the pages had connections with Russia Today, a broadcaster partially funded by the Russian government.
Whatever the source of the pages’ funding, their removal is a major new escalation of efforts by the US social media companies, at the behest of the US government, to censor and suppress oppositional political viewpoints.
Rania Khalek, a commentator for Maffick, told CNN, “We should judge journalists on the content that they produce. So, if you want to judge me, judge me on the content. Judge me on the facts I’m presenting.”
She continued, “If I oppose a US war, does that automatically mean I’m going to be accused of being aligned with the Kremlin? I feel like this is a very, very dangerous McCarthyist tactic to start saying that leftist views, anti-war views are just the Kremlin government’s talking points.”
Maffick media does not dispute that they received funds from the Russian government. In a statement on their website Maffick writes, “Similarly to NPR, PBS, BBC, DW, CBC, AJ+ and many other media companies, Maffick is supported in part by government funding. Likewise, while we haven’t posted funding details on our Facebook pages etc, neither have any of our international peers.” The post continues, “The government that helps fund our company is Russia. We did not violate any of Facebook’s policies whatsoever. None of our content promotes disinformation or fake news… This type of new McCarthyism deserves to be called out and needs to stop.”
After the removal of the pages was announced, a Facebook spokesperson stated, “People connecting with Pages shouldn’t be misled about who’s behind them. Just as we’ve stepped up our enforcement of coordinated inauthentic behavior and financially motivated spam over the past year, we’ll continue improving so people can get more information about the Pages they follow.” However, nowhere has Facebook stated a policy that pages must disclose their funding nor was Maffick given any warning before being removed.
Maffick claims that the American news agency CNN played a role in raising the question of funding with Facebook. According to a CNN report titled, “Russia is backing a viral video company aimed at American millennials,” Facebook did not take issue with the pages until CNN was tipped off by the Alliance for Securing Democracy, a right-wing organization staffed by former US intelligence officers and State Department officials with its own funding connected to the US government through the German Marshall Fund.
Quoting reports from the US Director of National Intelligence, they write that RT is the “Kremlin’s principal international propaganda outlet.” Later CNN quotes a representative from the Atlantic Council who stated that RT and Maffick pages “routinely boost Kremlin narratives, especially those which portray the West negatively.”
This is not the first move Facebook has made to censor content it does not agree with. Following the 2016 election Facebook hired over 20,000 moderators to block content. As a result, left-wing pages with millions of views have been removed without any serious explanation.
The WSWS strongly denounces these efforts to censor the internet. The public has the right to read and watch any information it wants. It is not for the corporations, working on behalf of the government, to determine what is appropriate for viewing. Free use of the internet for accessing information and sharing ideas is a democratic right.

