John Luwang

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John Luwang

John Luwang

@aboongm1

Hobby : Watching Geo Political Events and where the world is going!

Katılım Aralık 2020
500 Takip Edilen309 Takipçiler
John Luwang retweetledi
Arnaud Bertrand
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand·
Back in March I wrote 👇 that Iran was winning, and not only strategically but tactically too, but I genuinely didn't expect it would eventually lead - 3 months later - to a complete US surrender. Because, make no mistake, this is what the "deal" that was just signed is: a complete US surrender, the likes of which it has never signed in its entire history. Let's compare it with the 2 other most famous US capitulation agreements: the Paris Peace Accords with Vietnam in 1973 and the Doha Agreement with Afghanistan in 2020. The most significant difference is that both the Vietnam and Afghanistan deals, despite being documents in which the US effectively conceded defeat, contained at least some face-saving provisions for the US. For instance, in the Vietnam deal, North Vietnam accepted the continued existence of the South Vietnamese government, promised peaceful reunification, agreed to maintain the 17th parallel as a dividing line, and accepted international supervision. These were real (if ultimately unenforceable and unenforced) concessions. Same thing with the Taliban: they guaranteed Afghan soil would never again be used to attack America, and agreed to negotiate a political settlement with the then Kabul government. The latter commitment was never seriously pursued - but both existed and gave the US a narrative: at least it could claim its post-9/11 objective had been secured on paper. The deal with Iran is completely different: it doesn't contain a single meaningful concession from Iran. The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is merely the reversal of a wartime measure they took in response to the US-Israeli attack. And the "reaffirmation" that Iran won't build nuclear weapons is just this: a reaffirmation of a position Tehran has had for decades. As a reminder, there is a 2003 fatwa by Khamenei that forbids the production and use of any form of weapon of mass destruction, so "reaffirming" it costs Iran exactly nothing. Meanwhile, the list of concessions and costs on the US side is staggering: - Permanent end to the war on all fronts, including Lebanon - A US pledge to respect Iran's sovereignty and not interfere in its internal affairs - Full lifting of the naval blockade - Withdrawal of all US forces from the region within 30 days after the final agreement - A $300 billion reconstruction and development fund for Iran - Termination of all sanctions: UN, IAEA, and every unilateral US sanction, primary and secondary - Immediate Treasury waivers for Iranian oil exports and all related banking, insurance, and shipping services - Full release of all frozen Iranian funds and assets, to be spent however Iran's central bank sees fit So very concretely this is the US agreeing to 1) end the war and withdraw its forces, 2) end all hostile measures towards Iran that were in place before the war (the sanctions, the frozen funds, the interference in internal affairs, etc.), and 3) send hundreds of billions of dollars in what are, effectively, war reparations. If that's not a complete surrender, I genuinely don't know what is. And, cherry on the cake, in an absolutely perfect touch of historical irony, Trump literally signed this surrender agreement in Versailles (I'm not kidding: x.com/RnaudBertrand/…). History rhymes, but rarely this loudly, all the more because the historical 1919 Versailles Treaty was also signed in June! Of course, it's fair - very fair, even - to suspect that Trump will not honor this deal. If he's proven anything in his political career, it's that he is agreement-incapable. Plus there's the Israel dimension: the document does say that the war should "end on all fronts, including Lebanon," but Israel has already made clear it considers itself unbound by the agreement. As such, what I suspect will happen - as I wrote the day the MOU was announced (x.com/RnaudBertrand/…) - is that the deal will split in two. The immediate concessions - blockade lifted, oil flowing, funds unfrozen - will happen (some already have) and probably stick, because reversing them would mean restarting the very war the US humiliatingly lost. The deferred provisions - the negotiations on nuclear, the sanctions schedule, the reconstruction fund - will probably enter permanent limbo because, as I wrote then, the US won't get better terms on nuclear after showing they couldn't get them on the battlefield. And given sanctions relief and the $300 billion are tied to a final deal that requires resolving the nuclear question, and the nuclear question requires leverage the US no longer has, the whole structure is circular and never-ending. On the Israel-Lebanon question, things are trickier. Israel, in some way, finds itself in a South Vietnam situation with its patron having negotiated a surrender over its head. The difference is that Thieu was too weak to sabotage the Paris Accords, whereas Netanyahu isn't: his ability to escalate in Lebanon gives him a de facto veto over the deal's most fragile provision. Realistically speaking though, it's hard to imagine the US willing to restart the war, which is its own form of deterrence: if Israel keeps striking Lebanon in violation of the ceasefire, Iran can now retaliate with far greater confidence that the US won't come to the rescue - which ought to give Israel pause. In effect, the end result is that the US security umbrella over Israel just got a lot thinner. Which means that, for the first time in a long time, Israel has to calculate the cost of provoking Iran without assuming the US will absorb the consequences. This points towards restraint, at least for any rational actor. But then again, the same government that dragged the US into this war in the first place has not exactly been a model of strategic rationality... In any case, it's undeniable that Iran has just achieved something no other country has managed, ever: it withstood the full force of the US and Israeli military machines, and extracted a surrender agreement that makes the Paris Peace Accords look like a US victory by comparison. To refer back to the title of my article below 👇: this was the first multipolar war, and Iran has definitely earned its place as one of the poles.
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

