Sunday, March 30, 2025

Foreign Digest: Gaza Strip, Armenia and Greenland

Gaza Strip: There were protests last week against Hamas, the Iranian-backed Islamist terror organization that governs the territory. The oppressive Hamas has used Gaza as a launching pad for terrorist attacks on Israel, which prompted a devastating Israeli response. The Palestinian Authority, which governs the West Bank, has declared that it will rule again in Gaza, after Hamas had split from it. As in both territories, which are inhabited mostly by Arabized Muslims, there is a significant Arabized Christian minority. Armenia: The Armenian Parliament overwhelmingly approved membership in the European Union last week as the former Soviet Republic pulls further out of the Russian orbit, following last year’s takeover by neighboring Azerbaijan of the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, over with the two southern Caucasian States had fought two wars, while Russian peacekeepers proved ineffective in defending the Armenians of the enclave. Around 100,000 Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh fled to Armenia afterward, as I had posted. Mostly Christian Armenia and Muslim Azerbaijan recently signed a peace agreement that requires parliamentary ratification. Armenia recognizes Azeri control of the territory and does not claim any right of return of displaced persons, while the deal settles or withdraws compensatory claims and does not allow private claims, while not addressing war crimes. The agreement rejects any third-party peacekeepers, including the Russians and thus also an EU border monitoring mission. Azerbaijan demands Armenia amend its constitution to remove the clause claiming Nagorno-Karabakh. Border transportation connections will have to be negotiated separately, including any link between Azerbaijan and its exclave west of Armenia. Greenland: Four of Greenland’s political parties have formed a broad coalition government across the political spectrum, led by the leader of the center-right pro-business party that is moderately pro-independence that won the most votes and seats in the parliamentary elections earlier this month. The result was a repudiation of Donald Trump’s desire to acquire Greenland. The staunchest pro-independence party will not be part of the coalition. The self-governing arctic territory of Denmark, an ally of the United States as a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, hosts a strategic U.S. military base. The neo-imperialist Trump has also threatened to retake the Panama Canal from Panama and has been pressuring Canada to join the American Union as a state. While denying Russian imperialism, isolationist Trumpist Republican J.D. Vance contradictorily claims Russia and Communist China are coveting Greenland as a justification for its acquisition by the U.S. While on Danish and Greenlandic soil at the American base last week, Vance undiplomatically criticized Denmark as not a good ally, despite Denmark’s participation in the Cold War and the War on Terrorism with its dispatchment of combat troops, as well as the current Western opposition to Russian aggression. The combination of Trump’s protectionism and his imperialism mark a return to the long-rejected economic system of mercantilism that had been practiced in colonial times by the British Empire and the other European powers, which was one of the causes of the American Revolution.

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