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Category: Politics

Students challenge Prof. Tim Hayward’s ‘both sides’ stance on Putin and Assad’s war crimes

Students challenge Prof. Tim Hayward’s ‘both sides’ stance on Putin and Assad’s war crimes

BBC News reports: It was the start of a new term at the University of Edinburgh and Mariangela Alejandro couldn’t wait to take her next course. The 21-year-old history and politics student had heard good things about the professor, Tim Hayward. But a few weeks into the course, she said things started to get “weird”. “He goes from talking about global financial markets [and] poverty, into this realm of conspiracy theories about [Syrian President Bashar al] Assad and Russia,” she…

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The NRA doesn’t sell weapons, but it sells the fear that sells the guns

The NRA doesn’t sell weapons, but it sells the fear that sells the guns

Rolling Stone reports: On the third floor of Houston’s massive convention center, far above the noise and rabble of the gun show at the National Rifle Association’s annual meeting, a luxury hospitality suite was closed to normal NRA members. It was reserved instead for the gun lobby’s biggest donors, who belong to its “Ring of Freedom.” Here, grandees could escape from the masses, sink into plush leather couches, belly up to the refreshment tables, and marvel at a surreal pair…

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How China has raced ahead in a Pacific contest for influence

How China has raced ahead in a Pacific contest for influence

Damien Cave writes: Take a walk through the city where China’s foreign minister met on Monday with the leaders of nearly a dozen Pacific Island nations, and China’s imprint is unmistakable. On one side of Suva, the capital of Fiji, there’s a bridge rebuilt with Chinese loans and unveiled with the country’s prime minister standing beside China’s ambassador. On the other, down Queen Elizabeth Drive, sits Beijing’s hulking new embassy, where the road out front has been fixed by workers…

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Ukraine suffers on battlefield while pleading for U.S. longer range weaponry

Ukraine suffers on battlefield while pleading for U.S. longer range weaponry

The Washington Post reports: In a video address early Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the situation on the battlefield in Donbas was “very difficult,” with Russian forces attacking Ukrainian positions with “maximum artillery and maximum reserves.” “We are defending our land insofar as the defense resources we have today will allow. We’re doing everything we can to strengthen them — and we will strengthen them,” Zelensky said. “If the occupiers think Severodonetsk or Lyman will be theirs, they are…

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The Russians have withdrawn from Kharkiv, but the hardship they’ve left behind will last for years

The Russians have withdrawn from Kharkiv, but the hardship they’ve left behind will last for years

Tom Mutch reports: Flowers bloom over an unmarked grave in Kharkiv. We never found the woman’s name, but the neighbors buried her in a shallow grave in the garden she had tended her whole life. Springtime has come to Ukraine’s biggest city, which has mostly been relieved of the agony of three months of Russian bombardment. Galina, a 61-year-old teacher from Kharkiv, lived underground for nearly three months, but her daughter in Russia refused to believe that their city was…

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CIA chief William Burns’ extensive experience with Putin gives him special insight

CIA chief William Burns’ extensive experience with Putin gives him special insight

Politico reports: Half of Washington, D.C., is in the business of analyzing Vladimir Putin’s every word and move these days. But when CIA Director William Burns speaks of the Russian leader, an autocrat waging a brutal war on Ukraine, his words carry unusual weight. Putin is the epitome of a “peculiarly Russian combination of qualities”: “cocky, cranky, aggrieved and insecure,” Burns has written. The Kremlin chief is “an apostle of payback,” Burns has declared. Instead of giving up on his…

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The reconstruction of Ukraine

The reconstruction of Ukraine

Anders Aslund writes: In his grand work Capital, Thomas Piketty has established that the total capital of a country, including everything, such as land and minerals, is historically usually four times GDP, that is, $800 billion for Ukraine, and much of this capital persists. The next question is how can this possibly be financed. Ideally, it should be financed by Russia as war reparations. Needless to say, the Kremlin is not likely to accept that voluntarily, but the beauty of…

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For NATO, Turkey is a obstructionist ally

For NATO, Turkey is a obstructionist ally

The New York Times reports: When President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey threatened this month to block NATO membership for Finland and Sweden, Western officials were exasperated — but not shocked. Within an alliance that operates by consensus, the Turkish strongman has come to be seen as something of a stickup artist. In 2009, he blocked the appointment of a new NATO chief from Denmark, complaining that the country was too tolerant of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad and too…