Honda announces 3,500 job losses at Swindon, England

Robert Stevens

Honda has confirmed the closure of its car plant in Swindon, England with the loss of 3,500 jobs by the end of 2021. The plant produces one car in roughly every 10 made in the UK. Closure will also result in an estimated 12,500 job losses in the auto supply chain and other businesses serving the plant.
The Honda losses follow announcements of nearly 9,000 redundancies by car producers to be imposed in the next few years. Jaguar Land Rover is cutting 4,500 jobs internationally, with most of these to go in Britain where it employs 44,000 workers. Ford is to axe 400 jobs at its Bridgend factory in Wales by 2021.
Nissan announced earlier this month that it will not be producing its X-Trail sport utility vehicle at its Sunderland plant, putting hundreds of jobs in jeopardy.
The Honda plant went into production in 1985 and produces the Civic model, mostly for export. It is the company’s sole manufacturing location in Europe. Last year, the plant turned out more than 160,000 cars, with around 50 percent exported to the North American market, and 20 percent to Europe.
Giving expression to the cut-throat completion in the global car industry, Swindon would mark the first time that Honda has ever closed a vehicle factory since its incorporation in 1948.
A central factor in the decision is that Swindon’s engine plant manufactures diesel engines, with the company also seeking to relocate more of its global production back to Japan where it has based much of its newer hybrid and electrical vehicle capabilities.
Announcing the closure, Katsushi Inoue, chief officer for European regional operations, said, “In light of the unprecedented changes that are affecting our industry, it is vital that we accelerate our electrification strategy and restructure our global operations accordingly.”
Honda and the UK government were at pains to stress that the Swindon closure was not related to Brexit. But a new free-trade deal between Japan and the European Union means that Honda has no financial incentive to produce cars in Europe. Cars made in Japan no longer attract tariffs coming into Europe.
Last September, Honda Europe’s senior vice-president, Ian Howells outlined the doomsday scenario facing car manufacturers in the event of a hard-Brexit. Speaking to the BBC’s “Wake up to Money” programme he said, “In terms of administration, we’d probably be looking at something like sixty-odd thousand additional bits of documentation we would have to provide to get product to and from Europe.”
Howells warned, “[C]learly if we end up with World Trade Organization tariffs we’d have something like 10 percent costs in addition on our shipped product back into Europe, and that would certainly run into tens of millions of pounds. Likewise, when we’re looking at componentry coming the other way, again [it could cost] tens of millions in terms of tariffs coming into the UK.”
Last week, the Times reported that a Ford Motors executive told Prime Minister Theresa May, on a private conference call with other business leaders, that given a no-deal Brexit was an imminent danger, Ford was preparing to leave the UK. Ford has two engine plants in the UK—Bridgend and at Dagenham in east London. May was reportedly warned about the same outcome by other CEOs, with one stating, “This isn’t about contingencies any more—we are taking steps because of the uncertainty. It’s real.”
Speaking to the Just Auto web site, a Fords spokesman said, “We have long urged the UK government and parliament to work together to avoid the country leaving the EU on a no-deal, hard Brexit basis on March 29. Such a situation would be catastrophic for the UK auto industry and Ford’s manufacturing operations in the country. We will take whatever action is necessary to preserve the competitiveness of our European business.”
The response of the trade unions at Honda, as at every other car plant, is not to organise a fight to oppose job losses but to smooth the way for them. Unite automotive national officer Des Quinn said the closure would be “a shattering body blow at the heart of UK manufacturing.” He added, “The car industry in the UK over the last two decades has been the jewel in the crown for the manufacturing sector—and now it has been brought low by the chaotic Brexit uncertainty created by the rigid approach adopted by Prime Minister Theresa May.”
There was no call to mobilise workers at Honda or in the rest of the car industry, where Unite has thousands of members. Instead an appeal was made to “Business secretary Greg Clark” who needs “to make an urgent statement on what the government intends to do to rectify this dire situation.”
Unite claimed it didn’t know the Swindon closure was on the agenda and expressed concerns that the sudden announcement made it harder to sell thousands of job losses to its members. “If the government had advance warning of this dreadful news and did not alert the unions, this is an appalling and cavalier attitude by ministers,” said Quinn.
On Tuesday, Unite accepted the company’s rationale for closure saying, “We acknowledge the global challenges that Honda has outlined in its statement, but we don’t accept that this plant, with its highly skilled and dedicated workforce, does not have a viable future.” No fight would be organised, with the union “now entering a period of meaningful consultations with the management to examine in detail the business case put forward by the company.”
These are the words and actions of an appendage of the company, not an organisation that defends workers. All that can come out of such discussions will be proposals from Unite as to how it can ensure a smooth transition to closure or pledges that it will organise a further sacrifice of the pay, terms and conditions of its members to persuade Honda to stay.
In the face of an escalating trade war between the major imperialist powers, as car producers fight to win greater a share of a diminishing market at the expense of their rivals, the only realistic way for Honda workers to fight back is through the adoption of their own independent strategy.
This must be based on the struggle for the international unity of car workers, based on a socialist programme that does not accept the “right” of auto conglomerates like Honda to destroy thousands of workers jobs overnight.
The vital first step is for workers to organise themselves independently of the unions through the setting up of rank-and-file committees.
Car workers internationally have begun to take these steps. Last month, tens of thousands of auto workers in Matamoros, Mexico, on the US-Mexico border, launched a wildcat strike. Workers formed independent organisations and marched under the banner, “The union and the company kill the working class.”
In Detroit on February 9, autoworkers and supporters organised by the World Socialist Web Site Autoworker Newsletter and the Steering Committee of the Coalition of Rank-and-File Committees held a demonstration outside General Motors headquarters in opposition to the company’s plans to close five plants in the US and Canada. This was carried out independently of the United Auto Workers union, which hasn’t lifted a finger to save a single job.

