28 Mar 2024

UPS outlines plans to close at least 200 facilities

Jacob Crosse


In an investors presentation held Tuesday in Louisville, Kentucky, top executives of United Parcel Service (UPS) announced plans to shutter 200 facilities in the United States and lay off thousands of workers, as part of their plans for the “Network of the Future.”

While previous layoffs have already been reported extensively by the WSWS, this is the first time that UPS has issued its comprehensive nationwide plan to slash jobs. UPS executives estimated that the company would save $3 billion by the end of 2028 by consolidating facilities and implementing automation at the remaining hubs.

Earlier this year, UPS announced it would be laying off 12,000 salaried employees. This was quickly followed by mass layoffs of pre-loaders at facilities across the United States, including in New York and California. The ongoing jobs bloodbath at UPS is part of a wave of layoffs at the company and in virtually every industry across the globe.

The cuts are being enabled through the collaboration of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, which rammed through a sellout contract last summer by deliberately concealing that these cuts were coming. Tuesday’s presentation underscores the urgent need for workers to take matters into their own hands, organize a rebellion against both management and the sellout artists in the union bureaucracy.

It also fully confirms the warnings made at the start of the year by the UPS Workers Rank-and-File Committee that “New technologies are being rolled out that can eliminate almost all of the work inside the warehouses. The jobs of nearly 200,000 part-timers at UPS are at risk.” That statement called for a “counter-campaign” by workers to defeat the attack on jobs.

In their slides presented to investors Tuesday, UPS executives outlined 63 sites in the US that would be targeted for automation by the end of 2028. These include hubs in Albany and Syracuse, New York; Mesquite, Texas; as well as Hartford, Chelmsford and Providence, Massachusetts.

A map showing where UPS plans to initiate "major automation projects" by the end of 2028. [Photo: UPS]

Some of the facilities that will be consolidated—that is, closed—include the Windsor, Ashland, Leominster and Nashua Hub in Massachusetts. In Albany, New York, the NY Capital Village Center will be closed, as will the Chalk Hill Center in Texas.

A map of the state of Massachusetts showing where UPS plans to shutter certain facilities, and transform others into automated hubs. [Photo: UPS]

In his slide presentation, Nando Cesarone, president of US domestic operations at UPS, emphasized that the “Network of the Future” would bring “new automation and technology tools to materially improve productivity.”

This “highly productive network” will operate with “less dependency on labor,” a slide in Cesarone’s presentation explained. Another of his slides, titled “Actions We Are Taking Right Now” to increase “operating margin,” listed “Building and Sort Closures” as the top item.

Cesarone confirmed that UPS would be closing “40 sorts this year, up from 30 in 2023,” but he stressed that “every single work area is being scrutinized for automation opportunities, not just our sortation hubs,” per Freightwaves.

Automation and Consolidation projects in Texas. [Photo: UPS]

In his presentation, Bala Subramanian, chief digital and technology officer for UPS, highlighted the “strategic bets” the company was taking to boost profits. “Artificial Intelligence and Gen AI” and “Robotics and Automation” were the top items listed.

The last major presentation made clear how these cost savings would be squandered on the company’s wealthy investors. Chief Financial Officer Brian Newman outlined the “Capital Allocation Policy/Priorities” for the company; two of the four listed were a “stable and growing dividend” for shareholders and to use “excess cash” to “repurchase shares.”

Executives did not place an exact figure the number of layoffs. But in an interview with Bloomberg Television following the presentation, UPS CEO Carol Tomé confirmed the company planned to boost profits by raising prices, including a 5.9 percent general rate increase this year, and automation.

UPS CEO Carol Tomé on Bloomberg, March 26, 2024. [Photo: Bloomberg]

Asked by her Bloomberg host to elaborate on the “layoffs coming,” and “what more should investors expect?” Tomé replied, “We have got to right-size our business, so we did make some decisions to do just that under our operating model of fit to serve. Moving past though, is the very exciting opportunity that we have to drive out costs through automation.

“Did you know we have over 1,000 buildings in the United States? And many of these buildings were built 50, 60 years ago. ... As we looked at the buildings we said, ‘My gosh, we have an opportunity, actually, to consolidate buildings ... that aren’t automated into brand new, automated buildings and drive productivity.”

By end of the “initial phase,” Tomé said UPS would have “400 buildings that are fully automated.”

“And with this automation,” she added, “we are going to drive out costs. We will drive out $3 billion in costs between now and 2028,” with “half of that” being “realized by 2026.

“And with end-to-end automation ... we don’t need as many people to move the packages inside the buildings that we have today,” she said.

In an interview with CNBC the same day, Tomé explained that the company’s plans for mass layoffs was fully realizable due to “the cost nature of our new Teamster contract.”

“We are very pleased with that contract,” Tomé said. “The compounded annual average growth rate of wages and benefits is 3.3 percent over a five-year period, but it is front-end loaded.

A slide highlighting the role of the Teamsters bureaucracy in providing “Labor Certainty” so that UPS can implement its cost-cutting automation plans. [Photo: UPS]

“So ... in year one we want to grow our volume and our revenue and our operating profit dollars,” she continued. “And then in years two and three we want to grow volume, revenue and operating profit margin.

“Why will margins expand past year one? Because we are going to anniversary the first year of the Teamster contract in August, and the cost growth rate drops dramatically after that.”

Describing the “Network of the Future” as “one of the most exciting initiatives” in the last 100 years of the company, Tomé lamented that while the UPS delivery network was highly “integrated,” it was “old.”

