• @postmeridiem@lemmy.antemeridiem.xyz
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    281 year ago

    Dual-use goods

    Such goods are classified as dual-use, meaning they also have civilian purposes, allowing China to skirt international sanctions and claim that it conducts only legal trade with Russia

    The “international sanctions” btw:

    You can’t just unilaterally decree someone can’t be traded dual use goods

    • @YeeHaw@beehaw.org
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      61 year ago

      Those are pretty international, y’know. What would your criteria be for calling sanctions international?

      • @postmeridiem@lemmy.antemeridiem.xyz
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        51 year ago

        A large majority of the world engaging in sanctions and not the usual suspects regularly framed in the press as the “international community.” It’s framed that way to imply that the entire world is doing it besides a few “rogue states” like China, North Korea or Venezuela, as if they were handed down by the UN or the world is united in agreement with the western sanctions regime. What would be far more accurate than “international sanctions” would be “western sanctions.”

        For a more immediate example of how framing effects perception, look at all the people in this thread upset about China giving Russia weapons. No weapons are listed, just drones, helicopters, and metals. Upon opening the article you’ll see the drones arrived before the war and are presumably consumer electronics, and there are six undefined types of helicopters. Some posters even mentioned attack helicopters, as if the Telegraph would not be screaming about attack helicopters and not helicopters if that was the case.

        It’s a complete nothingburger and like all nothingburgers it plays with language to let you fill in the gaps using the context they have provided. Russia is being “armed” with some consumer drones, six personal helicopters, and metal, and the whole world is in uproar about it.

        • @YeeHaw@beehaw.org
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          71 year ago

          But, this is about as international as sanctions get. These are among the largest sanctions in history, in fact. Under your definition, no such thing as international sanctions ever happened. And the word “international” doesn’t imply global, planetary or a majority.

          • @postmeridiem@lemmy.antemeridiem.xyz
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            41 year ago

            But, this is about as international as sanctions get.

            Not true, North Korea is sanctioned by everyone via the UNSC with more specific sanctions from other countries and bodies like the EU.

            And the word “international” doesn’t imply global, planetary or a majority.

            Right, when they say the international sanctions by the international community they’re definitely not trying to imply anything. I wonder in that case what they mean when they mention the rules based international order.