2021
April
28
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 28, 2021
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TODAY’S INTRO

A space harvest of homegrown veggies, and more

Father, aerospace engineer, and astronaut Michael Hopkins returns to Earth Saturday after six months aboard the International Space Station. And Colonel Hopkins can now add “space gardener” to his résumé. 

While orbiting our planet at about 17,100 miles per hour, the American astronaut has grown two varieties of lettuce, Amara mustard and extra dwarf pak choi. 

The space station crew recently finished savoring the last of the pak choi as a warm side dish, marinated in soy sauce and garlic. Apart from giving astronauts a delicious break from food in a tube, NASA is learning how to grow pick-and-eat crops to feed crews on multiyear Mars missions. 

NASA has worked with 230 U.S. middle and high school science classes to select seeds that will thrive in a microgravity garden. Previous space station crews have grown radishes, soybeans, and wheat (which grew 10% taller in space). 

But NASA has another motivation, which echoes why so many people stuck at home on Spaceship Earth have been growing veggies during the pandemic: Gardening feeds the soul. It nourishes a sense of hope. And there’s something inherently therapeutic about caring for another life form. 

“Even though astronauts can’t run to the supermarket for fresh produce during a two-year mission to Mars, they could float into a module that has the same smell and feel of the produce section,” Colonel Hopkins says. “And that will put a smile on any astronaut’s face.”

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Afghanistan has changed. What if exiled Taliban have not?

Our reporter finds there’s little optimism in the future of women’s rights or democracy in Afghanistan with the planned U.S. withdrawal from the South Asian nation. 

Rahmat Gul/AP
An Afghan National Army soldier searches a man at a checkpoint on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, April 17, 2021.
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As the United States prepares to remove its troops from Afghanistan, ending America’s longest war, the Islamist Taliban are signaling uncompromising positions that appear to barely recognize the dramatic social and political changes in Afghanistan since the U.S. ousted the self-proclaimed “Islamic Emirate” two decades ago.

It raises questions about the danger to Afghanistan posed by a Taliban leadership – returning after years in exile – equipped with thinking that analysts say is often still-calcified from a previous era.

The Taliban’s Voice of Jihad website is among those raising red flags about the Taliban’s post-U.S.-withdrawal intentions. An article posted Wednesday, for example, titled “Feminism as colonial tool,” suggests that feminism for decades justified “invasion, subjugation and bullying of Muslims.”

Also emblematic of the Taliban’s unwavering stance is their insistence on the term “Islamic Emirate” throughout their negotiations with the U.S.

The Taliban “want everything, even this ‘Islamic Emirate,’ which could be changed to anything and doesn’t carry any value. But just to prove their point, they’re even sticking to that,” says Rahmatullah Amiri, a Kabul-based analyst. “If I am not willing to change even the name, which is superficial, why would I be willing to change the content?”

Afghanistan has changed. What if exiled Taliban have not?

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The Taliban are set to reclaim some power in Afghanistan – if not orchestrate their own wholesale military takeover – as remaining U.S. forces prepare to withdraw and end America’s longest war by Sept. 11.

In the interim, a peace deal between the Taliban and the Afghan government in Kabul remains elusive, and the Taliban are gearing up for their annual spring offensive – even promising “every necessary countermeasure” against the United States for ignoring a May 1 pullout deadline that the militants agreed to in February 2020 with then-President Donald Trump.

It’s a vow that fits a pattern of uncompromising Taliban positions that appear to barely recognize – or to directly oppose – the dramatic social and political changes in Afghanistan since the U.S. ousted the Taliban’s self-proclaimed “Islamic Emirate” two decades ago.

And it raises questions about the danger to Afghanistan today posed by a Taliban leadership – returning after years in exile – equipped with thinking that analysts say is often still-calcified from a previous era.

Afghans have seen the results of out-of-touch outsiders returning from exile to rule, analysts say, in 1992 when faction chiefs long exiled in Peshawar, Pakistan, battled for control after the fall of President Mohammad Najibullah.

The result was a devastating civil war, further civilian exodus, and the fragmentation of the country by feuding warlords, a chaotic period that eventually gave rise to the Islamist Taliban, who seized control and ruled from 1996 to 2001.

To achieve their aims at the time, the Taliban used a heavy hand and imposed their strict interpretation of Islam – including unbending rules limiting the role of women and banning girls’ education, enforcing long beards, and even forbidding all music and photographic images of people.

There are some signs that the Taliban have evolved in their thinking, to accommodate changes in Afghanistan. But there are many other signs that echo a previous, violent era – from an assassination campaign that in recent months has killed scores of journalists, civil society activists, and government officials, to Taliban propaganda declaring continued jihad against the Western-backed Afghan government and “victory” over a superpower.

The Taliban’s Voice of Jihad website is among those that raise red flags for Afghan activists about the Taliban’s post-U.S.-withdrawal intentions. An article posted Wednesday, for example, titled “Feminism as colonial tool,” suggests that feminism for decades justified “invasion, subjugation and bullying of Muslims.”

“Western cries of ‘women’s rights’ appear a harmless demand,” the Taliban author states. “But when coupled with the incompatibility of much of these rights with the Islamic religion, their destructive effects on human society … and the dangerous agendas for Muslim societies curtained behind them, a more sinister perspective emerges.”

Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP
Former Afghan President Hamid Karzai (second from left) looks as members of the Taliban delegation arrive at an international peace conference in Moscow, March 18, 2021. Russia hosted the peace conference, bringing together Afghan government representatives and their Taliban adversaries along with regional observers in a bid to help jump-start the country's stalled peace process.

Also emblematic of the Taliban’s unwavering stance is their insistence on the term “Islamic Emirate,” the name of its regime in the late 1990s.

