There Is No “Doom Loop”

I agree with some things in Walter Russell Mead’s latest Wall Street Journal column and disagree with others. For example, I disagree with this:

With less than a year before a challenging election, the Biden administration risks getting caught in a political doom loop. President Biden’s perceived weakness at home undermines his authority in dealing with foreign leaders, while the deteriorating global picture erodes his popularity at home.

As a general rule Americans don’t care about foreign policy. I doubt that a single person who voted for Joe Biden in 2020 will vote for Donald Trump in 2024 because of the “deteriorating global picture”. They might stay home but it still won’t move them to vote for Trump. They might because Joe Biden’s term has seen the highest inflation in 40 years or the situation at our southern border is in disarray but “deteriorating global picture”? Not a chance.

However, I agree with this:

This is not a world that is becoming more stable, and it is not a world in which American interests or values are becoming more secure. It is not a world in which America’s rivals and enemies are gaining respect for the president. It is not a world in which America’s waning powers of deterrence can long hold back the rising tide of aggression and war.

and this is a prudent warning:

The Indo-Pacific has been quieter lately, but only because China remains committed to its creeping gradualism, or “cabbage leaf strategy.” Building new islands, equipping them as military bases, harassing American ships and planes, challenging Taiwanese airspace, staging invasion exercises: The cabbage slowly grows, one leaf at a time.

These days, China is looking toward rich fishing grounds and the adjacent shoals and atolls that, under widely recognized legal principles, form part of the Philippines’s Exclusive Economic Zone. The EEZ’s Scarborough and Second Thomas shoals have long attracted fishing fleets. Increasingly, they are attracting aggressive Chinese maritime militia and coast-guard forces as well.

The Philippines controlled the Scarborough Shoal before 2012, but China pushed Manila aside, advancing Beijing’s legally baseless claims to most of the South China Sea. Philippine fishing boats still attempt to fish in these troubled waters, but Chinese maritime militia and coast-guard vessels harass and obstruct them, deploying inflatable boats, buoys and a “long-range acoustic device” that temporarily incapacitate Philippine crew members. This month Chinese ships fired water cannons and rammed Philippine vessels trying to bring fuel and food to Philippine crews in the area.

Looking for diplomatic solutions, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the Asia-Pacific economic summit in San Francisco last month. While Biden administration officials hailed improved U.S.-China relations following the summit, Beijing’s response to the Philippines was chilly. Jose Manuel Romualdez, the Philippine ambassador to the U.S., said Mr. Xi’s answers to Mr. Marcos’s requests were “disappointing,” “evasive” and “noncommittal.” Mr. Xi “didn’t say anything,” Mr. Romualdez told the Japanese newspaper Nikkei Asia.

Chinese provocations have only increased since the summit. Chinese forces are moving against the Philippine presence in the Second Thomas Shoal. “It’s pure aggression,” Phillipine Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. told the Associated Press. A wooden-hulled ship he was aboard, posing no threat to Chinese vessels, was blasted by water cannons and bumped by Chinese forces as it brought supplies to a small military force stationed on a long-marooned Philippine navy ship at the shoal.

China turned up the heat another notch on Dec. 11, when 11 Chinese vessels entered the Second Thomas Shoal, with up to 27 vessels present all week. “Next after the water cannon is probably ramming and also they will attempt to board our vessel,” Philippine Vice Adm. Alberto Carlos told CNN Philippines.

Amid escalating Chinese pressure, Philippine officials are trying to rouse Washington and its allies to respond. Calling the South China Sea a flashpoint comparable to the Taiwan Strait, Ambassador Romualdez told Nikkei that conflict near the Philippines could be “the beginning of another war, world war.”

It may come as a surprise to Americans including President Biden and his advisors but other countries have interests of their own and they’re not always aligned with American interests. That includes China.

I have no idea what will happen if Donald Trump is elected to a second term in 2024. We haven’t had a president serve two terms with a hiatus between them for 130 years, since Grover Cleveland. Consequently, although not unprecedented we shouldn’t make any assumptions about what will or will not happen. However, we have a pretty good idea of what to expect from a second Biden term although his advanced age may have some impact. Foreign policy always seems to land like a ton of bricks on president in their second terms and I doubt that a second Biden term will be any different.

