Welcome To aBlackWeb

The Official World Politics Thread

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/amid-little-scrutiny-us-military-ramps-up-in-afghanistan

Amid Little Scrutiny, US Military Ramps Up In Afghanistan


WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. is bolstering its military presence in Afghanistan, more than 16 years after the war started. Is anyone paying attention?

Consider this: At a Senate hearing this past week on top U.S. security threats, the word “Afghanistan” was spoken exactly four times, each during introductory remarks. In the ensuing two hours of questions for intelligence agency witnesses, no senator asked about Afghanistan, suggesting little interest in a war with nearly 15,000 U.S. troops supporting combat against the Taliban.

It’s not as if the war’s end is in sight.

Just last month the bulk of an Army training brigade of about 800 soldiers arrived to improve the advising of Afghan forces. Since January, attack planes and other aircraft have been added to U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

But it’s not clear that the war, which began in October 2001, is going as well as the U.S. had hoped seven months after President Donald Trump announced a new, more aggressive strategy. The picture may be clearer once the traditionally most intensive fighting season begins in April or May. Over the winter, American and Afghan warplanes have focused on attacking illicit drug facilities that are a source of Taliban revenue.

One of Washington’s closest watchers of the Afghanistan conflict, Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, wrote last month that the administration has made major improvements in military tactics and plans for developing Afghan forces but has “done nothing to deal with civil and political stability.” That challenge is expected to come into clearer focus with the approach of parliamentary elections planned for July.

The administration “not only faces a deteriorating security situation, it has no clear political, governance, or economic strategy to produce Afghan stability,” Cordesman said. In his view, the U.S. military has been assigned a “mission impossible” in Afghanistan.

The weak central government in Kabul and the resilient Taliban insurgency are not the U.S. military’s only problems there. It also faces what Gen. Joseph Votel (pictured above), the top U.S. general overseeing the war, calls interference by Russia. He told a congressional panel last month that Moscow is seeking to undermine U.S. and NATO influence in Afghanistan by exaggerating the presence of Islamic State fighters there and portraying this as a U.S. failure.

When Trump announced in August that he was ordering a new approach to the war, he said he realized “the American people are weary of war without victory.” He said his instinct was to pull out, but that after consulting with aides, he decided to seek “an honorable and enduring outcome.” He said that meant committing more resources to the war, giving commanders in the field more authority and staying in Afghanistan for as long as it takes.

Stephen Biddle, a professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University, said Americans’ relative lack of interest in the war gives Trump political maneuver room to conduct the war as he wishes, but that dynamic is not necessarily a good one.

“The idea that a democracy is spending billions of dollars a year, killing people and sacrificing American lives waging war, and the elected representatives of the people aren’t paying attention I think is inappropriate,” Biddle said. “But to say it is inappropriate isn’t to say it’s surprising, because this is the way Congress has been behaving toward this war for a long, long time.”

Last November, the U.S. commander in Kabul, Gen. John Nicholson, said the Afghan army, with U.S. support, had “turned the corner” and captured momentum against the Taliban. Since then, the Taliban have conducted a series of high-profile attacks in Kabul and elsewhere that have killed scores of civilians. U.S. officials have portrayed this as desperation tactics by the Taliban, arguing that they are unable to make new territorial gains.

Dan Coats, the director of U.S. national intelligence, offered a less optimistic forecast when he testified to the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday.

“We assess the overall security picture will … modestly deteriorate in the coming year and Kabul will continue to bear the brunt of the Taliban-led insurgency,” Coats said. Afghan forces, while “unsteady,” probably will maintain control of most major population centers in 2018, he added.

Testifying at the same hearing, Army Lt. Gen. Robert Ashley, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, offered a mixed outlook. He forecast that Afghan forces this year will continue to develop offensive combat power. But he also predicted the Taliban will “threaten Afghan stability, undermine public confidence by conducting intermittent high-profile attacks in urban areas,” increase its influence in rural areas and threaten district centers.

The Defense Department’s special inspector general for Afghanistan said in January that Afghan government control or influence has declined and Taliban control or influence has increase since the U.S. watchdog began reporting this type of data in January 2016.

It said in a follow-up report last month that as of October 2017, about 20.9 million Afghans, or 64 percent of the total population of 32.5 million, lived in areas where the government has control or influence. The rest of the population was in areas under Taliban control or influence, or deemed “contested” by both sides.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livew...ts-call-to-give-death-penalty-to-drug-dealers

At Political Rally, Trump Repeats Call To Give Drug Dealers The Death Penalty

President Donald Trump on Saturday again proposed the death penalty for convicted drug dealers.