I don't think people realize just how extraordinary what we're witnessing with Iran is. I was arguing with a dear journalist friend of mine yesterday who was telling me that Iran was winning, yes, but only on the strategic level, not tactically. The type of thing a skinny kid getting stuffed in lockers in highschool tells himself to make himself feel better: "These people will BEG to work for me in ten years. Everyone knows jocks peak in highschool. They'll literally beg." 😏 I think that's precisely wrong, and that's what makes the Iran war different. As of now, Iran is in fact holding its own tactically too. Think about other U.S. wars of aggression these past few decades. Take Vietnam, Afghanistan, Libya, Iraq, Serbia, etc. (the list is unfortunately very long). The pattern was roughly always the same with an immense power differential between aggressor and victim. These wars were, by and large, imperial: the empire attempting to crush a much weaker people whose only realistic recourse was guerrilla resistance. And that is when they actually had the will to resist: some - like Libya - barely even bothered, just resigning themselves to their fate (despite being, at the time, the richest country in Africa). As spectators of these wars, if you had any moral sense, the dominant emotion was a kind of helpless disgust: you were watching a giant stomp through someone else's house. Sure, the U.S. actually lost many - if not most - of these wars, famously replacing the Taliban with the Taliban or being expelled with their tail between their legs from Vietnam, but the power differential was no less real for it. It's just that power doesn't always guarantee victory: sometimes the giant can't kill everyone, and eventually tires of trying. But the “victories” won this way were always pyrrhic at best: the people endured, yes, but what they were left with was a country in ashes that takes decades to rebuild. Meanwhile, in the grand scheme of things, the giant walked away with little more than a bruised ego. Iran is - remarkably - proving to be an entirely different beast: when others were merely surviving a giant, Iran appears to be able to compete with one. What just happened over the past 48 hours is the best illustration of this. You had the President of the United States issue a formal ultimatum: reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours or we "obliterate" your power grid. Iran's response was essentially: we dare you, if you do this we'll make all your Gulf allies uninhabitable within a week. And, as we saw, Trump backed down: pretexting non-existent "VERY GOOD AND PRODUCTIVE CONVERSATIONS" with Iran, he said his ultimatum no-longer applied (or, rather, became 5 days). Adding he now envisaged the Strait of Hormuz being “jointly controlled by me and the Ayatollah.” To the amusement of Iran’s diplomacy (x.com/IraninSA/statu…). That, folks, is a textbook tactical victory. It is, remarkably, Iran demonstrating in this instance that it had escalation dominance over the United States of America. That is, the ability to credibly threaten consequences so severe that the US - for perhaps the first time since the Cold War - found it preferable to stand down. That's no skinny kid being locked in a locker dreaming of revenge fantasies. That's the kid grabbing the bully's wrist mid-shove and watching his face change. And it's not the only tactical victory in this war so far. Take the episode over the Israeli attack on Iran's South Pars gas facility. Iran had warned that if that happened U.S. allies in the region - including Israel - would face a symmetrical response. And they delivered: famously devastating Qatar's Ras Laffan facility - which produced roughly 20% of global LNG supply - and leading, according to Qatar themselves, to a $20 billion loss of annual revenue for the next 5 years (oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-…). Not only that but they also managed to hit Israel's Haifa refinery (aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/19…), one of the country's most strategic and protected sites. The result was Trump distancing himself from the South Pars attack, saying that Israel had "violently lashed out" unilaterally and that "NO MORE ATTACKS WILL BE MADE BY ISRAEL pertaining to this extremely important and valuable South Pars Field." Israel then said it wouldn't strike Iran energy sites anymore (bloomberg.com/news/articles/…). From where I stand, that's another tactical victory. It is, at least, Iran demonstrating that is can fight back **symmetrically** against the U.S. and its allies. Not through asymmetric resistance with IEDs hidden in the roadside or traps hidden in the jungle, but eye for eye, and against some of the most heavily protected sites on the U.S.'s side. That's qualitatively different from any other adversaries the U.S. has directly fought in recent wars. There's plenty more, such as the pretty relevant fact that Iran has gained control of the single most strategic energy chokepoint on earth and the U.S. is finding it impossible to break that control. To the point where Trump has been reduced to publicly begging China - of all countries - for help, which given Trump's ego mustn't have been easy to do. Only to be told no. By China. And by everyone else he asked. This is the topic of my latest article: how this is, in fact, the first genuine "multipolar war." First, in the narrow sense: because Iran is revealing itself to be a genuine pole of power - not a superpower, but an actor that cannot be submitted, which is all multipolarity is. And second, because the war itself is accelerating multipolarity everywhere else: the U.S. has never been more isolated, never looked weaker and its security guarantees have never been more hollow. In my article I lay out the full scoreboard - military, economic, political - and explain why this war has already changed the world, regardless of how it ends. Enjoy the read here: open.substack.com/pub/arnaudbert…

