12 Aug, 03:00
Press review: Kursk fighting moves Belarus to action and nations line up for BRICS summit
- Fighting continues in Russia’s Kursk Region, forcing Belarus to send reinforcements to the border with Ukraine;
- BRICS members and other countries announce plans to attend the group’s summit in Russia; and
- protesters rally against lithium mining in Serbia.
Vedomosti: Fighting continues in Russia’s Kursk Region
"The US understands that it’s getting closer and closer to a red line. Washington is concerned that the issue of assistance to Kiev may move beyond funding, affecting US national security," Kortunov said.
The deployment of additional Belarusian troops to the Ukrainian border will not necessarily lead to an immediate escalation, Nikolay Mezhevich, head of the Center for Belarusian Studies at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Europe, said. However, Minsk is not convinced that Ukraine will exercise common sense and refrain from sparking a conflict with Belarus, too. The measures that Minsk has taken to strengthen the border are based on the principle of "reasonable sufficiency," Vyacheslav Sutyrin, director of the Center for Science Diplomacy and Promising Academic Initiatives at Moscow State Institute of International Relations’ Institute for International Studies, stressed. The Belarusian leadership wants to show that it remains on its toes, seeking to avoid an escalation of tensions. Minsk is ready to defend itself but also to de-escalate the situation on the border, particularly through political means, the expert concluded.
Izvestia: Countries confirm plans to attend Russia-hosted BRICS summit
Laying down a joint payment mechanism will be a key discussion topic at the summit, which is going to be the final event of Russia’s BRICS Presidency, said Viktoria Panova, who heads an expert council tasked with overseeing Russia’s presidency. "Active efforts are underway to create a financial payment mechanism that would make cooperation between BRICS countries easier, maintaining their sovereign trade and economic exchanges. This issue tops the agenda because every member of the group sees it as important," the expert said.
Other issues that are expected to be touched upon at the summit include regional conflicts and counterterrorism, the expert went on to say. "BRICS has established itself as a comprehensive mechanism for political cooperation. All of the group’s countries are responsible members of the international community, which is why we are concerned not only about the conflicts taking place in Eurasia but also about what is happening in the Middle East and other parts of the world," Panova noted.
Media: Protesters rally against lithium mining in Serbia
A series of protests began in Serbia in late July, sparked by the government’s decision to restore the British-Australian mining company Rio Tinto Group's license to develop Europe’s largest lithium deposit, worth an estimated $2.4 bln. The license was suspended in 2022 under pressure from environmental activists, who argued that the environmental costs of lithium mining outweighed the project's potential economic benefits. However, in mid-July, Vucic and the European Union’s authorities signed a memorandum of understanding, focusing on raw materials including lithium.
Serbian demonstrators are protesting against the neo-colonial practice of exploiting the natural resources of peripheral countries, Anastasia Maleshevich, researcher with the Institute for International Studies at Moscow State Institute of International Relations, pointed out. In her opinion, the environmental risks related to mining Rio Tinto are very high, while the West is clearly lobbying for the project: "Its implementation is literally being linked to talks on Belgrade’s accession to the EU." According to Maleshevich, President Vucic has found himself in a situation where he actually cannot directly say no to his Western partners. However, he can use his people’s discontent in order to reduce external political pressure.
Meanwhile, although Vucic has pointed to "the threat of a color revolution" in relation to the protests, the current situation is lacking the key feature of a color revolution, that being Western backing of the protests, Nezavisimaya Gazeta notes. This is easy to explain: the rallies are actually aimed at undermining a project that the European Union needs. In fact, the Rio Tinto project is directed against Moscow and Beijing. Russia has rather large undeveloped lithium reserves, while China is the global leader in lithium processing. So the West will not support the protests, unless the Serbian president goes too far in dispersing the demonstrators, an unlikely scenario.
Vedomosti: Iran unlikely to change course after forming new government
Pezeshkian has nominated Strategic Council on Foreign Relations Secretary Abbas Araghchi for foreign minister. Araghchi served as deputy foreign minister in 2017-21 and led Iran’s delegation in talks on the nuclear deal. Deputy Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces Aziz Nasirzadeh, who used to command the Air Force, has been nominated for defense minister. Both Araghchi and Nasirzadeh earlier visited Russia.
Vladimir Sazhin, senior researcher at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Oriental Studies, points out that "what Pezeshkian has proposed is by no means final because as with previous governments, parliament never approves every candidate." The expert does not rule out that part of the new cabinet will be made up of Pezeshkian’s liberally-oriented supporters, while the other part will consist of conservative politicians close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
However, Sazhin notes that Iran’s government cannot pursue an independent policy as its main job is to achieve the economic goals set out by Khamenei, meaning there will be no fundamental change in the country’s policy. "Still, the appointment of a new top diplomat may lead to efforts to resume dialogue with the US, restore trade and economic ties with the European Union and launch the process of resolving the issue of sanctions," Sazhin stressed.
The ministerial candidates proposed by Pezeshkian can generally be described as reformers, but any dissenters will be tossed aside in the approval process, said Yevdokia Dobreva, senior laboratory researcher with the Center for Middle East Studies at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of World Economy and International Relations. She points out that Washington is unlikely to change its stance on Tehran, while Iran will remain a de facto military and logistics partner for Russia, which eliminates any chance of sanctions being lifted.
Kommersant: Russia increases aluminum exports to Asia
According to the AlCircle website, South Korea recorded the world’s highest per capita demand for aluminum in 2023, which was driven by the needs of automobile and electrical companies.
A market source told the newspaper that the increase in aluminum exports to Asian nations makes it possible for Russia to redirect some of the supplies that it used to send to the US and Europe. The US introduced prohibitive duties on Russian aluminum in March 2023, while the US and the UK jointly banned the import of aluminum, copper and nickel from Russia in April 2024. The source says that although the EU has not banned Russian aluminum yet, Brussels keeps talking about abandoning its imports.
Russia’s Rusal producer exports most of its aluminum. In 2023, South Korea became the company’s second-largest foreign market in terms of revenue. Revenues from China rose 2.5-fold, while proceeds from the European and US markets dropped by 40%. Kommersant’s market source expects Russian aluminum exports to China to grow further based on Beijing’s friendly ties with Russia and the size of China’s market.
TASS is not responsible for the material quoted in these press reviews
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