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US says not to attend Moscow summit on Afghanistan

The US will not participate in the Moscow Format consultations on Afghanistan, scheduled for October 20, but Washington does support these talks and may participate in the future, US Department of State spokesman Ned Price said Monday.

“We will not participate in the Moscow talks,” he noted, adding that the US supports the process itself and may join a similar meeting in the future. “It’s just logistically difficult for us to take part this week to support the process.

He also stated that the Troika plus format (Russia, the US, China, Pakistan) is an “effective and constructive forum”.

“We look forward to engaging in that forum, going forward, but we’re not in a position to take part this week,” he continued.

The radical Taliban movement has confirmed participation in Moscow consultations. A senior delegation of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan will pay an official visit to Moscow at the invitation of the Russian leadership, Taliban spokesman Wardak al-Hanafi tweeted on Friday.

The consultations are scheduled for October 20, 2021. The Moscow format was established in 2017 on the basis of a six-party consultation mechanism of the special envoys of Russia, Afghanistan, India, Iran, China and Pakistan.

Seoul says North fired ballistic missile towards Sea of Japan

North Korea fired a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) from off its east coast on Tuesday, South Korea’s military said, pulling Japan’s new prime minister off the campaign trail and overshadowing the opening of a major arms fair in Seoul.

The launch, reported by officials in South Korea and Japan, came after U.S. and South Korean envoys met in Washington to discuss the nuclear standoff with North Korea on Monday. Spy chiefs from the United States, South Korea, and Japan were reported to be meeting in Seoul on Tuesday as well.

The North Korean launch would be the latest weapons test by the country, which has pressed ahead with military development in the face of international sanctions imposed over its nuclear weapons and missile programmes.

The missile was launched about 10:17 a.m. local time from the sea in the vicinity of Sinpo, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said, where North Korea keeps submarines as well as equipment for test firing SLBMs.

It was not immediately clear whether the missile was fired from a submarine or from a submersible test barge, as in most previous tests.

“Our military is closely monitoring the situation and maintaining readiness posture in close cooperation with the United States, to prepare for possible additional launches,” JCS announced in a statement.

The missile flew about 430-450 kilometres to a maximum altitude of 60 kilometres, the Yonhap news agency reported, citing an unnamed source.

The North displayed new Pukguksong-4 and Pukguksong-5 SLBMs during its military parades in October and January, respectively, and a previously unseen, smaller missile was spotted at last week’s defence fair in Pyongyang.

North Korea has also been working on what would be its first operational submarine capable of launching an SLBM, according to South Korean officials. It currently has an experimental ballistic missile submarine it claims was used in a 2016 test, though some analysts say that may have used a barge.

The Washington-based Nuclear Threat Initiative has assessed that “an operational (ballistic missile submarine) and SLBM capability could provide North Korea with additional options for nuclear launch, and a hedge against destruction of its land-based nuclear systems.”

South Korea’s national security council held an emergency meeting and expressed “deep regret” over the test, urging the North to resume talks.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida stated that two ballistic missiles had been detected, and that it was “regrettable” that North Korea had conducted a string of missile tests in recent weeks.

There was no immediate explanation from South Korea’s JCS for the conflicting number of missiles detected.

Kishida cancelled scheduled campaign appearances in northern Japan, and the deputy chief cabinet secretary told reporters that Kishida was planning to return to Tokyo to deal with the missile situation.

The launch came as the intelligence chiefs of the United States, South Korea, and Japan were due to meet in Seoul to discuss the standoff with North Korea, amid other issues, Yonhap reported, citing a government source.

The U.S. special representative for North Korea, Sung Kim, noted that he would visit Seoul for talks this week.

“The U.S. continues to reach out to Pyongyang to restart dialogue,” Kim noted after meeting with his South Korean counterpart in Washington on Monday. 

“We harbour no hostile intent towards (North Korea), and we are open to meeting with them without preconditions,” Kim added.

The series of recent launches as well as the opening of the unusual military showin Pyongyang suggest that North Korea may be resuming military and international affairs after nearly two years of focusing inward amid the COVID-19 pandemic, said Chad O’Carroll, CEO of Korea Risk Group.

“North Korea’s renewed testing of ballistic missiles suggests the worst of domestic hardship between summer 2020-2021 could be over,” he wrote on Twitter.

“Pyongyang tends to focus on one big strategic issue at a time, so the renewed testing could suggest military – later foreign policy – now priority,” he added.