During a rambling, hour-plus speech in Moon Township, Pennsylvania, Trump quickly endorsed Republican state Rep. Rock Saccone ahead of Tuesday’s special congressional election, then pivoted to his own re-election message.

“Our new slogan, when we start running, in — can you believe it, two years from now — is going to be, Keep America Great, exclamation point,” the President said.

Elsewhere, he took drug enforcement tips from Chinese President Xi Jinping.

“When I was in China — and other places by the way — I said, ‘Mr. President, do you have a job problem?’” Trump told the Pennsylvania crowd.

“‘No, no, no. We do not,’” he said, imitating Xi’s response.

“I said, ‘Huh, big country, 1.4 billion people.’ Not much of a drug problem. I said, ‘What do you attribute that to?’ ‘Well, the death penalty.’”

He added later that he didn’t “know” whether the United States, “frankly, is ready for it.”

“But at a minimum, you have to give long, tough sentences,” Trump said.

“A drug dealer will kill 2,000, 3,000, 5,000 people during the course of his or her life,” the President said separately. “Thousands of people are killed or their lives or destroyed, their families are destroyed. You can kill thousands of people and go to jail for 30 days.”

It recalled Trump’s message during an White House summit on opioid abuse at the beginning of the month.

“Some countries have a very, very tough penalty — the ultimate penalty — and by the way, they have much less of a drug problem than we do,” he said at the time.

The Washington Post reported Friday that the White House and Justice Department were “studying” policy changes to allow prosecutors to seek the death penalty for drug dealers.
 
https://www.mediaite.com/tv/trump-h...gop-candidate-he-rallied-for-in-pennsylvania/

Trump Has Reportedly Taken to Privately Trashing GOP Candidate He Rallied For in Pennsylvania


President Donald Trump was in Pennsylvania last night to hold a rally for Republican state lawmaker Rick Saccone, who is facing a tough special election on Tuesday.

And while the president offered warm words for Saccone in his speech, behind closed doors he has trashed as a “weak” candidate, according to a new report in Axios.

Per Axios’ Jonathan Swan:

Trump thinks Saccone is a terrible, “weak” candidate, according to four sources who’ve spoken to the president about him.

Trump held that opinion of Saccone before leaving for the rally, and I’ve not been able to establish whether his time on the ground with the candidate changed his mind.


Saccone’s Democratic opponent, Conor Lamb, is seen as a “far superior candidate” by other Republicans as well, per the report. The Democrat is also a better fundraiser, having “outraised Saccone by a staggering margin — nearly 500 percent.”

Tuesday’s special election, being held in a ruby red House district of western Pennsylvania that Trump won by double-digits in 2016, is looking like a toss-up — a fact that should concern Republicans.


The obvious was pointed out by FiveThirtyEight’s Nate Silver:



The president’s Saturday night rally was a veritable bonanza of vintage 2016 campaign-Trump, replete with multiple jabs at the press, bluster and “build the wall” chants — though aside from a few warm words, there wasn’t much in the way of praise for Saccone.


Typical Trump.. He just wanted to do that klan rally for the his own ego boosting nothing more.. He doesn’t give damn about no Rick Saccone.. Trump use him as a convenient prop so he could try out his new white supremacist material for future rallies...
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/mueller-near-completion-obstruction-probe

Report: Obstruction Probe Almost Done But Mueller May Wait To Reveal Findings

Special counsel Robert Mueller is nearly done with his investigation into whether President Donald Trump obstructed justice but may wait to publicize his findings until he has completed other parts of the Russia probe, Bloomberg Newsreported on Monday.

Bloomberg News reported, citing unnamed current and former U.S. officials, that Mueller could finish the obstruction portion of the investigation once he has interviewed key officials like the President and his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr.

Trump’s lawyers have been in discussions with the special counsel’s team about the possibility of an interview for weeks, but it’s not clear when one might take place or what form it would take.

Mueller has so far brought charges against former Trump aides Paul Manafort and Rick Gates, though those indictments did not stem from their activity on Trump’s campaign. He has also indicted several Russians for election meddling and secured a few plea agreements, but has yet to bring any charges related to the collusion aspect of the investigation.

Mueller may hold off on revealing his findings on obstruction so that the results don’t prompt Trump to attempt to shut down the special counsel investigation or fuel other pressure for Mueller to end the probe, as Bloomberg News noted.
 


https://www.mediaite.com/tv/trainwr...tary-betsy-devos-brutal-60-minutes-interview/

‘Trainwreck’: Watch Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’ Brutal 60 Minutes Interview

Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos had an interview on 60 Minutes that aired Sunday night, and faced a brutal grilling from Lesley Stahl about the work her department does.