The Taliban “want everything, even this ‘Islamic Emirate,’ which could be changed to anything and doesn’t carry any value. But just to prove their point, they’re even sticking to that,” says Rahmatullah Amiri, a Kabul-based analyst who closely studies the Taliban.

“Imagine, if in these two years of this hardcore negotiation [with the U.S.], the Taliban didn’t even change that, which they can change in a minute,” says Mr. Amiri. “If I am not willing to change even the name, which is superficial, why would I be willing to change the content?”

American acquiescence is evident in the 2020 U.S.-Taliban deal, which refers 16 times to the Taliban with the unwieldy phrase “the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan which is not recognized by the United States as a state and is known as the Taliban.”

Taliban insistence on “Emirate,” without clarifying its import, even prompted a rare joint rebuke by the U.S., Russia, China, and Pakistan, who stated in March they “did not support the restoration of the Islamic Emirate.”

“Bringing back people who have been outside of the country for a long time, and who are ideologues, is a recipe for disaster,” said Thomas Barfield, professor of anthropology at Boston University and president of the American Institute of Afghanistan Studies, in a recent webinar.

“It looks like we are going to make the same mistake as in 1992, and invite some of these Taliban who have not seen Afghanistan for 20 years,” said Professor Barfield. “The Afghanistan that they remember no longer exists. It doesn’t. If they fly into Kabul, that is not a recognizable city from the ruins they left, nor is the population, its education, its communications.”

“These are not exactly people who are prone to compromise, or who even understand what Afghanistan’s problems are going to be,” said Professor Barfield.

Already, those challenging characteristics have marked the Trump-Taliban deal. The February 2020 agreement required mandatory withdrawal dates for U.S. and NATO forces, but few concrete commitments by the Taliban, other than preventing Afghan soil from being used for terrorist attacks abroad, severing ties with Al Qaeda, and not attacking foreign forces.

The Taliban also committed to “start” intra-Afghan peace talks, with a cease-fire “on the agenda.” Yet since signing the deal – and despite an unwritten promise to reduce violence by 80%, according to the U.S. side – the Taliban have kept up attacks on Afghan forces.

This month the Taliban refused to attend a U.S.-initiated conference in Turkey meant to jump-start the intra-Afghan peace talks that have stalled for months in Doha, Qatar.

Sapidar Palace/AP
Abdullah Abdullah, chairman of the High Council for National Reconciliation (center right), walks with Secretary of State Antony Blinken at the Sapidar Palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, April 15, 2021. Mr. Blinken visited to sell Afghan leaders and a wary public on President Joe Biden's decision to withdraw all American troops from the country.

With President Joe Biden affirming that the U.S. withdrawal will proceed, administration officials publicly are shrugging off concerns for the Afghan government.

“I do not believe the government is going to collapse or the Taliban is going to take over,” U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Tuesday. The Pentagon reportedly plans to send a 650-strong force in coming days to “protect” the pullout of some 2,500 U.S. and 7,000 other NATO troops.

Yet the annual U.S. intelligence analysis of global threats, published earlier this month, takes a darker view.

Prospects for a peace deal “will remain low” for the next year, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence assessed. The Afghan government “will struggle to hold the Taliban at bay if the coalition withdraws support,” it noted. And while Kabul continues to face battlefield setbacks, “the Taliban is confident it can achieve military victory.”

That is not news to Afghanistan analysts, who point to high Taliban expectations of triumph, expressed in a steady barrage of statements. Responding on April 15 to President Biden’s declaration of the September withdrawal date, for example, the Taliban said U.S. “warmongering circles have failed,” and that the Taliban “will under no circumstance ever relent on … establishment of a pure Islamic system.”

Taliban fighters have been promised complete military victory. The Taliban’s supposed partner for peace – the Western-backed government of President Ashraf Ghani – is “corrupt and illegitimate” and “must be replaced with an Islamic government.”

Meanwhile, years of increasingly effective insurgency already have brought the Taliban to control or have influence over more than half of Afghanistan today. They say their emirate was “taken from them” in 2001, and that victory now means their emirate must be given back, completely, says Mr. Amiri, the Kabul-based analyst.

“The issue with the Taliban being so stubborn is that there’s no peak to Taliban success,” he adds, noting that most insurgencies reach a point where they recognize that “this is all we can do.” But for the Taliban, “every year they get more territory, they get more success … so that makes it quite challenging.”

Yet even if an unconditional U.S. departure removes the leverage of foreign troops, other pressure points remain, including the Taliban’s long-standing desire for international recognition and sanctions relief.

“The enemy gets a vote on the battlefield, but not in the Security Council,” says Barnett Rubin, a former senior adviser on Afghanistan to U.S. and United Nations envoys, in an analysis written last month for the United States Institute of Peace.

There are nevertheless limits, notes Mr. Rubin, now at New York University, to how much influence diplomatic pressure can have.

Being “accepted as partners in ruling Afghanistan” would require them to “make difficult decisions that they have thus far avoided,” he says. “Negotiations … over a future political road map for the country cannot succeed if the Taliban behave as they did in the 1990s.”

Biden redefined ‘bipartisan.’ GOP moderates say it leaves them out.

What does it mean to be “bipartisan”? So far, the Biden administration defines it as including Republican ideas in a bill, even if there are no GOP votes for it. But our reporter finds GOP lawmakers expect a more “sincere” partnership.

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On the campaign trail, Joe Biden promised to be a president for all Americans – reaching across the aisle and tempering the
progressive left. But in his first three months in office, President Biden has been pushing through an ambitious agenda that expands the reach of government in many areas, so far without any Republican votes. 

The White House is calling its approach “bipartisan” because it incorporates some Republican ideas and has garnered approval from some Republican voters, mayors, and governors. They point to polls showing the general popularity of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, which gave most Americans stimulus checks and infused state and local governments with funding. 