US anti-Huawei campaign suffers a blow

Nick Beams

The US campaign to have its allies exclude the Chinese telecom giant Huawei from the development of 5G mobile phone networks on “national security” grounds appears to have suffered a significant blow. According to a report in the Financial Times on Monday, a major British intelligence agency has concluded that “it is possible to mitigate the risk from using Huawei equipment in 5G networks.”
The report cited “two people familiar with the conclusion,” who had been reached by the UK National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC). The impact of the finding, if confirmed, will extend far beyond Britain, cutting across a campaign by the US National Security Agency to have Huawei’s involvement in 5G networks significantly reduced, if not outright banned.
The newspaper quoted a person “familiar with the debate” who said the British decision would carry “great weight” with European leaders, as Britain is part of the Five Eyes intelligence sharing network with the US.
“Other nations can make the argument that if the British are confident of mitigation against national security threats then they can reassure their public and the US administration that they are acting in a prudent manner in continuing to allow their communications service providers to use Chinese components as long as they take the kinds of precautions recommended by the British,” the person said.
The Financial Times report on the NCSC assessment of Huawei followed its publication of an article on February 12 by Robert Hannigan, the director of the British intelligence agency GCHQ from 2014 to 2017, in which he took issue with the growing campaign “for Chinese companies to be frozen out of telecoms in Western countries, especially future 5G networks.”
Hannigan wrote that concerns over cyber espionage, the growth of the Chinese technology sector and the direction of Chinese foreign policy were all “lumped together into a perceived cyber threat which can only be met by a blanket ban.” All these arguments were “short on technical understanding of cyber security and the complexities of 5G architecture.”
Hannigan cited the detention of Huawei’s chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou in Canada and Trump’s statement that this could be part of a trade deal as having “reinforced” the view that “there is a wider geopolitical campaign in play.”
He noted that the NCSC had been “blunt about Huawei’s shortcomings in security engineering and its general attitude to cyber security,” noting that its failures were not unique, and that Huawei had promised to “address the criticisms and to spend huge sums doing so.” Huawei has said the cost will be around $2 billion.
“The key point here,” Hannigan continued, “obscured by the growing hysteria over Chinese tech is that the NCSC has never found evidence of malicious Chinese state cyber activity through Huawei.”
He noted that there had been Chinese state-linked cyber attacks. “But the fact that these attacks did not require the manipulation of Chinese sovereign companies such as Huawei merely underlines how ineffective a blanket security ban based on company national flags is likely to be.”
He described assertions that Chinese technology in any part of a 5G network represented “unacceptable risks” as “nonsense.” Hannigan said the UK and other European governments should “hold their nerve” and base decisions on Chinese involvement in future telecoms on technical expertise and rational assessment of risks, rather than “political fashion or trade wars.”
He concluded that “we should accept that China will be a global tech power in the future” and start managing the risk now, rather than pretending the west can sit out China’s technological rise.”
But this assessment points to the centre of the conflict. The US political, military and intelligence establishment, and not merely the Trump administration, has concluded that it cannot allow Chinese technological and industrial advancement as it regards it as a threat to American global economic, and ultimately, military dominance.
It has no intention of “sitting out” Chinese development but is determined to take action on all fronts—economic, political and military—to prevent it.
These geo-strategic interests were at the centre of the visit by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Eastern Europe last week. According to US officials, speaking to a briefing during Pompeo’s trip, the large number of small and mid-sized states in Central and Eastern Europe, many of which had a “high propensity for corruption,” could allow China to “penetrate key sectors” and exert influence with the European Union.
Pompeo told Hungary’s foreign minister that it would be difficult for the US to partner with countries where Huawei equipment was “co-located” with American technology.
In his address to the Munich Security Conference last Saturday US Vice-President Mike Pence also raised the issue of Huawei, repeating the US assertion that it posed a threat because of a Chinese law requiring telecom companies to share information with the government.
However, under conditions in which the tensions between the US and Europe are on the rise and emerged into the open during the conference, the US stand did not receive full backing.
The secretary-general of NATO, Jens Stoltenberg, told the Financial Times that the alliance was taking the issue “very seriously” but had to reach a conclusion.
Britain has signalled that it is far from fully in line with the US position. The head of the British intelligence service MI6, Alex Younger, has indicated that the situation is too complex to simply ban Huawei and that countries have a “sovereign right to work through the answer to all of this.”
In Eastern Europe, Poland is most closely aligned with the US position on Huawei, but others have reservations. The Czech president, Milos Zeman, has said that moves against Huawei could hurt Czech economic interests. Slovakian Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini last month warned that politicians should be “careful not to become a tool in a trade war or a fight between competitors.”
Large amounts of money and resources are at stake as Huawei is deeply involved in European telecoms networks. A very small operator barely a decade ago, it now supplies about a third of telecom systems.
Bloomberg has reported that the “nightmare scenario” for telephone companies would be if they have to remove Huawei equipment from their systems. The German provider Deutsche Telekom has estimated the cost of any retroactive ban as billions of euros.
Huawei has hit out at the US actions with Eric Xu, one of the company’s three rotating chairmen, denouncing the Trump administration for conducting a “co-ordinated, tactical political campaign” against it.
And in view of the well-known fact revealed by WikiLeaks and whistle blower Edward Snowden that the world’s major hackers and cyber spies are US intelligence agencies, he provided an interesting slant on some of the possible motives for the campaign.
“Is [the US] truly thinking about cyber security and protecting the privacy of other countries’ citizens, or do they have other motives?” he said. “Some say that because these countries are using Huawei equipment, it makes it harder for US agencies to obtain these countries’ data.”