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Fossil fuels are a threat to national security

Fossil fuels are a threat to national security

Jerome Foster, Julia Jackson and Alexandria Villaseñor write: How much more unpredictability must the American people endure as a result of our reliance on fossil fuels before we finally cut ties with Big Oil and build a stable, affordable clean-energy economy? It seems like President Biden is out of options, given the intransigence of the fossil fuel–friendly Congress. But he has one: use his authority as president to invoke the Defense Production Act to dramatically scale up production of clean…

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Now is not the time for Western governments to seek a deal with Putin

Now is not the time for Western governments to seek a deal with Putin

In an editorial, the Washington Post says: Wars end. Many, if not most, end with negotiation. That might be what happens with the war Russia launched against Ukraine on Feb. 24, too, though one former Moscow regime member warns against urging Ukraine to negotiate while President Vladimir Putin is still bent on more conquest. “You just can’t make peace now,” Boris Bondarev, who recently resigned from his mid-level Russian Foreign Ministry post to protest the war, said in an interview…

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How Andrey Kurkov, Ukraine’s greatest novelist, is fighting for his country

How Andrey Kurkov, Ukraine’s greatest novelist, is fighting for his country

Giles Harvey writes: On the morning of Feb. 25, the day after Russian bombs began falling on his country, Andrey Kurkov, Ukraine’s most famous living writer, received a phone call at his home near Independence Square in central Kyiv. The call was from an old friend, a businessman with close ties to the government, who had just got hold of some privileged information: Kurkov, a longtime critic of Vladimir Putin, was on a list of “pro-Ukrainian activists” drawn up by…

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Why Germany’s chancellor is reluctant to send more heavy weapons to Ukraine

Why Germany’s chancellor is reluctant to send more heavy weapons to Ukraine

Politico reports: Accusations of broken promises and spreading fake news. Criticism from within the government coalition’s own ranks. And a chancellor defending his course with references to Emperor Wilhelm II. In other words: Just another week of Olaf Scholz’s wavering policy on military support for Ukraine. The German chancellor, who has steadfastly refused to visit Kyiv or even say he wants Ukraine to “win” the war, has been under heavy fire since March for hesitating on delivery of tanks to…

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Why Viktor Muchnik closed down his Siberian TV station and left for Armenia

Why Viktor Muchnik closed down his Siberian TV station and left for Armenia

The Observer reports: On the ninth day of Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine, editor-in-chief Viktor Muchnik gathered the staff of TV2 for a meeting at their small newsroom in the Siberian city of Tomsk. New wartime laws meant the whole newsroom risked jailtime for reporting on the conflict, Muchnik told them, and TV2 had just been officially blocked by Russia’s communications watchdog, along with many other independent media outlets. “All of us who wanted to change things for the better…

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For Western companies, the moral, legal, and public relations risks of staying in Russia are huge

For Western companies, the moral, legal, and public relations risks of staying in Russia are huge

Natalia Antonova writes: The companies that have already left have tended—with good reason—to emphasize the moral risks. McDonalds, for instance, stated, “[O]ur values mean we cannot ignore the needless human suffering unfolding in Ukraine.” And that hasn’t meant abandoning Russian staff; many firms have been providing salary continuations or directly evacuating personnel. The businesses that are staying might think—or at least tell Western governments—that they can remain separate from Russia’s increasingly unhinged political system. But if they really think that,…

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What America needs is a liberalism that builds

What America needs is a liberalism that builds

Ezra Klein writes: In April, Brian Deese, the director of Biden’s National Economic Council, gave an important speech on the need for “a modern American industrial strategy.” This was a salvo in a debate most Americans would probably be puzzled to know Democrats are having. Industrial strategy is the idea that a country should chart a path to productive capacity beyond what the market would, on its own, support. It is the belief that there should be some politics in…

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At NRA convention, conspiracy theories abound among gun owners who see themselves as victims

At NRA convention, conspiracy theories abound among gun owners who see themselves as victims

Politico reports: The protesters who raised their middle fingers and shouted “shame” outside the National Rifle Association’s big gathering here on Friday had assumed — like much of official Washington — that the timing of a school shooting three days earlier might somehow be problematic for the NRA. For gun enthusiasts and the Republican politicians courting them, it was only more reason to come. Here, amid acres of guns and tactical gear inside a cavernous convention hall, the proximate cause…

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