I tend to think that President Biden’s disapproval rating at home and the “deteriorating global picture” have a common cause: bad assumptions. Bad assumptions about the economy and about the world. I doubt that a second term will improve those.

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Is Zelenskyy Losing Influence?

Thomas Fazi makes the following observation:

But Zelenskyy isn’t just facing criticism over the way forward for Ukraine; some are now saying that the entire strategy was botched from the start. Oleksii Arestovych, Zelenskyy’s former presidential advisor now turned critic, recently wrote that “the war could have ended with the Istanbul agreements, and a couple hundred thousand people would still be alive”, referring to a round of peace talks that took place in March and early April 2022, mediated by Turkey.

On that occasion, Russian and Ukrainian negotiators had reached a tentative agreement on the outlines of a negotiated interim settlement — whereby Russia had agreed to withdraw troops along the lines prior to February 24, 2022 in exchange for Ukraine’s neutrality — but the deal was allegedly blocked by Boris Johnson and representatives of the American State Department and the Pentagon. Even David Arakhamia, the parliamentary leader of Zelenskyy’s own Servant of the People party who led the Ukrainian delegation in peace talks with Moscow, recently claimed that Russia was “ready to end the war if we accept neutrality”, but that the talks ultimately collapsed for several reasons — including Johnson’s visit to Kyiv informing Ukrainian officials that they should continue fighting.

You will note that is not unlike what I have been arguing here for some time. However, Mr. Zelenskyy is holding fast to his “maximalist” objectives. Mr. Fazi concludes:

From the US perspective, a democratic regime change in Ukraine would arguably be the preferable solution; but, as noted, elections aren’t on the table at the moment. This doesn’t mean that change isn’t coming, though; if anything, it only heightens the risk of Zelensky’s opponents — inside and outside of the country — trying to get rid of him by other means. Indeed, Zelenskyy himself recently expressed concern that a new Maidan-type coup is being plotted in Ukraine — though he accused Russia, not local enemies, of being behind these plans. Regardless of how credible one believes this scenario to be, it speaks to Zelenskyy’s changing status on the world stage: as Western countries, and important segments of the Ukrainian establishment, look for an exit strategy, Zelenskyy is no longer seen as an asset — but as a liability.

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Mismatch

At Fortune Rick Wartzman has an article that fills in the blanks on how “college for all” became the prevailing educational and economic policy in the United States:

In the wake of “A Nation at Risk,” curricula at most high schools became more academically demanding, with added requirements in mathematics, science, English, and social studies. More homework was assigned; more classroom time was scheduled.

But by ushering in these academic reforms, the report’s greatest legacy may well have been this: It reinforced the idea that unless every student wound up going to college, we had failed them—and they had failed themselves.

In particular, “A Nation at Risk” cemented the bachelor’s degree, in the words of a Century Foundation analysis, as “more and more the gold standard for the transition from youthful dependency to adult independence as a worker and as a fully empowered individual and citizen.”

The result is that—despite some recent, high-profile pushback against this “college-for-all” mindset and mounting skepticism about the “return on investment” of a college degree—we have consigned those who don’t have a four-year diploma to lesser-than status. Along the way, we have overlooked the fact that people express their brainpower in all sorts of ways, many of which can’t be captured by how fast they divide polynomials, how adeptly they can dissect Moby Dick, or how high they score on the SAT.

The proportion of the population affected by this bias is enormous, and the costs are staggeringly high.

concluding that the policy “has failed America”.

I wouldn’t put it quite that way. I would say that the primary beneficiaries of the policy have been colleges and there is a mismatch among the jobs our economy is creating, our population, and the policy. Billions have been spent on the policy and most that has gone to colleges and universities who have used it to increase the size of their administrative staffs.

Pew Research has found that 40% of recent college grads are ‘underemployed”, i.e. they’re taking jobs that don’t require a college degree. Just about a million U. S. go to H1-B holders or are outsourced offshore. I suspect that is a substantial undercount.

I would also make a more controversial claim: “college for all” ignores half of the population who are not interested in college or unable to complete college. We need a policy that is better aligned with the population we have and the economy we have rather than those we wish we had.

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Define “Democracy”

I persist in wanting to know the definition of democracy presently being used by people who insist that’s what they’re defending.

Example:

Recently the Chicago City Council acted to prevent a referendum vote on whether Chicago should continue its “sanctuary city” status. I genuinely want to know how the members of the City Council who voted to bar the referendum define democracy.