19 Feb 2019

IMU-Simons African Fellowship Program (Fully-funded) 2019

Application Deadlines: 
  • April 15th, 2019 for research visits starting between August 1, 2019 and August 1, 2020 (Decisions will be made by June 15h, 2019)
  • July 15th, 2019 for research visits starting between November 1, 2019 and November 1,, 2020 (Decisions will be made by September 15, 2019)
  • October 1st, 2019 for research visits between January 15, 2020 and January 15th, 2021 (Decisions will be made by November 15th, 2019)
Offered Annually? Yes. Until 2021


Eligible Countries: African countries

To be taken at (country): Worldwide

About the Award: The IMU-Simons African Fellowship Program supports research sabbaticals for mathematicians from AFRICAN developing countries employed in AFRICA to travel to an Internationally known mathematical centre of excellence/university (WORLDWIDE) for collaborative research.
The program is not for any post graduate courses or post doctoral training but for a LIMITED RESEARCH PERIOD. The grant covers TRAVEL and LIVING COSTS of African mathematicians working in Africa (Specifically coming from a developing country, the definition of which is determined by the IMU for all its schemes) during the sabbatical.

Offered Since: 2016

Type: Fellowship (Academic)

Eligibility: 
    • The applicant has to hold a valid doctoral degree (PhD) in mathematics.
    • The African applicant must be based (place of work) in an African developing country.
    • The applicant has to be employed as a mathematician in a faculty of a university or an equivalent higher education institution.
    • The applicant should already have established contact with a mathematician in the host institution in mathematical centre of excellence worldwide and should have a definite research plan together with the host, which must be submitted along with the curriculum vitae of both mathematicians at the time of applying for this grant. This plan should be approved by the host as well.
    • The applicant should have been granted appropriate leave of absence from his/her home institution which will cover the period of the visit.
    • The application must also be accompanied by a formal letter of invitation from the host institution, which clearly specifies the period of the (short) research visit as well as the extent of its financial commitment and support. It is expected that the host institution would at least offer office space, free Internet access and other basic amenities.The invitation has to come from the dean of the faculty for the host institution.
  • The minimal length of a visit that could be favourably considered would be one month. There is no maximal length but it has to be a sabbatical/ research visit not a fellowship position in the host institution (e.g. doing a post-doctoral).
Value of Scholarship: The grant under this scheme will cover:
  1. Travel costs from the place of work of the applicant to that of the host to the extent of economy class airfare (Public) transport (surface transport by rail or bus between the nearest city where the airport is located and the headquarters of the candidate or the city/town where the host institution is located, if necessary)
  2. Visa fees
  3. Travel insurance charges
  4. Basic living costs
  5. Accommodation cost (guest house of the institution or rented flat if possible).
  6. Maximum four (4) Taxi fares (on submission of receipts) may be allowed to travel between the residence and the airport/railway station (upon arrival and departure).
How to Apply: In order to apply please take the following steps:
  1. Please fill out and submit the online application form for the IMU-Simons Programs.
  2. Upload all requested documents (two CVs: of the host and the applicant, detailed Research plan, invitation letter by the host institution, letter by the home institution, tentative budget details in USD) as 1 joint PDf to the Online Application Form.
  3. A picture of you for our website (upload separately to the Online Application Form) (The picture will be published on our website (like this: https://www.mathunion.org/cdc/grants/research-travel-grants/imu-simons-travel-fellowship/2018-awarded-imu-simons-africa) if the applicant is chosen, so PLEASE upload a NICE picture in good quality!)
The application form can be found here
If your application is NOT completed by the deadline, it CANNOT be considered for evaluation. Please send your application at least two weeks in advance so it can be checked.