The company is “going to collapse some buildings that we don’t need any longer into larger, more automated buildings,” she said. “We will invest to make this happen, we will invest about $9 billion over five years, but in that five-year time frame, we will enjoy $3 billion of savings, of which 50 percent will be recognized within the first three years.”

The Teamsters bureaucracy, which has said next to nothing about the layoffs this year, continued its guilty silence after Tuesday’s conference. Neither Teamsters President Sean O’Brien, nor the Teamsters social media accounts have released a statement yet on the pending destruction of thousands of jobs, or what plans the Teamsters have to fight against the layoffs.

The silence of the union bureaucrats is not a mistake. They knew automation and the cuts it would entail were coming, yet they did nothing to fight to defend workers’ jobs. Instead, they blocked UPS workers from striking together with actors and writers, who were already on strike and eager for reinforcements, and instead sold the rotten contract as “historic.”

However, news of Tuesday’s presentations spread like wildfire among UPS workers. “It’s getting crazy here. They cut our hours again,” a UPS worker from Philadelphia told the WSWS. “They laid off a pregnant woman today. She is having twins and has two kids at home. It’s horrible.”

José, an over 20-year UPS worker in Southern California, told the WSWS, “Hours are being cut. I know management wants to automate small sort in my hub.”

Joseph, a feeder driver out of Chicago, said he was “worried” about his co-workers “inside the buildings.

“Two hundred facilities in the next four years, wow! How many jobs will be cut? Remember, Carol Tomé clearly said this new contract bites in the beginning but ridiculously smooths out in UPS’s favor in the later years.”

Sudan’s “forgotten war” leads to epic suffering and regional instability

Jean Shaoul


Last week, United Nations (UN) relief agencies warned the Security Council that Sudan is suffering one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises in recent history, after nearly a year of gruesome fighting between rival factions of the Sudanese armed forces for control of the country.

Sudan faces a famine of biblical proportions because of the war, displacement, the breakdown of the economy and the almost total absence of international aid. Many building in the capital Khartoum have been destroyed. The government, virtually bankrupt, barely functions.

Sudanese refugees displaced by the conflict in Sudan gather to receive food staples from aid agencies at the Metche Camp in eastern Chad, March 5, 2024 [AP Photo/Jsarh Ngarndey Ulrish]

Fighting broke out in April 2023 between the army, headed by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, leader of the Sovereign Council and de facto ruler of the country, and his deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, better known as Hemedti, who heads the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

The RSF, based in the western Darfur region, has taken control of the west of the country and most of the capital Khartoum, although it is struggling to hold onto these gains. Al-Burhan, despite backing from Egypt’s military regime, South Sudan and Saudi Arabia has yet to win a major battle. He has retreated to the east and Port Sudan, on the Red Sea.

Both factions, composed of rival sub-ethnic groups with competing interests, have the support of various local militias, leading to fighting often along ethnic lines, as well as support from outside forces. They are mobilising for a long war in the east of the country.

According to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, there have been 13,900 reported fatalities across Sudan, while the Health Ministry has reported 27,700 people injured between 15 April 2023 and 26 January 2024.

The UN highlighted “mass graves, gang rapes, shockingly indiscriminate attacks in densely populated areas” and the displacement of 8.1 million of Sudan’s 45 million population, including at least 1.76 million that have fled to neighbouring countries also wracked by poverty and instability.

According to the UN, “at least 25 million people are struggling with soaring rates of hunger and malnutrition” and 3.8 million children under the age of five are malnourished. Aid agencies say that children in refugee camps in Darfur are dying of hunger every two hours. Martin Griffiths, head of the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), warned that “almost five million people could slip into catastrophic food insecurity in some parts of the country in the coming months.”

Cholera has broken out. At least 292 people have been killed by the disease and there were over 10,700 suspected cases as of 17 February 2024.

Compounding the crisis is the disruption to farming by the fighting. The Middle East Eye cited the Sudanese organisation Fikra for Studies and Development as reporting, “Only 37 percent Sudan’s agricultural land has been cultivated in comparison to previous years. Also, Sudan’s national wheat production has reduced by 70 percent.”

With international attention focused on the US/NATO led war against Russia in Ukraine and Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, Sudan’s war and its wider implications have been all but ignored. The UN relief agencies have called for $2.7 billion of assistance for this year, but they have received pledges for just $135 million. Last year, just 43 percent of the target was raised. The miserable funds testify to the prevailing view among the imperialist powers that Sudan’s impoverished people are surplus to requirements.

The two army leaders fighting to control Sudan rose to prominence during the war in Darfur, in which 300,000 people were killed and 2.5 million displaced in fighting from 2003 to 2008. Al-Burhan headed the army, while Dagalo led the notorious Janjaweed militias responsible for some of the worst atrocities of the conflict. Dagalo has since become enormously rich based off Darfur’s gold. Both men were implicated in war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Fighting between these two corrupt figures erupted in no small part due to longstanding efforts by US imperialism and other regional powers to exert control over Sudan and its resources—gold, minerals, oil and agricultural land—and cut off Khartoum’s relationships with China, Russia and Iran that all have growing economic interests in the region.

The country saw its first military coup within three years of independence from Britain in 1956, aimed at suppressing the working class and tenanted farmers whose struggles had rapidly politicised as key export prices fell, threatening the economy with collapse.

Since then, the country has been riven by recessionary wars, violence and intrigues, spread across its unstable neighbours. These conflicts testify to the multiple, competing interests in the conflict-ridden Sahel region and the Horn of Africa, strategically located on the Red Sea through which 20 percent of global container shipping passes.