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John Luwang retweetledi
Arnaud Bertrand
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand·
Fascinating argument by Bloomberg's top energy analyst Javier Blas 👇: he argues that China effectively saved the world economy during the Iran war by absorbing the brunt of the global oil supply shock on its own, without visible economic damage. According to his calculations, China "cut its average daily waterborne oil imports by the same amount as the combined oil consumption of Germany, France and the UK." And, still according to Blas, they "did so without suffering economic harm" because they could rely on many levers: their huge strategic petroleum reserve, a massive surge in EV usage, their remaining coal-fired electricity capacity, and coal-to-chemicals replacing lost feedstocks. Had China not been ready to absorb that blow, a good argument can be made that the economic damage to the West, and the world at large, would have spiraled far beyond what we saw. Effectively, China's energy strategy at all levels (petroleum reserves, EVs, etc.) and its ability to withstand huge supply shocks paid off for everyone, not just for them. It sounds awfully familiar: in 2008 too it was China's stimulus package and continuous buying of US Treasuries that averted a complete breakdown of the global financial system. So twice in 20 years the country the West loves to present as a "threat" to the global economy effectively saved it from a US-made global economic disaster 🤷
Javier Blas@JavierBlas

COLUMN: The Chinese 'oil weapon.' The Strait of Hormuz crisis shows Beijing is now a stabilizing force for oil prices. This potentially reshapes the energy risk premia — and Asian geopolitics if conflict breaks out over Taiwan. @Opinion bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…

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John Luwang retweetledi
Masoud Pezeshkian
Masoud Pezeshkian@drpezeshkian·
این یک سند تاریخی و پیامی از ایران مقتدر است: صلح در سایه احترام متقابل تحقق خواهد یافت. جمهوری اسلامی ایران به صلح جهانی با حفظ عزت و استقلال، پیشرفت و همکاری منطقه‌ای همواره متعهد و پایبند است.
Masoud Pezeshkian tweet mediaMasoud Pezeshkian tweet mediaMasoud Pezeshkian tweet media
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Antonio Tajani
Antonio Tajani@Antonio_Tajani·
Le gravi e offensive parole del Presidente Trump nei confronti del Presidente del Consiglio Giorgia Meloni offendono tutta l’Italia. Per questo motivo ho deciso di annullare la mia visita negli Stati Uniti prevista per i prossimi 21 e 22 giugno.
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John Luwang retweetledi
Zhao DaShuai 东北进修🇨🇳 Commentary
US department of WAR, is changing the Indo-Pacific Command back to the Pacific command. In the previous name change, the US wanted to bring India into the fold, but now as it has always been, india will remain in a peripheral country. The US is becoming more transactional in its international relations, India has not brought any tangible benefits to the US, nor is india strong enough against regional rivals like Pakistan. India's inability to do anything during the Iran war is also a negative in the US calculus. India, in the eyes of the US, went from a potential counterweight to China; Now to a good for nothing burden.
Pete Hegseth@PeteHegseth

U.S. Pacific Command…is back.