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Why the “Two State Solution” Is Unrealistic (Updated)

I wanted to bring Daniel Gordis’s analysis of the results of a recent, post-October 7 poll of Palestinians, both in Gaza and the West Bank to your attention. If nothing else it illustrates how unrealistic a “two state solution” has become.

Mr. Gordis observes:

These are the results of the latest poll conducted by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research (PSR) in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip between 22 November and 2 December 2023. The period leading up to the poll witnessed the launch of Hamas’ October the 7th offensive against Israeli towns and military bases bordering the Gaza Strip and the Israeli launch of the current ground invasion of the Gaza Strip. Video images circulating in the international and Israeli media show that some Hamas fighters have committed attacks against Israeli civilians, including women and children, and took many of them hostages. International and Palestinian reports reported that thousands of Palestinians, mostly women and children, were killed by Israeli arial and tank bombardment. Israeli attacks targeted Palestinian hospitals, public buildings, and most other civilian infrastructure including tens of thousands of homes, with many neighborhoods leveled completely to the ground. In the meanwhile, in the West Bank, the Israeli army blocked or restricted Palestinian access to main roads while settler attacks increased against vulnerable towns and villages in various parts of the B and C areas.

To ensure the safety of our field researchers in the Gaza Strip, interviews with the residents were conducted during the ceasefire, which saw Palestinian women and children released from Israeli prisons in exchange for women and children held by Hamas.

The sample size of this poll is 1231 adults, of whom 750 were interviewed face to face in the West Bank and 481 in the Gaza Strip in 121 randomly selected locations. The sample is representative of the residents of the two areas.

Some interesting things were revealed in the poll. There is a substantial discrepancy of opinion between people who live in the West Bank and those who live in Gaza about Hamas, with confidence in Hamas being inversely proportional to how close to it they are. They don’t believe that Hamas has been committing war crimes but they believe the Israelis have. Support for the Palestinian Authority is minuscule.

Since the PA is the only prospective “partner” in negotiating a two state solution Palestinian opinion provides a convincing case that a “two state solution” will be unrealistic for the foreseeable future.

Update

John Mearsheimer reaches the same conclusion as I have following a somewhat different route:

I don’t believe a two-state solution is a realistic possibility. Certainly after what happened on October 7, and what has subsequently happened, there’s not going to be a two-state solution. What the Israelis are determined to do is create a Greater Israel, and that Greater Israel includes Gaza, the West Bank, and what we used to call Green Line Israel — Israel as it existed before the 1967 War. And the problem that the Israelis face is that there are approximately 7.3 million Israeli Jews in Greater Israel. And there are approximately 7.3 million Palestinians inside of Greater Israel. And that creates huge problems, because they can’t have a meaningful democracy when there are probably slightly more Palestinians than Israeli Jews. The Israeli government was unwilling to move towards a two-state solution regardless of what happened on October 7, but certainly after October 7, that’s not going to happen.

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Illiberal Journalism

James Bennet, formerly editor-in-chief of Atlantic and editorial page editor of the New York Times>, now senior editor at the Economist publishes a lengthy lament for the sorry state of modern corporate journalism. Here’s a snippet:

The Times’s problem has metastasised from liberal bias to illiberal bias, from an inclination to favour one side of the national debate to an impulse to shut debate down altogether. All the empathy and humility in the world will not mean much against the pressures of intolerance and tribalism without an invaluable quality that Sulzberger did not emphasise: courage.

Don’t get me wrong. Most journalism obviously doesn’t require anything like the bravery expected of a soldier, police officer or protester. But far more than when I set out to become a journalist, doing the work right today demands a particular kind of courage: not just the devil-may-care courage to choose a profession on the brink of the abyss; not just the bulldog courage to endlessly pick yourself up and embrace the ever-evolving technology; but also, in an era when polarisation and social media viciously enforce rigid orthodoxies, the moral and intellectual courage to take the other side seriously and to report truths and ideas that your own side demonises for fear they will harm its cause.

One of the glories of embracing illiberalism is that, like Trump, you are always right about everything, and so you are justified in shouting disagreement down.

It should be no surprise that a majority of young people today think it is perfectly acceptable to shout down people with whom you disagree—it’s the message they’re receiving from many media outlets every damn day.

Read the whole (long) thing.