The expansion, spurred on by the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and Gulf investors, of commercial, export-oriented agriculture, has been characterised by violent expropriation, rampant exploitation, deep inefficiencies, and ecological destruction which in turn spurs more land grabs. This has torn apart traditional ways of life, created severe food insecurity in one of Africa’s most fertile regions and fueled tensions between communities.

Apart from a few brief periods, Sudan has been subject to military rule or military-backed dictatorships that ruthlessly quashed all dissent on behalf of the country’s tiny elite.

Al-Burhan first came to prominence in April 2019, when, following months of mass protests across the country and with the support of the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, he led the pre-emptive military coup that overthrew President Omar al-Bashir and his Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated military dictatorship.

The protests were fueled by Sudan’s economic collapse, precipitated by the US-brokered secession of oil-rich South Sudan in 2011, poor harvests and floods that led to soaring food and fuel prices, widespread poverty, political instability, conflicts and the displacement of some 3 million people.

The aim of the military was to prevent the overthrow of the entire state apparatus and the expropriation of their own substantial financial and corporate institutions that control much of the Sudanese economy. Al-Burhan opened negotiations with leaders of the protests, the Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC), an umbrella group of 22 bourgeois and petty bourgeois groups, including the professional trade unions and the Sudanese Communist Party, over the formation of a joint military-civilian government to provide a cover for the military, while carrying out the economic measures needed to remove US sanctions and access international loans.

Just weeks afterwards, soldiers and paramilitaries massacred more than 1,000 unarmed protesters, chasing them through Khartoum, tying concrete blocks to their feet and throwing them into the Nile. In October 2021, Abdalla Hamdok’s transitional “technocratic” government, made up of “leftists” and serving as a front for the Sovereign Council headed by al-Burhan, threatened the military’s privileged commercial and political interests. Al-Burhan sacked it, resuming military rule alongside Islamists and other reliable allies of the al-Bashir regime.

Eighteen months later, war broke out between al-Burhan and Dagalo following mounting tensions over the planned integration of the RSF, and other former rebel militias involved in insurgencies in various parts of the country, into the Sudanese army.

Al-Burhan’s faction has supported the US/NATO war against Russia in Ukraine and was backed by Egypt until Cairo was forced to back off by its paymaster, the UAE, which has become increasingly entrenched in the region.

According to the New York Times, the UAE is covertly shipping weapons to the RSF, as well as to Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar who controls the Tobruk government in eastern Libya. Abu Dhabi has also supported neighbouring and landlocked Ethiopia’s controversial agreement with the internationally unrecognised breakaway Somaliland for access to the port of Berbera, developed by UAE’s DP World.

Somalia, along with its allies Qatar and Turkey, views this as an attack on its territorial integrity and has recalled its ambassador from Addis Ababa.

Dagalo has courted support from Somaliland and Ethiopia, as well as Chad, all increasingly dependent on UAE investment, threatening more regional instability. Further afield, his control over the export of Sudanese gold has fostered close connections with Russia, which buys via the UAE, enabling the Putin government to bypass NATO sanctions.

Moscow, whose Wagner mercenaries operate in Sudan, eastern Libya and neighbouring Central African Republic, is trying to establish a base at Port Sudan. There have been rumours and unverified reports of Ukrainian forces active in the country, targeting Russian operatives.

With the Horn of Africa, the Sahel, North Africa and the Red Sea basin becoming key battlegrounds for competing interests, an infuriated Biden administration has been unable to broker any agreement either among its own regional allies or between Sudan’s rival gangsters, with its special envoys to the country each quitting after a few months in post.

27 Mar 2024

Google Creative Fellowship 2024

Application Deadline:

The deadline for the Google Creative Fellowship 2024 program is April 5th, 2024.

Benefits Google Creative Fellowship 2024:

Successful candidates will

  • Get paid. The salary is dependent on the location of the applicant and will be made known during the interview process. 
  • Get to work for six months in a paid contractor role where candidates will be employed as freelancers via one of Google’s staffing partners.
  • The Creative Fellowship is a Google program for emerging creative talent that offers ongoing mentorship, helpful networking opportunities, and hands-on experience across Google’s various in-house creative teams.

Eligibility Criteria:

Interested applicants for the Google Creative Fellowship 2024 must meet the following requirements:

  • Must be an emerging creative thinker (0 – 5 years of creative experience) who has a clear point of view and passion for making things and telling stories.
  • Must be an individual excited to bring their unique voice and craft to Google’s creative teams.

Also, interested candidates must ensure that:

  • As of June 2024, they have work authorization in the United States. They do not require a visa or sponsorship to work.
  • As of June 2024, they are of legal age to work in the United States.
  • They can speak and write English fluently.
  • They will be living in the city in which you are applying for a role. (Locations are listed in the individual role descriptions.)
  • They can commit to a full-time position on the Creative Fellowship for six months (mid-June 2024 – mid-December 2024).
  • They understand that you will be employed as a freelancer via Google’s staffing partners.
  • They have read the FAQs and understand what’s required for the application process.

Note: Each creative team at Google is looking for something different, so they encourage creatives to apply with work that best captures their craft.

Application Process

To apply for the Google Creative Fellowship 2024

  • Visit the official website
  • Read through the page and fill out the application form for the designated role
  • Before submission, confirm you have reviewed the following requirements to ensure you can fully commit to the program.
  • Also, if you have a disability or special need that requires accommodation, send an email to creative-fellowship@google.com for help. 

For more information, visit the official website.

