BLACKWATER USA | DAILY BRIEF

Posted by BW Actual on Oct 21st 2024

BLACKWATER USA | DAILY BRIEF

Coming Up This Week

  • World Bank and IMF annual meetings take place in Washington, DC today through Saturday. Climate change programs are high on the agenda - although rich countries don't want to pay for them and indebted poor countries can't afford to.
  • Leaders of Commonwealth countries (the UK and most of its ex-colonies - or, roughly, countries that play cricket) meet in Samoa starting today. It's the first biennial Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting that King Charles III will lead.
  • Russia will host BRICS leaders for the bloc's 16th annual summit in Kazan tomorrow through Thursday. This will be the first opportunity for its new members (Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the UAE) to join the namesake original members (Brazil Russia, India, China, and South Africa) for the meetings. [Saudi has been invited to join the bloc but isn't an official member yet and won't join this year's summit.] The group will discuss the possible future accession of up to 15 new members, including Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela.
  • Uruguay and Japan will both vote on Sunday. A leftist opposition candidate, Yamandú Orsi, leads Uruguay's presidential polls, but not by enough to avoid a runoff. In Japan's snap poll, the long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party hopes to recover public trust it lost in recent financial scandals, but it risks losing ground to a divided opposition.
Commodity Prices
  • Aluminum: $2,552/ton
  • Antimony (ingot min. 99.65% fob China): $25,100/ton
  • Cobalt: $23,995/ton
  • Copper: $9,472/ton
  • Gold: $2,733/toz - an all-time record high
  • Lead: $2,034/ton
  • Natural Gas (Nymex): $2.28/MMbtu
  • WTI Crude Oil (Nymex): $70.34/barrel
  • Zinc: $3,082/ton
Cuba
  • Cuba suffered four nationwide electrical grid failures over the weekend.
  • The energy minister blamed power plant problems, and it's no surprise that the island's outdated plants are failing: Fidel Castro once called them "prehistoric." The eight plants that produce Cuba's electricity are almost 50 years old - nearly twice their useful life - and poorly maintained.
  • The government seems to expect some blowback over the grid failures: Pres. Diaz-Canel appeared on national television (between blackouts) in fatigues to urge Cubans to express their frustrations peacefully.
Middle East
  • Israel carried out airstrikes against Hezbollah's financial partner, Al-Qard al-Hasan, in Lebanon, and against Hamas in northern Gaza.
  • Militants in Hezbollah targeted PM Netanyahu's coastal residence, Caesarea, in a drone strike over the weekend. One drone penetrated Israeli air defenses but caused no casualties.
Ukraine and Russia
  • Yulia Navalnaya - the widow of murdered dissident Alexey Navalny - told BBC that she intends to continue her late husband's fight against Pres. Putin: "I will do everything to make his regime fall as soon as possible."
  • Navalnaya also said she intends to run for president of Russia as soon as Putin is out of the picture (she rationally fears returning to Russia while Putin is still in power because his government - which killed her husband - has accused her of extremism too).
  • Separately, Ukraine sent hundreds of drones into several regions of Russia overnight. Russia intercepted most of them, but one penetrated Russian air defenses and struck a military explosives manufacturer deep inside Russian territory.
  • Russia also targeted Kyiv with airstrikes over the weekend.
North Korea
  • South Korea's spy agency studied satellite photos to conclude that at least 1,500 North Korean Special Forces troops are fighting for Russia in eastern Ukraine. Ukraine previously warned that North Korea plans to send up to 10,000 troops to the war.
Other News
  • Moldova voted yesterday on a referendum deeming EU membership a "strategic objective." The outcome is too close to call but slightly tilted in favor of closer ties with (and, eventually, membership in) the EU - despite Russia spending around €100 million ($109 million) supporting the other side.
  • Indonesia's Pres. Joko Widodo (aka Jokowi) stepped down as planned on Saturday, handing power to Prabowo Subianto, an ex-general who won February's election. Prabowo then announced his cabinet, which is Indonesia's largest ever and carries over one-third of Jokowi's ministers, including Jokowi's entire economic team.