This redefinition of bipartisanship has cheered progressives, who say GOP obstructionism has held Congress hostage for
too long. But it has frustrated Republican senators with a track record of bipartisan cooperation.

“It discourages a lot of us because we want to work with them,” says Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, one of 10 GOP senators courted by the White House. He’ll be listening as President Biden addresses Congress tonight – and watching closely in the weeks to come. “Words matter,” he says, “but action matters more.”

Biden redefined ‘bipartisan.’ GOP moderates say it leaves them out.

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Alex Brandon/AP/File
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer celebrate after signing the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 10, 2021. The bill was popular with voters, but did not win any Republican votes in the Senate.

The last time Joe Biden gave a big speech on Capitol Hill, moderate Republican lawmakers were buoyed by what they heard. The newly sworn-in president might be a Democrat, but he had spent 36 years in the Senate. He understood Congress and how deals were done. On that blustery January day, as their former colleague talked of unity, hopes for bipartisan cooperation soared.

Tonight, as President Biden marks nearly 100 days in office with an address to a joint session of Congress, many Republicans are far more wary. Some say they feel rebuffed – or worse, like they’ve been used as window dressing for a White House that has no genuine interest in bipartisanship. 

“The administration should be on notice that the Lucy-and-the-football play can’t be run too many more times until people stop playing football with the administration,” says Sen. Todd Young of Indiana, one of 10 GOP moderates courted by the White House.

Mr. Biden’s campaign promise to be a president for all Americans – one who wanted results, not a revolution – set him apart from primary rivals like Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. He was Uncle Joe, the genial dealmaker who would turn down the temperature in Washington and temper the policy ambitions of the progressive left. 

But in his first three months in office, he has been pushing through an ambitious agenda that expands the reach of government on everything from manufacturing to health insurance – so far without any Republican votes. “All of the sudden he’s trying to outdo FDR and LBJ combined,” says one GOP Senate aide, speaking on background.

The White House has called this approach “bipartisan” because it has incorporated some Republican ideas and garnered the support of some Republican voters, mayors, and governors.  

Andrew Harnik/AP
White House press secretary Jen Psaki speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, April 15, 2021.

“Bipartisanship is not determined by a single ZIP code in Washington, D.C.,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said at a briefing last month. “It’s about where the American people sit and stand.”

Allies on the left are championing this redefinition of bipartisanship as a breakthrough. They say it will allow them to finally get things done for the American people and not be held hostage by GOP senators demanding compromise before they will sign onto legislation – something Democrats contend led to many “Lucy-and-the-football” moments for their side during the Obama years. Under this concept of “Main Street bipartisanship,” the White House points to polls showing the general popularity of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, which gave most Americans a $1,400 stimulus check and infused state and local governments with funding after a rough year. 

“We consider that a huge framing victory,” says Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which has advanced the concept of Main Street bipartisanship. “It takes away all the leverage that [Senate Minority Leader] Mitch McConnell has.”

But Republicans warn that Democrats are misreading the broader political environment, and say that if the White House continues to shut GOP lawmakers out, they could be courting a backlash in the 2022 midterms. GOP pollster Bill McInturff has found that Republican antipathy toward Mr. Biden is nearly equivalent to that of Democratic voters toward former President Donald Trump at about this time in his presidency. The difference – for now at least – is independent voters, who view Mr. Biden more favorably than they did Mr. Trump. 

Political realities in Congress may also impel a change in approach. With the COVID-19 relief bill, Mr. Biden and his Senate allies relied on a fast-track mechanism that allows Democrats to pass budget-related bills with only a simple majority rather than the usual 60-vote threshold. But it can only be used a handful of times.

“They have the votes and so therefore they didn’t need us,” says Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who called Mr. Biden’s efforts at bipartisanship on COVID-19 relief “totally insincere.”

“I think if they need votes, they’ll be sincere.”

“No genuine outreach”

Senators Cassidy and Young were among 10 Republicans whom President Biden invited to the White House for what the senators thought would be earnest negotiations. They felt the president genuinely listened to their ideas, and said he seemed receptive toward their proposal for a $618 billion package that focused more narrowly on specific forms of COVID-19 relief, including funding for testing and vaccination, and limited stimulus payments to people in a slightly lower income range. 

The very next day, Democrats announced they would be proceeding with their $1.9 trillion bill through the fast-track process, known as budget reconciliation. They wouldn’t need a single GOP vote.

“There was no genuine outreach or working together. It discourages a lot of us because we want to work with them,” says Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, who was part of the meeting. 

Evan Vucci/AP
President Joe Biden speaks during a Cabinet meeting in the White House in Washington, April 1, 2021. From left, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Mr. Biden, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. Mr. Biden will mark his 100th day in office on April 29.

While he says it was “courageous” of Mr. Biden to run a primary campaign on promises of working with Republicans and Democrats alike and getting back to a truly bipartisan style of governing, he adds, “We just haven’t seen it yet.”

Last week, the Democratic National Committee pointed to a poll showing that 70% of Americans support the American Rescue Plan, including 48% of Republicans and 73% of independents, though other polls have shown considerably lower support. GOP mayors from Arizona to Michigan also welcomed the initiative. Not one of the Senate’s 50 Republicans – whom Democrats have criticized as obstructionist at a time of urgent need amid a pandemic and related economic downturn – voted for the COVID-19 relief bill.

Senate Democrats say the COVID-19 bill actually included elements proposed by Republicans, such as Mississippi Sen. Roger Wicker’s Restaurant Revitalization Fund, and is popular with many Republicans across the country. If Republican senators as a whole ultimately decided not to support the bill, that was a political calculation, says Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia.

“If the content includes significant chunks of legislation that were bipartisan; if it’s popular with Republicans; if Republican stakeholders, mayors, and governors, U.S. Chamber of Commerce like it – then, yeah, I think it is bipartisan,” says Senator Kaine. “I don’t think Biden gets held responsible for [Republicans’] strategic call” to oppose it.

