'It's not going well' The US military is more known for brashness rather than understatement. So, this comment by an unnamed US defense official to CNN's Barbara Starr is an uncharacteristically deadpan assessment of the unfolding mess in Afghanistan.
It looks rather like the 20th anniversary of the September 11 attacks next month will be remembered less for the US finally extricating itself from its longest war than the Taliban regaining vast swathes of territory in the country. In recent days, the US has ramped up fierce air strikes in support of Afghan government troops as Taliban forces advance on critical provincial capitals Herat, Kandahar and Lashkar Gah. The defense official told Starr that there was deep concern that the ultra-fundamentalist militia could take some of its target cities and trigger a collapse in confidence in the Afghan government.
Since President Joe Biden announced the withdrawal of all US troops from the country earlier this year, the Taliban has clearly been emboldened, raising fears that it could seize all of the country and crush democratic rule from Kabul. Such a scenario would not only roll back gains, such as they are, from 20 years of Western involvement in the country. They would again expose its people to feudal-style rule and mean a return to discrimination against women and girls. It would also expose Biden to accusations he deserted Afghans for his own political ends and present him with a genuine foreign policy disaster, just as the pandemic he had hoped was over renews its assault on the US.
So, could the President change his mind?
It doesn't seem very likely. Biden has long been skeptical of a prolonged troop presence in Afghanistan. And there's no public yearning for America to stay for decades on end — like it did in South Korea for instance. And to be blunt, the reasoning the President spelled out in April when he decided to leave is about what is best for the US and not Afghans.
"We went to Afghanistan because of a horrific attack that happened 20 years ago. That cannot explain why we should remain there in 2021," Biden said. The world and America Chinese-Canadian pop star Kris Wu was detained in Beijing on suspicion of rape.
After winning her first Olympic medal this weekend, US shot-putter Raven Saunders raised her hands and crossed them in an X, telling NBC that it represented "the intersection of where all people who are oppressed meet." The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has said it is looking into the gesture, a potential breach of rules banning protests on medal podiums. 'A sign that the regime is fragile, insecure' Kristina Timanovskaya didn't get to run her race at the Olympics, but she's become a champion anyway — of democracy in her native Belarus.
The sprinter refused an attempt by her team bosses to send her home from Tokyo to Minsk, saying she feared she was being persecuted for political reasons. When she finally gets back on the track in future, it could be in Poland, where the government has granted her a humanitarian visa.
Her stand earned her strong backing from the United States and the European Union, and further highlighted a diplomatic tussle over Belarus between the West and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The Olympian drama follows the Minsk government's forced landing of a Ryanair flight and arrest of an opposition journalist as well as deepening repression in the ex-Soviet state. President Alexander Lukashenkho is meanwhile lurching towards tyranny after what was widely seen as a stolen election last year.
Timanovskaya's apparent defection was hailed by exiled Belarussian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who is on a tour of Western capitals, including Washington where she last week met Biden. "No doubt, Kristina Timanovskaya is our hero; she found the courage to speak out and faced repressions for her bravery," Tikhanovskaya told CNN's Jim Sciutto. "Unfortunately, this case is also a sign that not a single Belarusian who has left the borders of Belarus is safe."
"On the other hand, this is also a sign that the regime is fragile, insecure," she added. "If you are really in control of the situation, you don't chase athletes for their comments on Instagram." Thanks for reading. On Tuesday, the US Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing on student loan bankruptcy. American gymnast Simone Biles is expected to resume Olympic competition with a showing at the balance beam. Iranian President-elect Ebrahim Raisi will be confirmed. And Twitter kills off its Fleets feature. View in browser | All CNN Newsletters
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