“Unprecedented” growth of US debt could bring market shock

Nick Beams


The US could be on course for a crisis in its bond market, replicating that which hit the UK in September 2022 when financial markets went into turmoil after the short-lived Liz Truss Tory government proposed major tax cuts funded by an increase in government debt.

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange [AP Photo/Craig Ruttle]

The UK crisis, which required intervention by the Bank of England, had its own peculiarities bound up with the operations of pension funds. But it may well have been a foretaste for a much bigger crisis that could engulf the US financial system.

This scenario was outlined by Phillip Swagel, the director of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), in an interview with the Financial Times (FT) yesterday. He said growing US government debt was on an “unprecedented” trajectory risking the kind of crisis which led to the collapse of the Truss government.

“The danger, of course, is what the UK faced with former prime minister Truss, where policymakers tried to take an action, and then there’s a market reaction to that action,” he told the FT.

He said the US was “not there yet” but warned it could be, with the increase in interest rates raising the cost of payments to $1 trillion in 2026 creating conditions for bond markets to “snap back.”

Swagel did not go into details of its form, but a “snap back” could result in a sell-off of government debt, leading to a rise in market interest rates [as bond prices fall interest rates rise] and liquidity problems.

The CBO has said federal government debt was $26.2 trillion at the end of last year, equivalent to 97 percent of gross domestic product. It has forecast significant increases in coming years, not lest because of rising interest rates.

Back in February it said the US budget deficit was set to rise by almost two-thirds over the next decade from $1.6 trillion to $2.6 trillion with much of the increase due to higher interest costs.

The CBO said that interest payments would account for around three quarters of the rise in the deficits between today and 2034. The deficit as a proportion of GDP would rise from 5.6 percent in 2024 to 6.1 percent in a decade’s time, well above the average of 3.7 percent over the past 50 years.

The total government debt as a proportion of GDP would rise above 100 percent next year and would reach 116 percent by 2034. The CBO estimates that while interest costs on government debt are at present roughly equal to military spending, they could rise to one and half times larger in a decade’s time.

Swagel noted that the expected rise in debt as a proportion of GDP would take it over the levels reached in World War II, and warned that even what seemed to be small changes in government spending could have major effects.

“We have the potential for some changes that seem modest—or maybe start off modest and then get more serious—to have outsized effects on interest rates, and therefore on the fiscal trajectory,” he said.

The rise and rise and rise of government debt had seen a rapid expansion of the US Treasury market where it is bought and sold. This market, the foundation of the US and global financial system has expanded to around $27 trillion, a 60 percent increase over the past five years. It is now six times larger than it was before the global financial crisis of 2008.

There has been a significant shift in operations of the market. In the past banks were major participants but their activity has been cut back, partly because of regulations introduced after the financial crisis—an example of how attempts to stabilise the system in one area can create problems in another.

Hedge funds have assumed a greater role. But their activity, particularly in the so-called basis trade in which they seek to make profit on the very small difference between the price of bonds and the price of their futures using large amounts of borrowed money, is creating concerns among regulators.

The growth of US debt, coupled with the instability in the financial system, is starting to raise questions about the role of the dollar as the global currency, the maintenance of which is an existential question for US hegemony.

The credit rating agency Fitch last year removed the triple A rating from the US citing concerns over a “high and growing general government debt burden.” Moody’s has maintained the triple A rating but has changed its outlook for the US from stable to negative.

The gold market is pointing in the same direction with the price of the metal, which, unlike fiat currencies, does embody real value in and of itself, has been steadily rising for the past 16 months and has been touching record highs. One of the reasons is increased buying by central banks after the freezing of Russian central bank assets at the start of the Ukraine war raised concerns that dollar assets held by any country could not be considered sacrosanct.

Swagel touched on the international role of the dollar in his FT interview, warning that its role as the global reserve currency, enabling it to run up large deficits, would not always insulate the US from market pressures if interest payments increased.

“We need to borrow from foreigners, because foreign capital helps keep interest rates low in the US,” he said. “But there’s two sides to it, in that cash flowing overseas [interest payments on debt] means us losing national income. On the other hand, not having the capital coming in for us to borrow—boy, that would be even worse.”

In a generally upbeat recent speech on trust and confidence in central banks, Agustin Carstens, the head of the Bank for International Settlements, the umbrella organisation of central banks, pointed to how fast a situation can change.

Periods of apparent tranquility, he said, are often when the seeds of future crises are sown and when financial markets smell weakness, they can move very fast. Carstens recalled the words of the late German economist Rudiger Dornbusch: “Financial crises take much, much longer to come than you think and then they happen much faster than you would have thought.”

He did not reference the US but under conditions where the growth of government is “unprecedented” and inherently unsustainable it may well have been a veiled warning.

No one can predict exactly how financial developments will unfold. But one thing can be said with certainty. As the experience of 2008‒2009 revealed, a crisis in the financial system will see an escalation in the assault on the working class to make it pay. And the intensity of that assault will be proportional to the size of debt mountain.

26 Mar 2024

EU, IMF and regional powers bail out Egypt in return for services rendered to Israel’s genocidal war

Jean Shaoul


In the face of its worst economic crisis in 50-60 years and rising social tensions, Egypt has leveraged its position as Israel’s key accomplice in the Zionist regime’s genocidal war on Gaza to secure a series of bailouts from the International Monetary Fund, the European Union (EU) and Cairo’s Gulf allies.

Last weekend, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen went to Cairo, along with leaders from Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Greece and Italy, to sign a deal with the Butcher of Cairo, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Branded as an $8.1 billion “aid package,” its purpose is to help shore up the economy of the most important country in the Arab world, whose collapse would destabilise the region and precipitate mass migrant flows to Europe.