Now Mr. Biden has unveiled a $2.2 trillion infrastructure and jobs plan, which Republicans have panned as another liberal wish list since only about 15% of it would go toward traditional forms of infrastructure like roads, bridges, ports, and water systems. Tonight, he is expected to unveil a $1.8 trillion American Families Plan.

When asked earlier this month if he will have failed on his promise of bipartisanship if he can’t get Republicans on board with his infrastructure plan, Mr. Biden reiterated that he was willing to work with them. As evidence, he pointed to his meeting with the 10 GOP senators on the COVID-19 bill, saying he would have been willing to arrive at a compromise but that the senators proposing a more modest package “didn’t move an inch. Not an inch.”

The comment – made publicly, by the president himself – stung. 

“It’s like someone spitting in your face and then telling the world that it rained on you,” says another GOP Senate aide, speaking on background. 

Glimmers of cooperation, on some issues

To be sure, not all hope is lost for bipartisan cooperation. Both Mr. Biden and Senate Republicans continue to voice support for the idea, and bipartisan discussions are taking place on guns and infrastructure. Democratic Sen. Mazie Hirono’s recent bill to address hate crimes against Asian Americans passed the Senate 94-1 after nearly two weeks of bipartisan discussions. Senator Hirono credited GOP Sen. Susan Collins of Maine with helping her to broaden support for the bill while retaining its core purpose.

Democratic Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, who filled Mr. Biden’s seat in the Senate when the latter became vice president and is a close ally, says the president’s calls for bipartisanship are not only genuine but imperative.

“Joe Biden has served in this body 36 years. He understands, better than anybody, that durable solutions are bipartisan solutions,” says Senator Coons, noting that the former vice president also dealt with GOP obstruction to President Barack Obama’s agenda. “So he actually understands ... both how hard it is to make progress in the face of partisan division, and how important it is.”

Many GOP senators say they’re willing to work across the aisle. If the administration sincerely wants to unify the public around common policy priorities, “then I will be on the front lines of that effort,” says Senator Young, who is working on a bipartisan bill with Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to keep America competitive vis-à-vis China. But, he adds, “If this is window dressing for a profligate spending spree that our children and grandchildren will be paying off, this United States senator will cease to take any part in it, in fairly short order.”

And they say they will be listening carefully as Mr. Biden delivers his address tonight. 

“I want to hear him outline clearly a commitment to bipartisanship in pursuing the remainder of his agenda,” said Senator Collins in a statement to the Monitor, adding that she liked the president’s inaugural address but has yet to see those calls for unity put into practice. “I want to see him pledge to be the unifier that he promised us he would be, and outline specific steps on how he plans to accomplish that.”

Senator Portman also expressed hope that the speech would address bipartisanship.

“But,” he adds, “I’ll be much more interested in seeing what actually happens. Words matter, but action matters more.”

Patterns

Tracing global connections

America is back. But for how long, the world wonders.

Trust is the foundation of a partnership. Our columnist observes renewed U.S. leadership on climate issues is warily welcomed. But are America’s commitments reliable or will they vanish with the next election?

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One hundred days after his inauguration, President Joe Biden is keeping his election promise to restore America’s international leadership. But the rest of the world, friend and foe alike, is still not convinced that attitude will live on beyond his term in office.

The Republican Party is still dominated by Donald Trump, who pulled Washington back from its international engagement during his presidency. Midterm congressional elections in 18 months and another presidential election two years later mean Mr. Trump’s influence could hold sway once more.

Mr. Biden is steaming ahead on the international front, hosting a summit last week to reinvigorate the Paris Agreement on climate change, and heading in June to the Group of Seven summit in Britain and to a NATO meeting in Brussels.

But he has yet to lay firm foundations for this activism, and they will require bipartisan support at home. Only if he succeeds in another of his inaugural priorities, healing domestic divisions and bringing his country together, will U.S. allies be reassured that “America is back” – for good.

America is back. But for how long, the world wonders.

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Mustafa Kamaci/Turkish Presidency/AP
World leaders virtually attend the opening session of the Leaders Summit on Climate, called by President Joe Biden to raise global ambition on climate change. The new U.S. leader has reversed many of his predecessor's foreign policies, but will need bipartisan consensus on America's world role to make his legacy stick.

President Joe Biden’s first 100 days is a landmark that’s drawing attention abroad, as well as at home. And the signs are that friend and foe alike have concluded that he is delivering what he pledged when he took office: reengaging America as a leading force on the international stage.

Yet there’s an elephant in the room. Quite literally, because the elephant in question is the symbol of America’s Republican Party – still in the grip of former President Donald Trump, who took a very different view of foreign affairs. With midterm congressional elections just 18 months away, and another presidential vote two years later, both allies and rivals are keenly aware that America’s new engagement and leadership may not be set in stone.

The seismic shift Mr. Biden has already effected was vividly on show last week when he hosted some 40 world leaders at a virtual summit to reinvigorate the 2015 Paris Agreement on combating climate change. Mr. Trump dismissed human-made global warming as a hoax, and pulled the U.S. out of the Paris accord.

Allies were especially effusive in welcoming the new president’s approach. German Chancellor Angela Merkel professed herself “delighted to see that the United States is back to work together with us.” Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi declared, “It’s a complete change. Now we are confident that together we will win this challenge.”

Even potential holdouts were supportive. Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro, a fulsome admirer of Mr. Trump, praised President Biden for convening the meeting. In the wake of considerable pre-summit diplomacy by U.S. officials, he announced a new commitment to rein in deforestation in the Amazon.

Equally striking were remarks from the leaders of America’s main rivals, China and Russia. Neither Chinese leader Xi Jinping nor Russian President Vladimir Putin touched on the major areas of tension with the Biden administration, which had some pundits predicting they might not show up at all. Instead, they pledged support for the international cooperation on climate change that Mr. Biden was hoping to galvanize.