Visit Scholarship Webpage for details

Arab-German Young Academy of Sciences and Humanities (AGYA) 2019

Application Deadline: 24th March 2019.

Eligible Countries: Algeria, Bahrain, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen.


About the Award: AGYA promotes research cooperation among outstanding early-career researchers from all disciplines who are affiliated with a research institution in Germany or any Arab country. The academy provides partnership-building opportunities and funding to support the innovative projects of its members in various fields of research as well as in science policy and education. More than 50 members – in equal number Arab and German scholars – have been selected to join AGYA since 2013.

Type: Fellowship

Eligibility: 
    • Early-career researchers from any field of the Life Sciences, Natural Sciences, Humanities, Social Sciences, Technical Sciences and the Arts are eligible to apply.
    • Applicants must be affiliated with a university or a research institution in Germany or any Arab country (Algeria, Bahrain, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen).
    • Applicants should be early career researchers. At the time of application, the candidate’s doctoral degree has preferably been awarded not less than three and no longer than ten years.
  • Applicants must have full command of English, the working language of AGYA. No knowledge of German or Arabic is necessary.
Selection Criteria: 
    • Successful candidates are expected to have a proven record of research excellence in their field of specialization.
    • Candidates with strong potential for academic leadership will be given priority.
    • Membership requires active engagement. As AGYA is a working academy, successful candidates are expected to dedicate a significant amount of time to AGYA activities and the funded projects they initiate in the framework of the academy.
    • Commitment to realizing interdisciplinary research projects in collaboration with AGYA members and other partners is essential.
  • Elected members will be required to attend the annual conference of AGYA in the second half of October 2019.
Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: 
    • AGYA offers its members a unique opportunity to take an active part in the life of the multidisciplinary academy and supports them to implement their own ideas, visions and creative projects in the framework of Arab-German research cooperation.
    • AGYA membership is granted for up to 5 years followed by a lifelong membership in the alumni network of excellent researchers. Furthermore, AGYA connects its members with outstanding research institutions in Germany and the Arab countries and facilitates collaboration opportunities. Therefore, AGYA members have an exclusive access to an academic network of excellence.
    • AGYA provides the funding to realize innovative research projects within its working groups and in joint projects between Arab and German members.
    • Members meet regularly to discuss, develop and implement joint research initiatives on cutting-edge issues.
    • Travel expenses for AGYA workshops and conferences are covered for all members.
  • AGYA offers a range of training opportunities to enhance the academic careers as well as the interdisciplinary and intercultural skills of its members and promotes them as ambassadors of science and culture.
Duration of Program: Up to 5 years followed by a lifelong membership in the alumni network of excellent researchers.

How to Apply: Interested applicants are required to submit the following documents in ENGLISH:
All documents should be submitted via email as a single PDF file to: agya(at)bbaw.de.