Egypt is home to around 10 million Middle East migrants, including 450,000 people who have fled the 11-month long civil war in neighbouring Sudan.

EU funding includes $5.45 billion of concessional loans and $2 billion of investment in renewable energy, trade and “security”—meaning support for Egypt’s armed security forces—over the next three years.

President Smt. Droupadi Murmu met President of the Arab Republic of Egypt, H. E. Mr. Abdel Fattah El-Sisi at Rashtrapati Bhavan (January 25, 2023) [Photo by MEAphotogallery / Flickr / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]

Egypt’s economy, in decline for decades, was hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic that sent tourism, a vital 15 percent of its economy, plummeting and led to the return of workers from the Gulf and the loss of their remittances, swelling the ranks of the unemployed. This was compounded by the outbreak of the US/NATO war against Russia in Ukraine pushing up the cost of agricultural imports, particularly wheat, maize and cooking oils. The two combined led to a $20 billion outflow of speculative capital—more than half of all the hot money invested in the country—seeking a higher rate of interest.

The war in Gaza led to a further decline in tourism and a catastrophic 50 percent fall in revenues from the Suez Canal as ships avoided the Red Sea route following attacks on commercial vessels linked to Israel and its US and UK backers by Yemen’s Houthi rebels. This has battered Egypt’s manufacturing, pharmaceutical and textile industries.

The war has also affected its energy market, with its re-exports of gas falling by more than 50 percent in the last quarter of 2023 compared with the same period in 2022.

Egypt’s economic problems have been exacerbated by el-Sisi’s vanity mega-projects, including an $8 billion widening of the Suez Canal, whose promised increased revenues failed to materialise; a $300 billion investment in new roads, ports and railways; a massive rearmament programme; and a $58 billion new administrative capital under construction since 2015—in the desert, 28 miles away from any renewed popular uprising in Cairo.

As a result, Egypt spends $32.79 billion, more than half of its budget, on debt servicing. The beneficiaries have been the military-linked companies that dominate Egypt’s economy and the army that now controls one quarter of the budget.

Unemployment, underemployment and anger over the lack of education and healthcare services is widespread. Around 30 percent of Egypt’s 108 million population live below the poverty line while another 30 percent are teetering on its edge. Egypt, once the pre-eminent power in the Middle East that even in the late 1960s was more prosperous than South Korea and Taiwan, has the sixth lowest GDP per capita in the region and the fourth lowest literacy rate.

El-Sisi maintains his rule with an iron fist far worse than that of longtime dictator Hosni Mubarak. Hundreds of political opponents have been killed in the last decade of his rule and 65,000 political detainees are incarcerated in Egypt’s jails, many without charge or trial, where they are subject to torture. Eight senior opposition leaders have recently been sentenced to death.

Independent media is censored, and international journalists have been subject to arrest, with Al Jazeera journalists detained for years without charges. All the Western media have withdrawn their reporters. All strikes and protests are brutally suppressed.

Amid concerns over Egypt’s “security”, the European powers have cast aside their hypocritical criticisms of his human rights abuses. They fear Israel’s planned ground offensive on Gaza’s southern city of Rafah on Egypt’s border, which could force hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to break into Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, might be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.

El-Sisi’s regime is up to its neck in the genocide. It has sealed off Gaza’s southern border and is closely coordinating its actions with Netanyahu’s fascist regime in the blockade of aid deliveries and construction of a temporary holding pen for the Palestinians should they break through the border crossing. Its military is waging a brutal war against the population of the Sinai Peninsula under the guise of fighting “Islamist terror,” using similar methods to Israel against the Palestinians.

The EU deal follows the decision of Egypt’s Central Bank to raise interest rates by an unprecedented 6 percentage points and to float the pound, causing the currency to fall 60 percent and the cost of imported goods to rise. The government has agreed to privatise its state-owned enterprises and reduce its spending on infrastructure projects and social welfare. These measures are part of a package of “market reforms” made in return for a $5 billion IMF loan, in addition to the $3 billion agreed in December 2022. This additional loan comes despite the IMF withholding funds last year due to concerns about government abuse and mismanagement.

More money is on the way. On Monday, the IMF’s sister organisation, the World Bank, announced it will provide Egypt with more than $6 billion in financial assistance over the next three years “to help it meet its development goals.”

These loans follow Cairo’s sale last month of the development rights to the Ras el-Hekma coastal resort on the Mediterranean to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for $35 billion, touted as Egypt’s largest ever deal, with an immediate down-payment from the UAE of $10 billion. Under the agreement, UAE sovereign wealth fund ADQ will develop the resort that will include hotels, entertainment projects, financial and business districts as well as an airport south of the city.

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and the Qatar Investment Authority have been in talks to develop similar deals.

These deals with Egypt’s brutal dictator indicate the real nature of the discussions between the Biden administration in the US, Egypt and the Gulf states held under the cover of negotiations for a ceasefire and the release of the Israeli hostages held by Hamas in Gaza. At issue is how to prevent the collapse of the largest and most strategically important state in the Arab world as the Gaza war threatens regional stability.

Just weeks before the talks, Egypt’s sham presidential elections in December returned el-Sisi to power until 2030, with 90 percent of the vote against candidates from parties that are part of the regime. The US and leading European powers repeatedly expressed their support before the elections.

The military regime’s complicity in the genocide of the Palestinians is closely tied to its suppression of the working class in Egypt. El-Sisi’s toppling of Mohamed Morsi in July 2013 was not simply directed against the Muslim Brotherhood, but at the bloody suppression of the Egyptian working class, the most powerful in the region.