The only sting in the tail? Mr. Xi’s pointed allusion to Mr. Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris Agreement. Cooperation on climate change, he said, hinged on the assumption that “we must honor commitments, not go back on promises.”

The question that comment raised – the “elephant in the room” question on everyone’s minds – was whether a future American administration might not reverse course again.

Because the lesson other countries have drawn from the past two U.S. administrations is that America’s appetite for leadership, even for sustained involvement in the wider world, may ultimately hinge on the course of domestic U.S. politics.

To some degree, that’s always been true. “America first” isolationism has ebbed and flowed for more than a century: dogging President Woodrow Wilson’s failed effort to champion the League of Nations after World War I, challenging Franklin D. Roosevelt’s support for America’s entry into World War II, and questioning the role of America as the nascent superpower after that war.

Nevertheless, U.S. engagement and leadership enjoyed bipartisan backing throughout the Cold War, in a consensus that generally held until the turn of the 21st century.

What particularly unsettled U.S. allies about Mr. Trump’s administration was its unprecedented lurch away from foreign-policy-as-usual. It wasn’t so much any one particular policy change as the active denigration of long-standing partnerships and withdrawals from international agreements in which Washington had played a leading role.

Can foreign policy bipartisanship be rekindled? Perhaps. That’s actually been happening on two top-priority foreign policy issues: U.S. relations with China and Russia. Yet in areas like climate change, not so much, at least not yet.

The deeper challenge for Biden’s next 100 days, and beyond, is whether U.S. foreign policy can be insulated from bitter partisan battles over domestic politics.

In other words, whether Mr. Biden succeeds in another of his inaugural priorities: healing divisions at home and bringing the country closer together.

In the meantime, on the world stage, he is steaming ahead, cementing his commitment to active international reengagement. He’ll be going to Britain in June for the summit of the Group of Seven, made up of economically developed countries. Then he’ll head to Brussels to meet NATO leaders. The U.S. is also emerging as a key player in preparations for the Paris follow-up conference on climate change to be hosted by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson later this year.

He is leaving rivals like China and Russia, and less reliable allies such as Brazil and Turkey, in no doubt as to Washington’s new international resolve. Mr. Bolsonaro experienced that firsthand, in the form of U.S. pressure before last week’s climate summit to deliver a tangible commitment to tackle a problem he has long played down.

A few days ago, Mr. Biden sent a similar political message to Turkey, which has angered the U.S. and other NATO partners by purchasing anti-aircraft batteries from Russia. The U.S. president broke a decadeslong taboo, and ignored Turkish political sensitivities, when he explicitly referred to the Turks’ early-20th-century massacre of Armenians as genocide.

That comment cannot be unsaid, no matter what follows the Biden administration. But U.S. allies are waiting for more than that. Only when they see Republicans and Democrats agree on America’s role in the world will they be reassured.

Books

‘The Daughters of Kobani’: A chronicle of the women who fought ISIS

For Kurdish women, tradition, culture, and family members often limit their opportunities in life. But this story is about women whose path to gender equality and dignity goes through the battlefields of Syria. 

Rodi Said/Reuters/File
Kurdish female fighters of the Women's Protection Units (YPJ) take part in a military parade as they celebrate victory over the Islamic State, in Qamishli, Syria, on March 28, 2019. Gayle Tzemach Lemmon's “The Daughters of Kobani" introduces readers to the YPJ and their impact on Kurdish society after the war.
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Women in the Syrian Kurdish Women’s Protection Units, or YPJ, fought on the front line against the Islamic State, serving as snipers, tacticians, and battlefield commanders – and leading both men and women into battle.

The women were fighting for their lives against ISIS, true, but also for their own equality.

As Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, author of “The Daughters of Kobani,” explains, YPJ soldiers “tested themselves, day in and day out, against one of the most brutal fighting forces the world has ever seen. They couldn’t separate the political piece from the fighting; without the military victories, the political experiment could not take hold. They believed – as one fighter put it – that ‘if we can lead in battle, we can govern in peace and no one can question that.’”

And they were right. As Ms. Lemmon says, “To watch your family members protect your people from the existential threat of the Islamic State, it really makes you question all the limits that have been placed on women’s lives, because you can see for yourself how much they’re capable of.”

‘The Daughters of Kobani’: A chronicle of the women who fought ISIS

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An American soldier who had served with U.S. Army Rangers in Afghanistan, calling from a brutal war zone, launched Gayle Tzemach Lemmon on her latest book, “The Daughters of Kobani.”

“She said, ‘You have to get here. You have to come see what’s happening.’”

Women in Syria were fighting on the front line against the Islamic State (ISIS), serving as snipers, tacticians, and battlefield commanders. Through the Syrian Kurdish Women’s Protection Units, or YPJ, they were leading both men and women into battle. Some guys didn’t love the idea – at first. But they came around. Most strikingly, says Ms. Lemmon, “was that these women truly had the respect of the men they were commanding.” 

The women were fighting for their lives against ISIS, true, but also for their own equality: The YPJ was created in 2013 with a goal not simply of destroying a brutal terrorist organization, but of building a democratic and egalitarian society – and of defending the women of their region whenever they faced persecution.

Ms. Lemmon spoke with Monitor correspondent Anna Mulrine Grobe.

Q: Talk a bit about what these women’s lives were like before joining the YPJ.

There’s Rojda, whose uncle dressed up like a ghost to try to scare her away from playing soccer in her grandmother’s village, which he considered shameful for girls. She ended up commanding 4,000 soldiers – Arab and Kurdish, men and women – as the commander of the western front line in Raqqa [the capital of ISIS’s self-described caliphate in Syria].