New York University CSAAD Research Fellowship 2019 for African Researchers

Application Deadline: 29th March 2019

Eligible Countries: Africans in African countries and the diaspora


To be taken at (country): USA

Type: Research, Academic Fellowship

Eligibility: While the fellowship is open to all academic fields, the research must focus on some aspect(s) of Africa or its Diaspora.

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: The Fellowship will provide a studio apartment, will cover airfare and will provide a stipend of $30000 per semester – from either Sept 1 2019 – Jan 15 2020 or Jan 16 2020 to May 31 2020.

Duration of Programme: Either 1 or 2 semesters

How to Apply: All materials must be submitted by March 29, 2019, via email, to csaad@nyu.edu
  • It is important to go through all application requirements on the Programme Webpage see link below) before applying
Visit Programme Webpage for Details

One Planet Fellowship 2019 for African Researchers

Application Deadline: 30th April, 2019, 23:59 East Africa Time (GMT+3).

Eligible Countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, Togo, and Zambia.


About the Award: Inspired by the AWARD Fellowship Model, the USD 15 million five-year initiative seeks to invest in 600 agricultural scientists through three rounds of open competition. Selected candidates will participate in an intensive, non-residential, career acceleration process aimed at fostering leadership skills, strengthening scientific research skills including integrating gender into their research, and catalyzing research partnerships and networks. Candidates who complete the three-year process will become One Planet Laureates.

Type: Fellowship

Eligibility: Applicants who are the citizen of the following sub-Sahara African countries are eligible to apply: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, Togo, and Zambia.

Selection Criteria: Recipients are selected based on their merit, competence and other relevant eligibility criteria

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: Selected candidates will participate in an intensive, non-residential, career acceleration process aimed at fostering leadership skills, strengthening scientific research skills including integrating gender into their research, and catalyzing research partnerships and networks.

Duration of Programme:  For candidates who will become One Planet Laureates upon completion of the three-year non-residential fellowship process.

How to Apply: 
  • Applicants from French-speaking countries should use this link, and those from English-speaking countries should use this link.
  • It is important to go through all application requirements on the Programme Webpage see link below) before applying
Visit Programme Webpage for Details

Rotary Peace Fully-Funded Fellowship for Masters and Professional Programs 2020/2021

Application Deadline: 31st May 2019

Offered annually? Yes


Eligible Countries: All countries are eligible

About Fellowship: Each year, Rotary selects up to 100 individuals from around the world to receive fully funded academic fellowships at one of its peace centers. These fellowships cover tuition and fees, room and board, round-trip transportation, and all internship and field-study expenses.
In just over a decade, the Rotary Peace Centers have trained more than 900 fellows for careers in peace building. Many of them go on to serve as leaders in national governments, NGOs, the military, law enforcement, and international organizations like the United Nations and World Bank.

Two types of peace fellowships are available.
  1. Master’s degree
Offers master’s degree fellowships at premier universities in fields related to peace and conflict prevention and resolution. Programs last 15 to 24 months and require a practical internship of two to three months during the academic break. Each year, up to 50 master’s degree fellowships are awarded at these institutions: Duke University and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA, International Christian University, Japan, University of Bradford, England, University of Queensland, Australia and Uppsala University, Sweden
  1. Professional development certificate
For experienced professionals working in peace-related fields who want to enhance their professional skills, Rotary offer a three-month program in peace and conflict prevention and resolution at Chulalongkorn University in Thailand. This program incorporates two to three weeks of field study. We award up to 50 certificates each year.

Type: Masters, Fellowship

Eligibility: The Rotary Peace Fellowship is designed for professionals with work experience in international relations or peace and conflict prevention and resolution. Fellows are committed to community and international service and the pursuit of peace.

Applicants must also meet the following requirements:
  • Proficiency in English; proficiency in a second language is strongly recommended
  • Strong commitment to international understanding and peace as demonstrated through professional and academic achievements and personal or community service
  • Excellent leadership skills
  • Master’s degree applicants: minimum three years of related full-time work or volunteer experience, bachelor’s degree
  • Certificate applicants: minimum five years of related full-time work or volunteer experience, strong academic background
Eligibility restrictions: Rotary Peace Fellowships may not be used for doctoral study. And the following people are not eligible for the master’s degree program:
  • Active and honorary Rotary members
  • Employees of a Rotary club or district, Rotary International, or other Rotary entity
  • Spouses, lineal descendants (children or grandchildren by blood or legal adoption), spouses of lineal descendants, or ancestors (parents or grandparents by blood) of any living person in these categories
  • Former Rotary members and their relatives as described above (within 36 months of their resignation)
Recipients of Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarships or professional development certificate fellowships must wait three years after completion of the scholarship or fellowship to apply for the master’s degree program.
Rotary Peace Fellows who have completed the master’s degree program must wait five years to apply for the certificate program.

