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Posts Tagged ‘Papua New Guinea’

Biden to Sign Military and Surveillance Agreements With Papua New Guinea

Posted by M. C. on May 11, 2023

One deal will involve US Coast Guard boats patrolling the waters of the Pacific Island nation

And this protects US how? No doubt $billions in new war equipment will be needed so we know Raytheon will be safe.

antiwar.com

by Dave DeCamp

President Biden will sign a Defense Cooperation Agreement (DCA) and a surveillance deal with Papua New Guinea when he visits the Pacific Island nation later this month, Papua New Guinea’s foreign minister told Reuters.

The White House announced Tuesday that Biden will visit Papua New Guinea on May 22 while on his way from the G7 summit in Japan to a Quad summit in Australia, making him the first sitting US president to visit the country.

The engagement and cooperation with Papua New Guinea is part of the US strategy to counter China in the region. PNG Foreign Minister Justin Tkachenko said the DCA with the US was finalized last week, “which now allows us to officially sign it when Biden comes here.” As part of the deal, the US will double the aid it provides to Papua New Guinea, bringing the total to $32 million.

The details of the DCA aren’t clear, but Papua New Guinea leaders have previously said it will focus on the US training their forces. Biden will sign a separate deal that will allow the US Coast Guard to patrol the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of Papua New Guinea, which extends 200 nautical miles from the nation’s coast. PNG officials will be onboard for the patrols as “ship riders.”

Map of the region (US Indo Pacific Command)

See the rest here

Be seeing you

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Soldiers Without Guns – The Libertarian Institute

Posted by M. C. on June 29, 2019

Also remarkable in the story of Bougainville is the lack of involvement by the United States or the United Nations. How many other parts of the world might benefit from such lack of involvement?

https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/soldiers-without-guns/

A new film by Will Watson, called Soldiers Without Guns, ought to shock a great many people — not because it utilizes a yet more gruesome form of violence or bizarre form of sex (the usual shockers in movie reviews), but because it recounts and shows us a true story that contradicts the most basic assumptions of politics, foreign policy, and popular sociology.
Bougainville Island was a paradise for millennia, inhabited sustainably by people who never caused the rest of the world the slightest trouble. Western empires fought over it, of course. Its name is that of a French explorer who named it for himself in 1768. Germany claimed it in 1899. In World War I, Australia took it. In World War II, Japan took it. Bougainville returned to Australian domination after the war, but the Japanese left piles of weapons behind — possibly the worst of the many forms of pollution, destruction, and lingering effects a war can leave in its wake…
Here, perhaps, was a moment for courageous and creative nonviolent resistance. But people tried violence instead — or (as the misleading saying goes) “resorted to violence.” The Papua New Guinean military responded to that by killing hundreds. The Bougainvilleans responded to that by creating a revolutionary army and waging war for independence. It was a righteous, anti-imperialist war. In the film we see images of fighters of just the sort still romanticized by some all over the world. It was a horrific failure…

Then another unlikely person said something sensible, something one hears almost daily in U.S. news media without it ever being meant seriously. But this guy, the Australian Foreign Minister, apparently actually meant it. He said there was “no military solution.” Of course, that’s always true everywhere, but when someone says it and actually means it, then an alternative course of action has to follow. And it certainly did.

With the support of the new prime minister of Papua New Guinea, and with the support of the Australian government, the government of New Zealand took the lead in attempting to facilitate peace in Bougainville. Both sides of the civil war agreed to send delegates, men and women, to peace talks in New Zealand. The talks succeeded beautifully. But not every faction, and not every individual, would make peace back home without something more.

A peace keeping contingent of soldiers, men and women, actually properly named “peace keeping,” led by New Zealand and including Australians, traveled to Bougainville, and brought no guns with them…

Unarmed peace keepers had to travel to those areas and persuade armed fighters to allow the talks to be held. Women had to persuade men to take a risk for peace. They did. And it succeeded. And it was lasting. There has been peace in Bougainville from 1998 until now. The fighting has not restarted. The mine has not reopened. The world didn’t really need copper. The struggle didn’t really need guns. Nobody needed to “win” the war.

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WildEagles: Bougainville trip

An alter to the flying gods that freed them from the invaders.

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