Millions of workers and young people had overthrown Mubarak in January 2011 after days of mass strikes and protests, shaking not just Egyptian capitalism but the entire region. While the el-Sisi military dictatorship has done everything in its power to drown the mass movement in blood, it is sitting on a social powder keg, as all the imperialist and regional powers are fully aware.

Thousands have protested Israel’s genocide in Gaza. In February, textile workers in Mahalla al Kubra, a historic centre of the class struggle in Egypt, went on a week-long strike for an increase in the minimum wage, forcing a concession from el-Sisi and signaling the growing opposition of the working class to his counter-revolutionary military dictatorship.

Latin America faces unprecedented dengue outbreak

Brunna Machado


An outbreak of dengue fever has hit Brazil and several other Latin American countries and is expected to make 2024 the year with the highest number of cases and deaths in the region’s history. Extreme climatic phenomena, precarious socio-economic conditions and the abandonment of both preventive measures and the fight against the transmitting mosquito, Aedes aegypti, have contributed to its spreading to areas previously free of the virus, making dengue an increasingly urgent public health issue in the region and worldwide.

Patients in the Pediatrics ward at the Ceilândia Field Hospital, in the Federal District, on February 8, 2024 [Photo: Fabio Rodrigues-Pozzebom/Agência Brasil]

The latest report from the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO/WHO) on the epidemiological situation in the Americas cites dengue cases in 18 countries in the region, the most affected being Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Peru and Colombia. According to the report, the incidence of dengue increased by 249 percent compared to last year, and by 354 percent compared to the average of the last five years. This data, however, only covers the first eight epidemiological weeks, and the situation has only worsened since.

By mid-March of this year, the number of dengue cases in Paraguay was 23 times higher than in the same period last year, rising from 6,900 cases to 160,900. In the same comparison, Argentina saw a jump from 8,300 to 102,800 cases, and Peru from 16,900 to 46,500. In these countries, 43, 69, and 53 deaths have already been recorded this year, respectively.

Brazil, the primary source of infection, has registered more than 2 million probable cases on its own, and the Ministry of Health estimates that it will exceed 4.2 million by the end of the year, almost triple last year’s figure. As of March 23, 715 deaths had already been confirmed, and another 1,078 are under investigation.

Total number of suspected dengue cases as of the eighth Epidemiological Week in 2024 and 2023 and average of the last five years. Region of the Americas. [Photo: Graphic: WHO]

On March 13, the health minister of the government of Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (Workers Party – PT), Nísia Trindade, downplayed the seriousness of the dengue epidemic in the country, writing in a social media post, “The lethality rate, at 0.3 percent of cases, is still less than half of last year (0.7 percent).” She added: “We are taking better care of the cases.”

In an interview with the daily Folha de São Paulo, epidemiologist Wanderson de Oliveira explained that several factors influence this apparently lower lethality rate: “Mild cases that may go unreported, difficulty in accessing treatment, and the quality of the health system can lead to a false impression that the disease is less serious than it really is.”

He continued: “At the moment, the priority should be to set up a task force to investigate the deaths and understand whether the causes of these deaths were due to the characteristics of the people or the quality of the services provided. This post [Trindade’s] was very unfortunate because it is cold and gives the impression that it is about numbers. For those who have lost a loved one, the lethality rate is 100 percent.”

The minister’s data for the comparison is still being analyzed. If the lethality rate for 2024 were calculated, including the deaths under investigation, the rate would be higher than in 2023.

The minister’s attempt to downplay an unprecedented outbreak of dengue fever  exposes not only the government’s “coldness” about the fatalities, but also its relation to the consequences of such a high incidence in the population and the suffering caused by the disease, which has been popularly called “bone-breaking fever,” due to the most well-known symptoms: severe headaches, backaches, along with muscle pain in the legs and joints.

When it progresses to a severe condition, dengue risks liver damage and bleeding. Another consequence that is still little known and, of course, never mentioned by government officials, are the neurological effects, which can manifest even in asymptomatic patients and appear long after infection.

In an interview with the podcast O Assunto, neurologist and scientist Marzia Puccioni said that between one percent and 20 percent of dengue patients can develop encephalitis, myelitis, meningitis, and even Guillain-Barré syndrome, an autoimmune disorder that attacks part of the nervous system.

Given the estimate of 4.2 million cases by the end of the year, 840,000 Brazilians could develop some neurological problem caused by the dengue virus. And there is no planning on the part of the health system to care for these future patients, quite the opposite.

The abandonment of the eradication policy 

The uncontrolled situation that is leading thousands of people to their deaths was not inevitable. It has been known for decades that dengue prevention and control depend on effective vector control measures.

The primary vector in the Americas is Aedes aegypti, a mosquito that lives in and near homes and breeds in any artificial or natural container holding standing water. The combination of high temperatures and rainfall favors an increase in the Aedes aegypti population. On this basis, representatives of the ruling class – including the WHO itself – have attributed the unprecedented rise in the disease to the El Niño phenomenon and global warming.

But none of this happened overnight. The climatic phenomena and the precarious conditions in which most of the region’s population lives favor the proliferation of the mosquito. They are as well known and predictable as they are ignored by the capitalist class. The truth is that the ruling class—similar to what we saw with the COVID-19 virus—abandoned any attempt to eradicate the dengue virus years ago.

Brazil itself once provided a historic example of eradication, a fundamental and long-standing principle used by medical science to combat countless infectious diseases.