And stunningly, DeVos failed to answer basic questions about school performance, as CBS News’ Stahl — who called her “one of the most hated members of the Trump cabinet” — pressed her on taking funding away from public schools.

After Devos made an argument for “school choice,” pointing to Florida as a state where public schools have improved as a result, Stahl grilled her home state of Michigan.

“Have the public schools in Michigan gotten better?” Stahl asked.

“I don’t know. Overall, I can’t say overall that they have all gotten better,” DeVos replied.

“The whole state is not doing well,” Stahl shot back, before stating, “No, but your argument that if you take funds away that the schools will get better, is not working in Michigan where you had a huge impact and influence over the direction of the school system here.”

“Have you seen the really bad schools?” Stahl asked. “Maybe try to figure out what they’re doing?”

“I have not — I have not — I have not intentionally visited schools that are underperforming,” DeVos said.

“Maybe you should,” Stahl deadpanned, to which DeVos conceded, “Maybe I should. Yes.”

Watch a painful segment from the interview above, and the full episode here.

The brutal interview caught the attention of many on Twitter, who pointed out the alarming idea that the education secretary seemed to have a poor grasp of the work of her own department.













 


https://www.mediaite.com/tv/watch-d...y-daniels-while-inhaling-a-bowl-of-ice-cream/

Don Jr. Duck Questions on Russia and Stormy Daniels While Inhaling a Bowl of Ice Cream

We do our very best, here at Mediaite, to monitor every single minute of live coverage on the three major cable news networks. And sometimes we see wonderful moments like this:



In Canonsburg, PA to stump for House candidate Rick Saccone ahead of Tuesday’s special election, Donald Trump Jr. stopped at a candy shop for a sweet treat. And the president’s son proceeded to absolutely inhale a bowl of ice cream — while simultaneously ducking some uncomfortable questions on Russia, Stormy Daniels, and other subjects during an impromptu press session.

“Ahead of the trump Tower meeting were you aware the Russians had information in those emails?” Trump Jr. was asked.

“I was not but that’s not what we’re here talking about,” Trump Jr. said. “We’re here talking jobs for Americans.”

Later came the Stormy Daniels query.

“Should Stormy Daniels be able to speak?”

Trump Jr., with a smirk on his face and a dollop of ice cream on his spoon, replied, “Thanks, you guys. That’s not what we’re talking about.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/tr...-back-to-haunt-him-in-new-immigration-lawsuit

Trump’s ‘Shithole’ Remark Comes Back To Haunt Him In New Immigration Lawsuit

A group of immigrants whose Temporary Protected Status was revoked by President Trump, and their U.S. citizen children, filed a class action lawsuitagainst the Trump administration on Monday afternoon at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

Lawyers on the case tell TPM that the immigrant parents, many of whom have lived in the U.S. for decades, are challenging the abrupt cancelation of their status as arbitrary and a violation of their right to due process. They are also arguing, citing President Trump’s infamous “shithole” comment and other disparaging remarks about immigrants, that the administration’s decision was unconstitutionally based on racial animus.

Over the past several decades, the U.S. has granted Temporary Protected Status to hundreds of thousands of people from an array of countries that have been in crisis—whether from war, natural disaster, or severe economic strife. Since taking office, Trump has terminated those protections for immigrants from El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua and Sudan, putting thousands of long-time residents at risk of deportation.

The American Civil Liberties Union and the National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON) are suing the Department of Homeland Security on behalf of a group of former TPS-holders now at risk of deportation and their U.S. citizen children who would be left behind.

As with many other lawsuits challenging Trump administration policies, the President’s own words have come back to haunt him. Specifically, the lawsuit cites Trump’s reported characterization of TPS-holders as hailing from “shithole countries” to argue that the decision “arises from the Trump Administration’s repeatedly-expressed racism toward non-white, non-European people from other countries.” The lawsuit also references Trump’s frequent recitation of the lyrics to the song “The Snake,” which the President employs as an allegory about welcoming dangerous immigrants and refugees into the country.

In February, a group of Haitian and Salvadoran immigrants filed the first lawsuitchallenging the cancelation of TPS, arguing, like the case in California, that the administration’s decision was racially motivated. The California case is the first to challenge the termination of protections for immigrants from all four impacted countries, and the first filed on behalf of the more than 270,000 U.S. citizen children who have at least one parent with TPS, who the case argues would be irreparably harmed by their parents’ deportation.

giphy.gif
 
Back
Top