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Vivek Dhamija
Vivek Dhamija@VivekDhami41134·
@zhao_dashuai An year-long investigative report by the independent Australian outlet Klaxon utilized open-source intelligence and deleted Chinese social media data to prove Beijing covered up, 38 Chinese soldiers drowned in the freezing Galwan River, China's actual death toll was closer to 42
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Shane David Jett
Shane David Jett@shanejett·
@zhao_dashuai Since 1948, Chinese Communists Party guilty of 416.6-469.2 million deaths.📈☭

Congratulations, China is now bloodier than USSR. 🇨🇳☭

Fact: #1 killer of communists is communist leaders. ☠️☭
x.com/shanejett/stat…
Shane David Jett@shanejett

@zhao_dashuai @grok how many Chinese citizens and non-citizens lost their lives due to the Chinese Communist Party’s purges, culture war, failed government programs, one child policy mass abortions, ethnic cleansing of the Hmong, Uyghurs and Tibetans and other atrocities since 1949?

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Zhao DaShuai 东北进修🇨🇳 Commentary
Hey indians, meet your masters; The Shang. The Shang people were China's chariot-riding, genocide enjoyer from the 1500 BC, just like the Aryans who conquered your emaciated race during the same era.
Zhao DaShuai 东北进修🇨🇳 Commentary tweet media
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Marcus Valerius Corvus
@zhao_dashuai The Mongols didn’t merely slap down the emaciated Jin and Song Dynasties, they unified it under the Yuan Dynasty: China run by Mongolia.
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John Luwang
John Luwang@aboongm1·
@Deepak__71 @zhao_dashuai Because its professions, a Chinese person can be all in their lifetime unlike indian caste system coz your a caste coz of your family name.
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DK
DK@Deepak__71·
@zhao_dashuai Well, in which class you belong?? Are you: Shi Nong Gong Shang??
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John Luwang
John Luwang@aboongm1·
Or maybe indians can stopped being shameless liars! Problem solved. Indians are literally spreading fake news and lies. No one would believe anything indians write or say.
Maitreya Bhakal@MaitreyaBhakal

By pushing back this hard against the "Chinese caste" propaganda - Chinese people doth protest too much. They are getting hysterical and overdoing it. And revealing their own insecurities in the process. In their rush to debunk the lie, they are revealing something they would rather keep hidden: their own insecurities and shame about China's problems. The reason for this is that while the propaganda is false, it's LESS false than they would like to admit. China still suffers from extreme levels of inequality. While this remains mostly hidden and overshadowed by positive Chinese content, it is still a serious problem, recognized by the government itself. It's a highly sensitive issue for Chinese nationalists. Comparing it to India's caste system was a satirical, hyperbolic exaggeration that never pretended to be the truth. It was always meant as a joke, a form of shitposting, executed largely for the lulz. Nobody, including the executives who started it, really expected anyone to actually believe it, or even take it seriously. But good propaganda is never defined by whether it is true or false, but by whether it touches a nerve. And touch their nerves it did. It got under their skins. They went ballistic. Because while it was mostly a lie, it still hit too close to home. What they had tried to keep as secret as possible was finally leaking out. As if that wasn't enough, what drove them madder still was the final twisting of the knife: one of India's most defining qualities - the caste system (that they loved exploiting to justify anti-Indian racism) - was now being re-directed and projected onto their own country. This is what really sent them into a meltdown. Fueling the propaganda further was the West's own older propaganda campaign likening the hukou to a "caste" system. So when people went looking for evidence, they found years of western commentary repeating the same lie. Search engines, AI models, news articles, op-eds, editorials, academia, films, and more - they all said the same thing. That they were all also lying and exaggerating does not make the pain any less bearable. That is in fact even more humiliating - that China is once again being insulted for things that are not even true. What started as a joke became a controversy. The controversy became a debate. The debate spread the meme further than its creators ever could. The lie won the moment its victims became obsessed with disproving it. The intensity of the debunking is itself evidence that the meme touched a nerve. Like a form of the Streisand Effect, the reaction itself becomes the mechanism through which the accusation spreads. This is the surest sign that an infowar campaign has succeeded: when its targets become its biggest promoters - when the infected victims themselves spread the virus. If you're this emotionally invested in debunking an obvious lie, the lie has already won.