Number of Scholarships: up to 100

Value of Scholarship: The Rotary Peace Fellowship covers:
  • -Tuition and fees
  • -Room and board
  • -Round-trip transportation
  • -Internship/field study expenses.
Duration of Scholarship: 15 to 24 months

How to Apply: Candidates have until 31 May to submit applications to their district. Districts must submit endorsed applications to The Rotary Foundation by 1 July.
It is necessary to go through the Application Process on the Fellowship Webpage (see Link below) before applying.



Visit fellowship webpage for details

Sponsors: Rotary International

Various IMD MBA Scholarships 2019/2020 for Women (and Men) in Africa and Other Developing Nations

Application Deadline: 31st May 2019 and 30th September 2019.


Offered annually? Yes


Eligible Field of Study: Masters in Business Administration

About IMD Scholarships IMD – International Institute for Management Development is a nonprofit Business School located in Lausanne, Switzerland. It is widely considered one of the world’s pioneers in Business education and consistently ranked as the top and very business school worldwide.
The scholarships are as follows:
  • Nestle Scholarship for Women (Need-Based)
  • Emerging Market Scholarships CHF 20-60K
  • Diversity Scholarships Africa, Asia, South America CHF 30K
  • IMD MBA Class of 1976 Merit Scholarship CHF 50K
  • Merit Scholarships CHF 20K
The IMD MBA scholarships aim to help you finance your year at IMD. You need to have already submitted your admissions application to the full-time IMD MBA program to be considered for one of the scholarships, and will only be awarded a scholarship if you are accepted into the program.

Nestlé Scholarship for Women (CHF 25,000 scholarship)
The Nestlé Scholarship for Women first awarded in 1997, was initiated by a group of IMD MBA participants who wanted to encourage women to take the MBA. The need-based scholarships aim to help women from developing countries finance your year at IMD.
Essay Topic
  • Demonstrate financial need by completing our Financial Aid Application and submit a 750 word essay on:
    “Many have argued that greater diversity in the Top Management team of an organization is good for profits and customers. What would you recommend as ways to achieve greater diversity?”
Emerging Market Scholarships CHF 20-60K:
For citizens of developing countries to enable young leaders who meet the following criteria to earn the IMD MBA degree.
  • Submit Financial Aid Form at time of admissions application.
  • Recipients confirmed at time of admissions offer.
  • Criteria: citizen of a developing country, good academic results and GMAT score, strong reference letters, steady career progression.
IMD Diversity Scholarships Africa, Asia, South America CHF 30K: 
  • Submit Financial Aid Form and essay by June 15th.
  • One scholarship awarded to a citizen of each area by July 15th.
  • Criteria: apply to one of first three application deadlines.
  • Essay: 500 words on “The role diversity and globalisation will play in my future career”.
IMD MBA Class of 1976 Merit Scholarship CHF 50K:
  • Awarded to the best all-round applicant from the April deadline.
  • Recipient confirmed at time of admissions offer.
  • No scholarship application required
Merit Scholarships CHF 20K:
  • Awarded to applicants who demonstrate exceptional qualities throughout the admissions process.
  • Recipient confirmed at time of admissions offer.
  • No scholarship application required.
Type: MBA

Selection Criteria: Candidates must have been accepted into the IMD MBA program prior to their application for scholarship.
The scholarship applications are essay based, with winning essays typically including the following features:
  • Relevance to the essay title
  • Organization and structure
  • Fully developed arguments
  • Persuasiveness
  • Personal element and/or passion
Number of Scholarships: Several

Duration of Scholarship: Duration of the programme

To be taken at (country): Switzerland

How can I Apply?

Visit the Scholarship Webpage for details