The missiles tested recently by North Korea appear aimed at matching or surpassing South Korea’s quietly expanding arsenal, analysts have stressed.

Last month South Korea successfully tested an SLBM, becoming the first country without nuclear weapons to develop such a system. North Korea test fired a missile launched from a train on the same day.

This month the two Koreas held duelling defence exhibitions aimed at showcasing their latest weaponry amid a spiralling arms race.

As news of Tuesday’s missile launch broke, representatives of hundreds of international companies and foreign militaries were gathered in Seoul for the opening ceremonies of the International Aerospace and Defence Exhibition (ADEX).

It is set to be South Korea’s largest defence expo ever, organisers said, with displays of next-generation fighter aircraft, attack helicopters, drones, and other advanced weapons, as well as space rockets and civilian aerospace designs.

South Korea is also preparing to test fire its first homegrown space launch vehicle on Thursday.

Though analysts say the South Korean rocket has few potential applications as a weapon, such tests are unlikely to be welcomed in North Korea, which has complained of a double standard in which its own space programme is criticized overseas as a front for military missile development.

Iran Imports Another 6mn-Dose Shipment of Covid Vaccines

The Red Crescent’s director said his organization will continue its push to import vaccines.

“Over the past 10 days, the Red Crescent Society has imported 5 shipments containing [an overall] 30 million doses of coronavirus vaccines,” Karim Hemmati said.

“The Red Crescent Society has imported a total 82 million and 390 thousand doses of vaccines since late April.”

Hemmati added that the Red Crescent is purchasing the vaccines from China’s Sinopharm, stressing that the jabs have a long expiry date.

“Fortunately, the main outcome of the imports of vaccines and inoculation of people is a reduction in the fatalities from the coronavirus disease among the medical staff and people and a reduced number of patients in intensive care units of the hospitals,” he said.

Iran’s health ministry announced on Monday 181 patients had died of Covid-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the number of the dead to 124,256 since the start of the pandemic.

Nasrallah: Hezbollah has 100k armed fighters

Hezbollah’s leader has accused the Lebanese Forces party of shooting at their supporters and killing seven people last Thursday near a protest against the judge investigating the Beirut Port explosion.

Nasrallah said in a televised address on Monday that the Christian party and its leader Samir Geagea are trying to start conflict in the country.

“The real programme of the Lebanese Forces party is civil war,” Nasrallah continued, adding, “They don’t have a problem with causing events that lead to bloodshed … even if it will lead to a large-scale military confrontation of civil war.”

Nasrallah said that Hezbollah’s armed wing has 100,000 “armed, trained, and experienced” fighters.

Unidentified gunmen fired at hundreds of Hezbollah and Amal supporters last Thursday at a protest by the Beirut Justice Palace, leading to hours-long clashes that killed at least seven combatants and civilians and wounded more than 30 others.

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea, longtime adversaries of the Iran-backed party, repeatedly denied the accusations of organising an attack.

Nasrallah dismissed accusations that armed members of Hezbollah and its ally Amal were at the protest before the clashes.

“We don’t didn’t carry weapons or take any security measures, and let the security agencies handle it because it was in a sensitive area,” he stated.

The protesters demanded the removal of Judge Tarek Bitar from the Beirut Port blast probe, and accused him of being biased and politically motivated.

The Lebanese Army has so far arrested 20 people in their investigation into the clashes, and have received a video that shows a soldier shooting and killing an unarmed protester.

More than 200 people were killed and some 6,500 wounded when hundreds of tonnes of highly explosive ammonium nitrate fertiliser stored in the Beirut Port for years ignited on August 4, 2020. The blast destroyed several neighbourhoods in the Lebanese capital. No officials have been convicted yet.

Judge Bitar has charged and pursued senior political and security officials. He has charged former Prime Minister Hasan Diab, and former ministers Ali Hasan Khalil, Ghazi Zeiter, Nouhad Machnouk, and Youssef Finianos with criminal negligence.

Nasrallah insists Bitar should instead focus on the judicial officials that permitted the ship carrying the explosive ammonium nitrate to dock at the Beirut Port, and again accused him of not being impartial.

“There are embassies, references, and there is politics involved,” the Hezbollah leader noted.

US special envoy to Afghanistan resigns

Khalilzad will leave his post following the breakdown in peace negotiations and Taliban takeover this summer, the US State Department confirmed Monday.