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AD_ART
AD_ART@ad_real_2007·
@supersnake20164 @aboongm1 @supersnake2009 @Raktarasikah Crazy projection. But here are the facts no your army was so weak that usa was the one to free you or you still be their being sexdolls for the japanese. Second we were offered the permanent member but because of our prime minister he literally gave it to you guys to fix yourself
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John Luwang
John Luwang@aboongm1·
Literally fair skinned upper caste indians are descendents of slaves of Chinese especially Kushan which were originally from Xinjiang province.
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Maitreya Bhakal
Maitreya Bhakal@MaitreyaBhakal·
Hilarious to see that no matter how much the "Chinese caste" propaganda is debunked, it still keeps gaining traction. There's simply no stopping it! 😂😂 Of course that's the point. While largely cope-ridden and originating as a satirical take on western conceptions of India's caste system, the narrative has now taken a life of its own. The functional purpose of this propaganda campaign is not to convince anyone it's the truth. Everybody knows it's a lie, including the propaganda campaigners. It's real purpose is to expose hypocrisy. The same people who falsely depicted videos from Bangladesh and Phillipines as being from India, or claimed that Pakistan had destroyed an Indian S-400 radar (!), or that countries are lining up to purchase J-10Cs - are now expressing deep concern that lies are being spread about countries THEY support. We know how much you care about the truth. And now your hypocrisy stands exposed. All those anonymous accounts (the "unknown men" of the online world as I call them, iykyk) who started this are not the losers in this saga - they will create new accounts. The real loser is YOU. You have lost all credibility. You have been stripped naked and flogged in full view of the world. Now everyone knows what you actually stand for, which is absolutely nothing. Of course you will not realize this immediately. As usual, it will take you some time to understand what happened. And even longer time to accept it. The realization will first hit slowly, and then all at once. ------- The pushback from Chinese people is still understandable. What about white people and westoids who spent years spreading lies about India, including during the India-Pakistan clashes last year? What's your excuse? What's your stake in the Kashmir issue? What's your stake in India-Pakistan relations? Or India-China relations? How much do you know about the background and context of these issues? Why are you so emotionally invested in these topics? Indians hate Pakistan because Pakistan kills Indian civilians. Pakistanis hate Indians because India kills Pakistani civilians (or so their government claims). But YOU hate Indians...why exactly? Because 3 Indians were rude to you on Twitter 5 years ago? This is why the "Chinese caste" propaganda narrative is so revealing. It has singlehandedly exposed such people as white cocksuckers and bootlickers, goycuck wankers with *zero* independent thought. You just follow the herd. You do what's cool. Hating Indians is cool. So you do it. That's it. That's all there is to it. And don't think nobody noticed your shallow, barebones, bare-minimum criticism of Israel, which you do just for plausible deniability, if at all. Criticizing India is easy, that's why you do it. Criticizing Israel is hard, that's why you don't. ------- This is the real contribution of the "Chinese caste" propaganda. To expose such people as nothing more than shallow liberal, anti-materialist, anti-Communist, herd-following, bootlicking charlatans. And this is just the beginning. There will be more propaganda campaigns. More lies. More information warfare. On an even larger scale. You've had your fun. Your goycuck white bootlicking shtick is going to be exposed to the world. Weaponizing information is a game two sides may play. Beatings shall continue until morale improves.
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let it go.
let it go.@stayaway_002·
My timeline is full of videos showing filthy food, unhygienic cooking practices, and all kinds of w£ird creatures that people in China eat. Expecting hygiene from China is like expecting Pakistan to stop supporting terror1$m. Chineese are so gro$s🤢🤢
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xaanxxaanx
xaanxxaanx@xaanxxaanx·
GUTTER OIL BEING SCOOPED UP BY THE CHINESE LADY WHICH WILL USED TO MAKE TRADITIONAL CHINESE DISHES LIKE COWDUNG HOTPOT, POOP SOUP
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John Luwang
John Luwang@aboongm1·
@Adityasingh0017 You really think that is reality in China! Your brain is filled with cow dung. Have your snack🤣🤣🤣
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John Luwang
John Luwang@aboongm1·
China continues to amaze everyone!
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