Zoonosis team doing fieldwork to combat dengue outbreaks in neighborhoods of Osasco, in the metropolitan region of São Paulo, on 15/03/2024. [Photo: Paulo Pinto/Agência Brasil]

A campaign at the beginning of the 20th century against yellow fever, which is also transmitted by Aedes aegypti, allowed successive Brazilian governments to control the proliferation of the mosquito through massive action by sanitary agents. In 1954, when the vector eradication program was resumed, the Report of the National Yellow Fever Service referred to this work as “the most useful and revolutionary of the techniques ever introduced in anti-Aedes aegypti campaigns (...).”

By 1955, the mosquito had been eradicated in the country. This policy was accompanied by an effort by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO/WHO) to eliminate it from other American countries, but the campaign did not come to an end. 

The reintroduction of Aedes egypti in Brazil and other countries in the region—this time bringing dengue and other arboviruses—coincided with the rise of US-backed military dictatorships in South America, which unleashed a massive attack on working class living standards and the region’s public health services.

Today, according to the WHO, the Region of the Americas accounts for 80 percent of dengue cases and has seen an increase in cases over the last four decades, rising from 1.5 million in the 1980s to 16.2 million in the 2010-2019 decade. The year 2023 broke the record with 4,565,911 cases, including 7,653 (0.17 percent) severe cases and 2,340 deaths (case fatality rate of 0.051 percent). In 2024, the scenario is already looking much more deadly.

Brazil, which a few decades ago could eradicate the vector, today registers cases of the disease in all of its 27 federal units, making its territory of eight million square kilometers the most extensive breeding ground for Aedes aegypti on the planet.

The capitalist system as an obstacle to universal healthcare

Some significant advances have been made in the last decade to combat dengue, such as the Wolbachia method, which consists of introducing mosquitoes carrying the Wolbachia bacteria into the environment, and the recently created QDenga vaccine. However, both are still in their initial application phase and have little production capacity. In addition, they are only effective in the long term, working in conjunction with the vector control actions that have been carried out for more than 70 years in Brazil.

However, after all this time, instead of increasing such action, what we have seen is a reduction over the last few years. Last year, President Lula sanctioned a spending ceiling that allowed for a reduction of almost 20 billion reais ($4 billion) in health funding.

According to the daily Metrópoles, the Federal District, the federal unit with the highest incidence today, has failed to invest R$241 million in the prevention of arboviruses over the last 10 years, losing 36.7 percent of the workforce responsible for combating mosquito outbreaks. A Federal Court of Auditors survey, published by TV Globo’s Profissão Repórter show, revealed that the proportion of health agents is only one for every 2,000 inhabitants. The Ministry of Health recommends six agents for every 2,000 inhabitants.

Top Boeing executives announce early retirements as questions over whistleblower "suicide" remain unanswered

Jacob Crosse


On Monday, the Boeing corporation announced that several top executives in the company, including the current CEO and the head of the commercial planes division, would be retiring early as a major crisis at the airline manufacturer and military contractor continues to mount.

National Transportation Safety Board investigator examines section of missing panel on a Boeing 737-9 MAX in Portland, Ore that blew off the jetliner in midflight. [AP Photo/National Transportation Safety Board]

Among those retiring will be Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun, who will remain in the position until the end of the year. It appears Calhoun’s departure was not planned. The New York Times reported that in 2021 the Boeing board raised the retirement age for its CEO to 70 from 65, which would have allowed Calhoun, 66, to remain in the position until April 2028.

Stan Deal, the president of the commercial planes division, also announced his early retirement. Boeing has confirmed that Stephanie Pope, previously the president and chief executive officer of Boeing Global Services, would be replacing Deal.

Finally, Larry Kellner, the chair of the board of directors, announced he would not stand for reelection at the annual shareholder meeting set for this May.

In Kellner’s stead, Boeing announced that Steve Mollenkopf, the former CEO of Qualcomm, will be appointed the new chair at the next shareholder meeting. Mollenkopf, per Boeing, “will lead the board’s process in selecting Boeing’s next CEO.”

In addition to Boeing, Mollenkopf still holds a high level position with Qualcomm, is a board member of the US-China Business Council, and has previously held top positions with the Global Semiconductor Alliance and the Semiconductor Industry Association.

The forced retirement of high-level Boeing executives comes after the deadly Boeing Max 737 crashes in 2018 and 2019, which killed 346 people, and several major incidents this year that have left millions of people, including the heads of airlines, wary of ever riding, or purchasing, a Boeing aircraft again.

This includes the Alaska Airlines panel blowout in January, the Chile-based LATAM Airlines nosedive earlier this month, and the suspicious death of whistleblower John Barnett on March 9.

In this March 11, 2019, file photo, Boeing 737 Max wreckage is piled at the crash scene of Ethiopian Airlines flight ET302 near Bishoftu, Ethiopia. [AP Photo/Mulugeta Ayene]

The death of Barnett, an over 30-year employee of the company, in a purported suicide, has particularly sinister implications. Barnett was in the middle of giving damning testimony in a civil lawsuit alleging Boeing forced him to retire early for refusing to compromise on safety and quality, when he was found dead in hotel parking lot in South Carolina.

In his lawsuit and testimony, Barnett alleged that “upper management” at Boeing “harassed, denigrated, humiliated, and treated” him “with scorn and contempt” for refusing to compromise his integrity. Barnett asserted that upper management not only wanted him to operate in a “gray area,” and not follow Boeing procedures, but to also ignore federal criminal statutes.

The Boeing executives who announced their retirement on Monday, and their replacements, all held “upper management” positions within the company during the years Barnett alleged rampant criminality on the part of Boeing.