Znarin is another amazing example, a decidedly naive entrant into militia life. She grew up in a conservative family – she’d never before heard the phrase “women’s rights” – but she wanted to go to university and dreamed of being a doctor. When she was 17, her father told her that he didn’t mind her getting an education, but his older brother did. He said, “Your uncle says that’s not for the women in our family.” A couple of years later, she fell in love, but her father comes to her again and says, “I’m sorry, your uncle has already picked out someone for you.” She refused.

She thought, “If I can’t marry the person I love, I’m never going to marry” – which is a huge act of defiance in a traditional society. For her, it was all about choice and dignity.

She goes from being part of a political movement focused on women’s equality to playing this role in the liberation of her hometown from ISIS, and having girls come up to her and see her as a role model. It’s a universal story for so many women – of turning a no into a yes, and rewriting the rules of a life that you didn’t play a part in writing.

Q: Their political inspiration is Abdullah Öcalan, who has been in a Turkish jail since 1999 for fomenting a Kurdish separatist movement. How is he an inspiration to the female fighters, and how is women’s equality central to his teachings? Also, how does a Vermont socialist come to play a role in all this? 

Here is this man, Öcalan, who, for the Syrian Kurds, lives in the public imagination somewhere between Nelson Mandela and George Washington. He came from a poor family of farmers with seven children, including a beloved sister who was married off for some money and several sacks of wheat.

It was central to his teachings that Kurdish society couldn’t be free until women were free. So women’s equality wasn’t on the periphery, as happens so often in politics. In this case, the notion that women should have full and equal rights was at the core of his ideology 

So you have a Kurdish liberation movement leader – Öcalan – who, sitting in prison, reads a former communist turned anarchist turned social ecologist living in Vermont – Murray Bookchin, [who advocated for equality between men and women]. These ideas converge with women at the center in a sliver of land in Syria recognized by no one outside its borders – but catapulted onto the global stage by the United States – because they offer the world’s best hope of stopping ISIS. 

Q: For them it really was an existential battle. If they didn’t win, their lives – literally and metaphorically – would be taken from them. In the midst of battle, they hear ISIS fighters saying over the radio, “Women, surrender,” and another telling a female commander, “I’m going to behead you, Azeema.” In spite of their fear, you write that you’d never seen women more comfortable with power and less apologetic about running things. 

I have thought a lot about the why behind this. They tested themselves, day in and day out, against one of the most brutal fighting forces the world has ever seen. They couldn’t separate the political piece from the fighting; without the military victories, the political experiment could not take hold. They believed – as one fighter put it – that “if we can lead in battle, we can govern in peace and no one can question that.” To win means living in a world where you [don’t] have to survive under the horrors of ISIS and their political structure. And it would also mean showing girls and women around the world what women can do. 

Q: And the YPJ soldiers were closely watched on the world stage. The wives and partners of U.S. special operations teams on the ground in Syria followed their battles on social media, right?

So many people spoke with me about this, because they were so deeply moved by the courage and the heart of these women, including the U.S. special operations forces. One of them said, “At the beginning, I wasn’t sure what it would be like working with them. But their warrior ethos is the same – we kind of want our daughters to be like them.”

It was new for the special operations teams that their families would be following their work in real time and rooting for them. Some of their partners went on social media to learn more about Rojda and the others, and started following them on Twitter and Facebook.

Their families were very much like the American public, watching this David versus Goliath story play out – except that David was a woman. 

Paul A. Hebert/Invision/AP/File
Currently an adjunct senior fellow for women and foreign policy at the Council on Foreign Relations, Gayle Tzemach Lemmon arrives at the International Women’s Media Foundation’s 2013 Courage in Journalism Awards at The Beverly Hills Hotel on Oct. 29, 2013, in Beverly Hills, California.

Q: How did this change the way the men in the region – and within their own families – saw women?

It’s much harder to say women aren’t equal, or women don’t merit equal rights, when you’re watching them put their lives on the line every single day for you. And that camaraderie, respect, and courage on the battlefield is what enabled more of this notion of equality to take hold.

To watch your family members protect your people from the existential threat of the Islamic State, it really makes you question all the limits that have been placed on women’s lives, because you can see for yourself how much they’re capable of.

In the case of Znarin’s uncle [who had forbidden her from attending university], and Rojda’s uncle [who once dressed up like a ghost to keep her from playing soccer], the fact that they now ask their nieces for advice about family and real estate matters – and that they call them friends – says everything. 

Q: You grapple with some questions in your book, like “Does it take violence to stop violence against women? Will real equality be possible only when women take up arms?” What conclusions did you come to about this?

I want readers to contend with these questions. I don’t want to give the answers, because I really hope that they’ll embrace the complexity.

Points of Progress

What's going right

Humans cleaning up, from outer space junk to village ponds

In this week’s cosmic roundup of progress, we find high- and low-tech efforts to fix environmental damage in small Indian communities, Kazakhstan, and outer space. 

Humans cleaning up, from outer space junk to village ponds

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1. United Kingdom

Following a push for more inclusive curricula, the Welsh government will require schools to teach about racism and Black history. A working group found significant evidence of racial inequality in Welsh school systems and an overall lack of information on the contributions of minority communities. Its 51 recommendations include new scholarships to encourage more Black, Asian, and minority ethnic students to become teachers, mandatory anti-racism teacher training, and a requirement that history of these minority communities be part of all subjects. The government has allocated £500,000 ($690,000) to implement the group’s recommendations as part of the updated national curriculum, set to roll out in 2022.

Rebecca Naden/Reuters
Welsh schoolchildren line up on June 29, 2020. Census data shows fewer than 1% of teachers in Wales are from minority ethnic backgrounds.

