'To meet the challenges and deter the threats of this new age' ![]() If this week's summit of leaders of rich nations can't come up with a real plan to vaccinate the rest of the world, what is it for? The G7 meeting in the UK, a gathering of Western democracies plus Japan, is a reunion after members retreated behind their borders during the pandemic and joined a dog-eat-dog race to vaccinate their people.
It's become a cliche that the pandemic won't end in the developed world until the virus is eradicated everywhere. So if the G7 doesn't do something serious and the summit simply becomes a familiar festival of big talk by politicians who don't follow through, it will be a failure. US President Joe Biden, the G7 new boy who wants to send a message that Donald Trump's "America First" era is over, is already warning against good optics but meager substance.
Biden is talking about a "defining question of our time" — whether democracies that provided stability and prosperity in the last century can deliver in this one, amid a pandemic, climate change and rising autocracy. "This trip is about realizing America's renewed commitment to our allies and partners and demonstrating the capacity of democracies to both meet the challenges and deter the threats of this new age," Biden wrote in The Washington Post on Sunday.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Monday that the US would start sending 80 million vaccine doses overseas between now and the end of June. The administration has made a $2 billion pledge to the World Health Organization's COVAX vaccination drive and will give another equal amount by the end of 2022. The President also defied the pharmaceutical giants that produced the vaccines by waiving intellectual property protections on the shots -- a move welcomed by campaigners for vaccine access.
But given the size of the task, critics worry the US contribution is a good but rather belated start. A vast manufacturing effort is needed to scale up vaccines from all countries. And while they're saving millions of lives, nations like anti-democratic China and Russia are also aggressively using vaccine diplomacy to increase their competitive edge against the West.
This week's talks hosted by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson along Cornwall's rocky coastline could hardly be more important. The world and America ![]() Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu's allies are slow-walking the next government's swearing-in.
Police identified the body of a Kurdish toddler who died crossing the English Channel.
And France fined Google $270 million.
Meanwhile, America recovered millions in ransomware paid to the Colonial Pipeline hackers.
And the Boss is reviving his Broadway show. Sound familiar? ![]() ![]() Denial is the destructive force populist, nationalist leaders embrace when they lose power through legitimate means. First, former US President Donald Trump convinced millions of Americans that his fair-and-square election loss was fraudulent – with a corrosive onward impact on democracy. Now one of his best foreign political friends is running the same routine.
"We are witnessing the greatest election fraud in the history of the country, in my opinion in the history of any democracy," Netanyahu told Israel's parliament Sunday as he railed against a newly formed unity government poised to end his 12-year run as Prime Minister. His complaint is that right-wing parties should not have joined a coalition with left-wing parties -- a claim that has riled supporters enough to prompt the head of Israel's Security Agency to warn that increasingly extreme discourse could end in violence. ![]() Trump on Saturday in Greenville, North Carolina. 'It's like Groundhog Day' ![]() Vice President Kamala Harris will be in Mexico tomorrow on the second stop of her trip to try to stem the flow of migrants from Central America. But what about the out-of-control stream in the opposite direction? An "iron river" of guns flowing south from the firearms-loving US has exacerbated lawlessness and violence in the region.
"It's pathetic, frankly, how little attention is spent on this," says Adam Isacson, director for Defense Oversight at the Washington Office on Latin America, a research and advocacy organization based in the US. "You end up banging your head on the same barriers over and over again: it's like Groundhog Day. ... It's an issue that everyone knows is there, but there's no action on either side," he told CNN's Stefano Pozzebon.
Isacson believes that the particularly fraught narrative around the issue of gun control in the United States – often fiercely debated among party lines – is one of the main reasons why leaders spend little time on the issue of guns being trafficked abroad. Another reason is that most gun regulations are different from state to state, and federal officials responsible for foreign policy or international relations have limited influence on those rules. More than a third of the guns seized in Mexico and traced to the US by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were initially purchased in Texas, California and Arizona.
Ioan Grillo, the author of "Blood Gun Money – How America Arms Gangs and Cartels," echoes Isacson: "It's kind of mind blowing to me that it is an enormous quantity of firearms, year after year from the United States to Mexico and so much violence happening in Mexico, and it's frustrating that concrete actions are not taking place."
Grillo, who covered the drug war in Mexico for more than 20 years and is now a New York Times contributor, remembers when in 2012 then-Mexican President Felipe Calderon unveiled a 3-ton advertising board urging the United States to crack down on gun trafficking. But if Calderon hoped to gain some momentum on this issue with his giant signpost, the tragic results of one such US attempt likely turned American politicians away from trying to tackle guns, Grillo said.
Operation Fast and Furious was a field operation by the Arizona Attorney General's Office and the ATF allowing illegal gun sales to track the sellers and purchasers, who were believed to be connected to Mexican drug cartels. But it failed spectacularly -- more than 1,200 guns disappeared into criminal hands and one in particular was used to kill Customs and Border Protection officer Brian Terry in December 2010.
"Fast and Furious was just a disastrous operation, and one of its casualties was knocking the gun-trafficking issue off the agenda," said Grillo, pointing at the little progress or even discussion of it among US policymakers in the last 10 years.
But now could be a time for change. The Biden presidency and a Congress under Democratic control have revitalized the gun debate in the US, which has potential for further consequences in Mexico and Central America.
"I see a huge window of opportunity on the guns issue: This administration has signaled they want to tackle this, and of course they are looking at it as the issue of guns domestically, but these two issues, gun control and gun smuggling, are linked," says Grillo. ![]() 'I kinda think that this could be a good thing for having a much better relationship' ![]() An audio recording obtained by CNN reveals the extent of former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani's efforts to persuade Ukraine to assist in a campaign to politically damage then-presidential candidate Joe Biden. During the roughly 40-minute call, Giuliani repeatedly tells Ukrainian presidential adviser Andriy Yermak that President Volodymyr Zelensky should announce investigations into possible corruption by Biden in Ukraine and into claims that Ukraine had meddled in the 2016 election to hurt Trump. (Both claims are untrue.)
The recording will raise further doubt about Trump's claim that "no quid pro quo" was offered for Zelensky's cooperation. Launching probes into Biden "would clear the air really well," Giuliani said, according to the recording. "And I think it would make it possible for me to come and make it possible, I think, for me to talk to the President (Trump) to see what I can do about making sure that whatever misunderstandings are put aside ... I kinda think that this could be a good thing for having a much better relationship." Thanks for reading. On Tuesday, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba will pay a working visit to Germany. Arab foreign ministers will meet in the Qatari capital, Doha. Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and a new Mom for the second time, will release a children's book. View in browser | All CNN Newsletters
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