In a letter to employees Monday, outgoing CEO Calhoun admitted that the “Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 accident was a watershed moment for Boeing.” A preliminary investigation by the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) found that the four bolts that were supposed to keep the panel locked in mid-flight, were not installed, leading to the blowout and emergency landing on January 5.

Just three days before Calhoun announced his abrupt retirement, the New York Times reported that the FBI had sent letters to passengers on Flight 1282 making them aware that they may have been “a possible victim of a crime.” The Times said the letters were sent from the Seattle FBI office. The letters indicated that while the incident remains under investigation, “for several reasons, we cannot tell you about its progress at this time.”

Boeing has confirmed to the NTSB that the bolts on the Alaska Airline were removed at their facility in Renton, Washington, after being transported there for final assembly last August. However, the airline has not been able to provide any documentation to the NTSB as to who removed the bolts, or why they were not reinstalled.

On Monday, Fortune reported that outgoing CEO Calhoun will retire with a “$24 million payday” but could collect “about $45.5 million” if Pope, (Deal’s replacement) “can boost the stock price nearly 37 percent.”

Ben Silverman of Verity, a firm that researches and analyzes insider stock sales, told Fortune that Calhoun could collect $4.8 million as early as February 2027, followed by $14.4 million spread out over the next 10 years. Fortune estimated that Calhoun collected $22.4 million in 2023, “including $8.5 million in options, $9.5 million in stock and $3.4 million in an annual cash bonus.”

When Calhoun was elected as president and CEO of Boeing in December 2019, the board included language that would boost Calhoun’s salary by millions of dollars if he could get the 737 MAX plane in the air, and production lines churning again.

While Calhoun is leaving with a golden parachute, Fortune noted his millions were a “far cry” from that showered on previous CEO Dennis Muilenburg who, despite being fired, still collected $80 million. Calhoun replaced Muilenburg following the 2018 and 2019 crashes.

No Boeing executives were ever charged in the deaths of the nearly 350 people killed in those disasters; instead the US Department of Justice levied a $2.5 billion fine against the company, which is $500 million less than the company spent buying back its own stock in March 2018.

Since its 1997 merger with McDonnell Douglas, and before grounding the MAX in March 2019, Boeing spent more than $60 billion in stock buybacks. A majority of these buybacks occurred between 2013 and 2019, with Boeing spending $43.5 billion on buybacks in just those six years.

Biden’s budget for world war

Patrick Martin


The budget legislation signed into law by President Joe Biden on Saturday provides the largest amount in history for US military spending. Of the $1.2 trillion appropriated to six federal departments, the Pentagon claimed more than two thirds, about $825 billion. The separate budget bill signed by Biden March 8, for the other six federal departments, includes $23.8 billion for the US nuclear weapons programs run by the Department of Energy.

The aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower and the fast combat support ship USNS Supply transit the Strait of Hormuz, Dec. 14, 2023. [Photo: Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Keith Nowak]

All told, when all other monies appropriated for military-intelligence operations through other departments and agencies are tallied, the cumulative total is likely to surpass $1 trillion, although the actual figure remains secret, since much of the military-related spending on surveillance, military satellite launches, and other operations is classified.

Total US military spending, even based on the publicly available figures, dwarfs that of any possible combination of countries. The US alone accounts for 39 percent of total world military spending, equivalent to that of the next 11 countries combined. Compared to the US total of $877 billion for 2022, the last year for which comprehensive global figures are available, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute estimated that China spent $292 billion and Russia $86.4 billion. 

Russian military spending is a fraction of the combined spending by US NATO allies, more than $300 billion, by the US Asian allies in the so-called Quad (India, Japan and Australia, $160 billion combined), and by US client states in the Middle East (Saudi Arabia, Israel, Qatar and the UAE, $130 billion combined). The combined military spending of the US and its major allies comes to well over $1.5 trillion, two-thirds of the world total, and four times that of Russia and China.

Given these figures, there is no way to assess the American military posture as anything short of a program for world war. 

American imperialism has suffered a protracted historical decline in its economic position. From nearly 50 percent of world GDP at the end of the Second World War, the US fell to 40 percent by 1960 and 27 percent by 1971, when President Richard Nixon ended dollar convertibility into gold because of the rising balance of payments deficit. The US share fell to barely 15 percent of world GDP last year, with the expectation of a further decline in coming years.

But in the production of war materiel, of the weapons that can destroy human life both with pinpoint accuracy and by the millions, the United States has no peer.

This contradiction, between declining economic base and massive military buildup, explains the ferocity of American foreign policy. It is expressed in the unanimity of the two main capitalist parties, Democrats and Republicans, on the need to smash the growing threat of China—whose economy is on course to outstrip that of the United States—and subjugate China’s potential allies in Russia, Iran and North Korea. As far as Wall Street and Washington are concerned, they must provoke confrontation with China as soon as possible, because the fundamental trends are against them. They have no time to lose.

The incessant claims by the Biden administration and its apologists in the corporate media, that the US government is averse to the use of military force, or seeks to prevent the expansion of the conflict in Ukraine or to restrain Israeli genocide in Gaza, do not bear up to the slightest scrutiny.

The true savagery of US imperialism is demonstrated in one key provision of the just-passed Pentagon budget. Democrats and Republicans in Congress agreed to bar a single penny of US aid for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), which feeds millions of Palestinian refugees daily, including the bulk of the 2.3 million people in Gaza. Whatever the election-year mudslinging between Biden and Donald Trump, both the Democrats and Republicans are united in supporting mass starvation as a weapon of war.