“If we want a society which is better for all, where there’s equality, and there’s fair representation then we need this,” said Angel Ezeadum, a U.K. Youth Parliament member who campaigned for Black history to be taught in schools across Wales. “It’s massive in terms of shaping who young people are going to be in the future.”
BBC

2. Africa

Young Africans are mobilizing to translate online materials into local languages, helping users access critical information while preserving Indigenous cultures. Although internet access in sub-Saharan Africa has grown rapidly, researchers have noticed persistent usage gaps that contribute to the digital divide. An estimated 3.2 billion people living in 3G+ network areas did not use the internet in 2019, often citing a lack of content available in their own language.

Since 2006, volunteers for the Moleskine Foundation’s WikiAfrica Education program have produced more than 40,000 Wikipedia entries in nearly 20 languages, such as Afrikaans, Dagbani, and Twi. During the pandemic, program coordinators have called on their network of translators across the continent and from the diaspora to translate relevant information from English, French, and Portuguese. Other translation projects, including University of Cambridge researcher Ebele Mogo’s “Found in Translation” website and the United Nations’ multilingual FAQ portal in Nigeria, have emerged specifically to combat COVID-19 misinformation.
Thomson Reuters Foundation, World Economic Forum

3. Kazakhstan

Looking to become a regional leader in clean energy, Kazakhstan has ramped up its emissions targets, aiming to reach carbon neutrality by 2060. As part of this effort, the Central Asian country is looking to boost renewable electricity production 10% by 2030 and 50% by 2050. Many households are already powered by more than 100 solar, biomass, wind, and small hydro plants throughout the country. The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is backing Kazakhstan’s clean energy plan and will collaborate with the government on various decarbonization initiatives.

Pavel Mikheyev/Reuters
Wind turbines, pictured during sunset on Nov. 7, 2020, are producing clean energy in the Almaty region of Kazakhstan.

Arman Kashkinbekov, a board member for the Association of Renewable Energy of Kazakhstan, said the country has already accomplished a lot compared with its neighbors, but the government has adopted the legislation needed to promote clean energy technology and fast-track development: “This is only the beginning of our country’s green story.”
The Astana Times, New Europe

4. India

Joining local knowledge to government support, community-led projects are bringing India’s ponds back to life. Residents of Saligao in the northern Goa state worked together to clean up their nearly dry pond and reintroduce native plant species, ultimately restoring the natural water supply. “It was meant to be a very small initiative that some of us friends were doing but it has grown into something bigger,” said Sharada Kerkar, a member of the citizen’s group called CatcH2o. “We have done five ponds now and keep getting calls to do others.”

Ahmad Masood/Reuters/File
Children sit by a partly dried-out pond in the western state of Gujarat, Aug. 5, 2012. Today, communities across India are working to revive local ponds.

A government think tank has predicted that 40% of the nation’s 1.3 billion population will not have reliable access to drinking water by 2030. The pond revivals coincide with a new program from the Goa wetland authority allocating funds for residents who protect their local ecosystems. To build climate resilience, adaptation experts say a combination of government funding, technical expertise, and community action is necessary.
Thomson Reuters Foundation

5. Vietnam

A critically endangered species of monkey endemic to Vietnam has quadrupled under the protection of the Van Long Nature Reserve, inspiring hope for conservationists. When German primatologist Tilo Nadler first visited the country in the early 1990s, he found only 50 of the Delacour’s langurs. He teamed up with local communities to establish the Van Long Nature Reserve in 2001, and most of the country’s 234 to 275 langurs live there today.

Outside the reserve, the species is still under pressure from poaching and habitat loss, but Van Long’s success gives conservationists a road map for the langurs’ future. Mr. Nadler expects to open a second reserve in 2021 or 2022, in an area north of Van Long where around 30 other Delacour’s langurs currently live, and he wants to relocate primates from unprotected areas to the UNESCO World Heritage Site Trang An.
Mongabay

Outer space

A company in Japan, Astroscale, has launched the first commercial trial of space debris cleanup technology. The project, known as ELSA-d, involves two spacecraft that will perform a series of increasingly complex tasks in low-Earth orbit, showing how satellites could work together to assess the condition of a piece of space junk and drag it back into the atmosphere. They were successfully deployed from a Russian rocket in late March.

Orbiting debris pose a significant threat to working spacecraft. The European Space Agency is currently monitoring about 26,000 such objects. To protect not only the environment but also commercial assets, space organizations must now figure out how to remove them. Demonstration missions like ELSA-d, which is supported by the U.K. Space Agency, are an important step. “Only when you understand the situation can you fix and understand how the factors play against each other, can you really start to think about remediation, and how do we solve the problem going forward,” said Mike Lindsay, chief technology officer at Astroscale.
Spaceflight Now

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Why nations rush to help India

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Now the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic, India has received extraordinary offers of aid from other countries. Even archrival Pakistan made a goodwill gesture to help relieve its neighbor’s unprecedented health crisis. Some aid is being given for political or strategic reasons. Yet look closer and you’ll see another motive at work: an appreciation for India’s past generosity.

Since the coronavirus crisis began last year, India has assisted more than 100 vulnerable countries with supplies and training. Indian officials cite a spiritual basis for such aid in a Hindu term, daan, translated as “charity without motive.” Its open heart has opened the hearts of others.

“It’s time for the world to extend aid & support to India,” tweeted Volkan Bozkir, president of the United Nations General Assembly.

No wonder so many countries now want to assist India. It has graciously accepted much of the aid, with little regard for whether it comes from friend or foe. Such giving is more than a type of mutual-aid society. When done out of gratitude, it also points to a greater good available to all, with no expectation of reciprocity or credit.

Why nations rush to help India

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Reuters
A shipment of medical supplies from the United Kingdom arrives in New Delhi, India, April 27.