Thomas West, who previously served as Khalilzad’s deputy, will take over the top post, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.

Khalilzad told Blinken of his decision to resign in a letter obtained by POLITICO.

“Tomorrow, I step down from my position as the Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation. I decided that now is the right time to do so, at a juncture when we are entering a new phase in our Afghanistan policy,” he wrote.

While he defends his tenure, he admits “the political arrangement between the Afghan government and the Taliban did not go forward as envisaged. The reasons for this are too complex and I will share my thoughts in the coming day and weeks.”

“Going forward, I plan to contribute to the discussion and debate about not only what happened but what should be done next,” he continued.

The veteran diplomat, who served under both Presidents Donald Trump and Joe Biden as the special representative for Afghanistan reconciliation, led talks with the Taliban in Qatar that resulted in the Trump administration’s agreement to leave the country by May 2021.

The Biden administration kept him on through the transition, as he continued to try to coordinate a power-sharing agreement between the Taliban and the Afghan government.

But the diplomatic talks broke down after Biden announced in April that the U.S. would end its 20-year mission in Afghanistan by Sept. 11.

Khalilzad was one of the first Biden administration officials to admit that the Taliban’s rapid sweep across Afghanistan caught the U.S. flat footed.

“It’s not surprising that with the reduction, or almost complete withdrawal of U.S. forces that was on the side of the Afghan government, that they would make some progress,” he told POLITICO in July. 

“They have made more progress, perhaps, with the reduction and withdrawal [than] one could have analytically predicted,” he stated.

“Their position, given the developments of the past several weeks, is stronger than it was before,” he added. 

The Taliban seized Kabul on Aug. 15.

The Biden administration’s chaotic departure from Afghanistan was marred by scenes of chaos and a frantic rush to evacuate American citizens and Afghan allies. At Hamid Karzai International Airport, where tens of thousands of people gathered trying to leave the country, a suicide bombing attack killed 13 American service members. A botched U.S. drone strike in retaliation for that bombing accidentally killed 10 civilians.

The State Department and Pentagon inspectors general, as well as several congressional committees, have launched investigations into the end of U.S. operations in Afghanistan.

Russia halts diplomatic ties with NATO

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Monday that Russia has suspended the operation of NATO’s information office in Moscow.

“In response to NATO’s actions, we are suspending the work of our permanent mission in the alliance, including the work of the chief military representative. [It will] probably [be suspended] as of 1 November, or it will take a few more days”, Lavrov told a press conference in Moscow.

He added that “secondly, we [Russia] are suspending the activities of the NATO military liaison mission in Moscow, with the accreditation of its employees due to be revoked from 1 November 2021”.

“And thirdly, the activities of the NATO information office in Moscow, which was established at the Embassy of the Kingdom of Belgium, are being terminated,” Lavrov noted.

NATO previously confirmed that it had revoked the accreditation of eight employees of the Russian mission to the alliance and reduced the number of accreditations for the Russian Federation to 10.

Iran FM: Tehran returns to full nuclear compliance, if others do

In a phone conversation with Secretary General of the United Nations Antonio Guterres on Monday evening, Hossein Amir Abdollahian said the Islamic Republic of Iran supports negotiations that have tangible practical results.

Amir Abdollahian referred to the nuclear negotiations and stated that the recent talks between the Iranian deputy foreign minister and European Union Deputy Foreign Policy Chief Enrique Mora in Tehran were positive and that they will continue their negotiations next week in Brussels.

Amir Abdollahian also referred to Daesh terrorist acts in Afghanistan in recent days and called for serious action by the UN secretary general to stop and confront terrorism in Afghanistan.

He said terrorist activities and the targeting of worshipers, along with the new wave of Afghan refugees, have added to the responsibility of the United Nations and its secretary general in this regard.

The top Iranian diplomat also invited Guterres to visit Tehran.

Guterres, in his turn, expressed hope for the success of the nuclear talks, adding the United Nations has always supported the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

The UN chief also called for the formation of an inclusive government that represents all Afghan ethnic groups and minorities.

He the UN will continue to send humanitarian aid to Afghanistan.

Raeisi: Iran serious about nuclear talks, sanctions must be removed

In an interview with the IRIB, Raeisi said Iran is serious about result-based negotiations, noting
that the sign of seriousness on the part of the other side is the removal of sanctions on Iran.

He however noted that his administration will not tie people’s livelihoods and the Iranian economy to the nuclear talks.

