Biden’s new World Order Africa Strategy

It is all about the oil and gas in Africa and a way of containing Chinese interests in the world and above all in Africa. It seems like Biden’s new strategy is to avoid a world war and it seems as if the US short term will accept high gasoline prices. The gasoline prices in the US looks like it is on its way down this winter of 2022, so I guess the US more recently have found alternative oil sources. Good for them! But Africa needs electrical energy in order to extract oil and gas and lay down pipelines.

This is also shown by Biden’s more recently mitigated Iran policy and China policy too. But what has Biden promised Erdogan to hold Sweden on the stretch bench regarding our possible Nato-entrance? Because it doesn’t look like if it is the Kremlin who is in cahoots with Turkey at this moment. Or is Erdogan’s Turkey acting on its own behalf? It is possible, but follow the money and the military industrial complex.

I will probably be back with more info on this topic.

Source:

https://sverigesradio.se/artikel/storsatsning-pa-elnat-i-afrika

Roger Klang

The Abysmal gap. Lesson ten

The abysmal gap between military geostrategists’ views on the world as being a battlefield over strategic hotspots, straits, sea routes, military bases and commodity assets, versus diplomats’ view of geostrategy as a frictional meeting between headstrong dynamic people, is probably the reason for the existence of military attache officials who combine the best of both worlds. Military attaches are usually younger and always low in rank. I can only assume it is the diplomats who rule in the house of diplomats. They shouldn’t be so skird of professionals.

There is thus a difference between geostrategy (military thinking) and geopolitics (diplomatic thinking).

Geopolitics revolves around economics and policies.

Geostrategy is inevitable facts; who has what and where, and who wins a conflict with this what?

Geopolitics also involve commodities and, to some extent, natural resources. Geostrategy involves natural resources and where they’re at. But there is no absolute division between the two different fields of strategy.

Almost any fool can conduct geopolitical work. But conducting the work of a geostrategic task is often a privilege for a few briefed men, often high ranking militaries, government leaders and industrialists within a closed circle of people. Nothing is initiated by chance at the top level. On the other hand, the intentions of others and decisive events often gets randomized in crazy interactions.

It is enough that only one party is aware that they have a geostrategic superiority. If they do, then it is possible for them to go out and make geopolitics of it. A fog of war is usually created by the protagonists at selected occasions in any given conflict. But sooner or later, the conflict will return to the origin of the conflict – the geostrategy i.e. the strategic hotspots and natural resources.

There is no way to tell which is more influential. I guess you could say in the short run it is geopolitics and in the long run it is geostrategy, but that is a truth with modification. Look at the start of the first World war, it was a continued power struggle between nations, but it started suddenly with a single fired gun against Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo. Then look at the start of the second World war, it was conducted from the state of Germany on the highest level and was foreseeable.

Everybody does not agree with me about what makes up a geostrategical task and what makes up a geopolitical task. Some wouldn’t even separate the two into dual significations. This is my definition.

Homework:

How would you define geopolitics and geostrategy, are they the same?

Roger M. Klang, defense political spokesman for the Christian Values Party (Kristna Värdepartiet) in Sweden