Now the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic, India has received extraordinary offers of aid from other countries. Even archrival Pakistan made a goodwill gesture to help relieve its neighbor’s unprecedented health crisis. Some aid is being given for political or strategic reasons. After all, the world’s largest democracy, with 1.3 billion people and the fifth-largest economy, is difficult to ignore. Yet look closer and you’ll see another motive at work: an appreciation for India’s past generosity.

As for its aid, the U.S. says it is simply being grateful. “Just as India sent assistance to the United States as our hospitals were strained early in the pandemic, we are determined to help India in its time of need,” President Joe Biden said in a tweet (India also sent aid after Hurricane Katrina in 2005).

Since the coronavirus crisis began last year, India has assisted more than 100 vulnerable countries with supplies and training. Its open heart has opened the hearts of others. “It’s time for the world to extend aid & support to India,” tweeted Volkan Bozkir, president of the United Nations General Assembl. For his part, Secretary-General António Guterres said the U.N. was “extremely grateful” to India.

It was not always thus for India.

Only in the past two decades has it warmed up to being one of the world’s “donor” countries, helping mitigate the impact of foreign disasters and health emergencies. The more it has seen itself as a major power, the more India has embraced a moral obligation to assist other countries, especially as a first responder in food supplies, evacuations, and equipment.

Indian officials cite a spiritual basis for such aid in a Hindu term, daan, translated as “charity without motive.” In a speech in mid-April, the external affairs minister of India, Dr. S. Jaishankar, said, “Even before the pandemic, India has been providing humanitarian assistance, disaster resistance to all. We have demonstrated in a practical manner, our belief that the world is a family.”

Perhaps the turning point for India was its response to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami. Its navy sent relief to coastal states hit by the tragedy, such as Indonesia and Sri Lanka. In 2015, it launched a large aid effort to Nepal after an earthquake. It has also assisted Iran during a locust attack, sent food supplies to South Sudan, and given flood relief to Cambodia and Vietnam.

Like other major donor nations, India sometimes withholds aid for strategic reasons or dispenses it as a display of soft power. But says Dr. Jaishankar, “We work ... on facing disasters together.”

No wonder so many countries now want to assist India. It has graciously accepted much of the aid, with little regard for whether it comes from friend or foe. Such giving is more than a type of mutual-aid society. When done out of gratitude, it also points to a greater good available to all, with no expectation of reciprocity or credit.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Driven by good alone

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While it may sometimes seem we’re subject to countless influences, the knowledge that there is only one real influence – the divine influence – enables us to increasingly prove the truth of what we are as children of God.

Driven by good alone

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Today's Christian Science Perspective audio edition

I have found it to be a good practice to ask myself what is driving me. What kind of thoughts am I being governed by? Are they as good as they should be? Observing our own lives and what’s happening around us, it may appear that there are times when less-than-noble motives and thinking lie behind what’s going on.

But the good news is that we can grow to think and act from a more kind and selfless standpoint that truly blesses ourselves and others.

The Bible offers many lessons in this area. The clearest is Christ Jesus’ exemplary example, which remains deeply instructional today. As the Son of God, Jesus was wholly influenced by divine Love, and this ruled out any susceptibility to self-serving thoughts. Being impelled by God’s goodness alone, Jesus revealed this goodness in healing and transforming lives.

This also enabled him to remain safe from others who were driven by evil thinking. In one instance, an enraged mob essentially forced Jesus out to a steep hill, ready to fling him over the edge. But as The Living Bible puts it, “He walked away through the crowd and left them” (Luke 4:30).

Jesus understood that the anger which had overtaken the people had no divine authority nor power, and therefore could not touch or harm him. His protection lay in his understanding of his indestructible relationship to God. And essential to Jesus’ mission was to show how that permanent, secure relationship to God truly belongs to everyone.

Mary Baker Eddy defined the Christ, the power that animated Jesus so completely, as “‘God with us,’ – a divine influence ever present in human consciousness” (“Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,” p. xi). Christ continues today to urge us forward in acts of healing love and peace.

While working at a company many years ago, I vividly saw the power of this divine influence to govern what drives our experience.

At one point everyone in the company was expected to go through a workshop. Some of the first employees to go through it reported that it involved humiliation and belittlement of people before building them back up.

Many who participated in this workshop left in tears and confusion, and the tension was palpable. It appeared that those running the company and holding the workshop were trying to control and manipulate our feelings. There appeared to be nothing good about it at all. My first thought was, “Who do they think they are!” Then dread set in, and I wanted to flee.

But Christian Science had taught me that I could always pray to feel God’s presence regardless of the circumstances I faced. So I prayed to perceive that true relationship to God that Jesus had evidenced – to know the spiritual innocence of myself and others. I saw that each one of us is God’s child made in His likeness – spiritual because God is Spirit – so we could neither carry out nor be subject to any evil intention.

I also saw that divine Love’s plan of good is a spiritual fact that always blesses everyone. And as it turned out, I never needed to take part in the workshop, and it wasn’t long before they just stopped altogether. I was grateful for this outcome!

Divine Love itself is our true source of thought. It is actually the one and only source of our thinking. Love’s power shows wrong thoughts or impulses to have no power to drive any kind of activity. It gives us the authority to refute thoughts that aren’t from God, good, and deny them as capable of bringing about any effect.

The understanding that we can reject oppressive or dominating thinking as incapable of driving anyone’s life brings great benefits. Then we are open to accepting and following the inspiration from God that always moves us with a spiritual grace and calm that loves and embraces others, too.

A message of love

Painting over protest

Ivan Petrov/AP
Municipal workers paint over graffiti of Russia's imprisoned opposition leader Alexei Navalny in St. Petersburg, Russia, on April 28, 2021. The words on the wall say "Hero of our time." In announcing the end of his hunger strike last week, on its 24th day, Mr. Navalny expressed appreciation for his supporters, some of whom had begun refusing to eat.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about American gun owners who are open to more regulations.

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