Raeisi said Iran has never walked away from the negotiating table and is ready for talks.

The president referred to his promise before the formation of his cabinet to pursue the issue, saying the Foreign Ministry is now doing just that.

Raeisi reiterated that Iran sticks by its word and that it conveyed this message to the envoy of the European Union.

Elsewhere in his comments, the Iranian president spoke of the country’s membership in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, SCO. Raeisi said Iran’s access to the SCO linked the country to the economic infrastructure of Asia and that all economic activists should avail themselves of this potential.

He added that Iran has a good capacity for increasing exports to the region, including neighboring countries.

Raeisi said Iran’s current economic standing in regional trade is not good, adding that strengthening ties with neighboring and regional countries is a priority and “I want all economic activists to be ready for a different movement in economic and trade ties in the region”.

Asked about his appointment of a special envoy for Afghanistan and Iran’s stance on the developments in the war-ravaged country, Raeisi said, “As we have said before, we support the formation of an inclusive government with the participation of all ethnic groups in Afghanistan”.

He however noted that, apart from the need to create a broad-based government, what matters now is the presence of the Daesh terror group in Afghanistan as a creation of the US.

The president said this “US-made group” is destabilizing Afghanistan but our strategy regarding Afghanistan is to establish unity and stability there. Raeisi noted that Deash is sowing sedition in different countries including Afghanistan.

He also urged Afghanistan’s rulers to stand up to the terrorist group’s crimes against the Afghan people.

Iran parl. speaker calls for closer economic ties with Venezuela

“It is the duty of the governments and parliaments of Iran and Venezuela to pave the way for the expansion of cooperation by bringing the private sectors of the two countries closer together,” Ghalibaf said in a meeting with Venezuelan Foreign Minister Felix Plasencia in Tehran on Monday evening.

“Political ties between the two countries are at a good level, so we should try to strengthen economic relations accordingly; although the long distance has made it (boosting economic ties) a bit difficult… problems can be solved,” the Iranian parliament speaker told the visiting Venezuelan foreign minister.

Ghalibaf referred to the experiences of the Islamic Republic in countering sanctions imposed by the United States against Iranians stressing that Tehran and Caracas should boost cooperation in the fields of tourism, agriculture, technical services and engineering.

The Venezuelan foreign minister said Caracas is interested in strengthening economic relations with Tehran adding that a meeting of the joint economic commission of Iran and Venezuela in the coming months will help strengthen bilateral economic ties.

EU: Iran nuclear deal at ‘critical point’

“We are at a critical point in time for the JCPOA. Everybody is determined to bring the JCPOA on track,” Borrell stated in reference to the troubled 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

“Time is not on their side,” he added.

The top diplomat noted there would be no nuclear talks between EU and Iranian diplomats in Brussels on Thursday.

Earlier in the day, Borrell had stated he hoped EU and Iranian diplomats would meet soon to discuss a potential return to nuclear negotiations.

A senior EU official said last week Iran was not ready yet to return to actual talks with world powers over its nuclear programme and related U.S. sanctions but could discuss with the EU in Brussels texts that would later be put forward.

“No confirmation yet, but things are getting better and I am hopeful we will have preparatory meetings in Brussels in the days to come,” Borrell stated in Luxembourg as he arrived for an EU foreign ministers meeting, adding, “You never know, I am more optimistic today than yesterday”.

On Monday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said the Thursday talks between Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri and EU official Enrique Mora in Tehran were good and constructive.

Talking to reports during his weekly briefing on Monday, Khatibzadeh added that Bagheri conveyed Iran’s message to the coordinator of the negotiations and the two sides agreed to continue talks in Brussels in the next few days. He noted that this agreement was bilateral.

Khatibzadeh said in Brussels, Iran and the other parties must hold talks over the challenges and obstacles they failed to resolve in Vienna.

The spokesman added that the talks will be pursued by the Foreign Ministry and the members of the negotiating team will be introduced.

He noted that the meeting in Brussels will be the continuation of the talks over issues raised in Tehran.

Khatibzadeh said the continuation of talks by Iran is a final decision, adding that Iran insists all sides return to full compliance with the nuclear deal unconditionally and under UN Security Council Resolution 2231 and all anti-Iran sanctions be lifted.

He also referred to the Joe Biden administration’s failure to make good on its promise to go down a different path than that taken by former US president Donald Trump.