Posted by BW Actual on Jul 29th 2024
BLACKWATER USA | DAILY BRIEF
Commodity Prices
- Aluminum: $2,289/ton
- Antimony (ingot min. 99.65% fob China): $23,100/ton
- Cobalt: $26,625/ton
- Copper: $9,111/ton
- Gold: $2,374/toz
- Lead: $2,068/ton
- Natural Gas (Nymex): $1.94/MMbtu
- WTI Crude Oil (Nymex): $75.86/barrel
- Zinc: $2,669/ton
- Pres. Maduro declared victory in yesterday's election. So did his opposition opponent, Edmundo González.
- This time, Maduro claimed just 51.2% of the vote - just enough to avoid a runoff, but (Maduro probably hopes) not egregiously incredible enough to spark a revolution.
- Many would-be observers boycotted the poll because Maduro tainted it from the start by bullying the opposition out of a fair race. And the few observers who participated cited widespread irregularities.
- Electoral authorities also prevented the public from fact-checking its count by refusing to release paper tallies printed by voting machines at key polling places.
- On Saturday, a Hezbollah rocket killed at least 12 kids and teens on a soccer (football) field in the Golan Heights, a sliver of Syria that Israel occupied in 1967 and annexed in 1981.
- Israel's security cabinet authorized PM Netanyahu to decide on the "manner and timing" of a response - likely involving counterstrikes in Lebanon.
- One such counterstrike already took place: an Israeli drone strike killed two people and wounded three - including a child - in the southern Lebanese town of Shaqra.
- SecState Blinken criticized China's "escalating" and "unlawful actions" in the South China Sea during a trip to Laos - where he will meet Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.
- Blinken will also visit Vietnam, Japan, and the Philippines in an effort to befriend Southeast Asian countries that are feeling threatened by an increasingly bellicose China.
- Saturday was North Korea's Victory Day - commemorating the 70th anniversary of the truce that paused (but didn't end) the Korean War.
- Kim Jong Un invited a special guest for the occasion: Russian Defense Minister Shoigu. His presence at the Victory Day festivities serves as a reminder of the increasingly close ties between Russia and North Korea, which were further solidified by Pres. Putin's second visit to the Hermit Kingdom last month.
- Tuareg separatists engaged Malian soldiers backed by Russian Wagner troops near Mali's border with Algeria and - according to the Tuaregs - "decisively obliterated these enemy columns" over three days of fighting.
- The Tuareg have been fighting for independence since 2012, but they started this latest round of fighting in response to recent military offensives that recaptured formerly rebel-held territory.
- The rebels say they seized "a large amount of equipment and weapons" and took "dozens" of Wagner fighters captive.
- The Malian army says two soldiers died and also acknowledged losing a helicopter in another nearby rebel stronghold, but said nothing about Wagner involvement in the fighting...officially, Wagner personnel are only in Mali to train local troops and shouldn't be fighting alongside their "trainees."
- Libya convicted 12 current and former officials for their negligence in managing dams near Derna that collapsed last year, killing at least 4,300 - and possibly over 12,000. Several were ordered to repay funds obtained through "illicit means," suggesting that the court blamed their misdeeds (at least in part) on corruption.
- French authorities are blaming the far-left for last week's organized attacks on French train lines. Today they arrested a far-left activist in Normandy in connection with the incidents.
- Meanwhile, a new coordinated infrastructure attack affected fiberoptic telecom networks throughout France (though Paris was not affected).