I think the problem is much greater than Mr. Bennet does and he thinks the problem is big. I think it stems from corporate media and the professionalization of journalism. The ink-stained publisher-editor-reporter bravely putting out his own newspaper is becoming a thing of the past like horse-drawn buggies. Today’s journalistic elites have forgotten that Mr. Dooley was lampooning, i.e. criticizing, journalists when he wrote about “comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable”. Now they are the comfortable.

I would further assert that you could not have the massive corruption in Chicago and Illinois with the 40 chairman of the Democratic Party and Chicago’s most powerful alderman for decades both on trial for corruption in office without not just the entire political establishment but the media itself complicit in that corruption.

I’ll close with Mr.. Bennet’s assessment of the NYT:

The reality is that the Times is becoming the publication through which America’s progressive elite talks to itself about an America that does not really exist.

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Tangle and Israel’s War Against Hamas

I read news and opinions from many sources, left and right, but I only subscribe to three. I subscribe to The Wall Street Journal. I subscribe to Crain’s Chicago Business>. And I subscribe to Isaac Saul’s newsletter, Tangle. Isaac describes Tangle as “an independent, nonpartisan, subscriber-supported politics newsletter that summarizes the best arguments from across the political spectrum on the news of the day — then ‘my take.'” I encourage you to take a look at Tangle and, if you like what you see and happen to subscribe to it, tell him I sent you.

In Friday’s newsletter, Isaac interviewed Palestinian-American writer Yousef Munayyer. There’s a lengthy conversation but I wanted to call out one portion of it:

But I’m curious how you would answer that question. If you could wave a magic wand and have some influence on what happens on October 8th, what’s your guidance?

Yousef Munayyer: I think there’s a few ways to respond to that. First of all, I think there’s no situation that justifies the mass killing of innocent civilians. And we should make no mistake, this is what we are seeing in Gaza. Thousands of people, thousands of children who had absolutely nothing to do with the events of October 7th, are being killed in what is called an act of defense. That’s not justifiable in any circumstances. At the same time though, you do hear people attempting to justify this war by raising the very point that you did. “What is Israel supposed to do? You have to sympathize with this impossible predicament that Israel is in.” I think there’s a couple responses to that.

First, we know that this is not the only way that Israel can defend itself, because Israel was capable of defending itself on October 7th, but failed to do that for a number of reasons. What happened on October 7th was not because Hamas was somehow militarily superior to Israel, somehow had more resources and more guns than Israel, or had superior intelligence. It was made possible by a failure of Israeli intelligence and security apparatus. So there is clearly a way to prevent another attack like that from the Gaza Strip.

What it is seeking to do now in the Gaza Strip is not defense. It’s some form of accountability, in the most generous description, against the key architects behind October 7th. But it’s not defense. And I think it’s important to separate those two things.

Although Michael Reynolds no longer comments here, he continues to comment at Outside the Beltway and I believe that Michael’s response to Mr. Munayyer’s observation would be something along these lines (from one of his comments at OTB):

Look at the ratio of progressives demanding Israel stop, vs. the number calling for Hamas to lay down their arms and release the hostages. I’d guess it’s easily 10 to 1. A lot of ‘From the River to the Sea,’ and a lot of, ‘by any means necessary,’ and a lot of nonsense about ‘indiscriminate bombing,’ and, ‘genocide.’ Not a lot of ‘why the fuck don’t Hamas lay down their arms and stop getting Gazans killed?’

Calling for a permanent ceasefire by Israel while not equally calling for Hamas to lay down its arms is objectively pro-Hamas. Consequently, given the absence of any calls for Hamas to lay down its arms by Mr. Munayyer while demanding that Israel end its campaign against it is objectively pro-Hamas. Maya Angelou’s comment that when someone tells you who they are, believe them is being much-quoted these days. Hamas is antisemitic. Its members want to kill Jews and they won’t be satisfied until the entirety of historic Palestine is Arab, practices their brand of Islam, and that Palestine is governed by Shariah law..

There’s a reason that Bedouins and Druze in Israel agree with the Israelis. It’s because they know they are freer in Israel than they would be in such a Palestine and the Druze, in particular, recognize that once the Jews had been killed by Hamas they would be next.

In conclusion of this post I want to repeat that I think the Israelis have made many mistakes in their response to Hamas’s attack and I don’t think that there is any just solution that is in the U. S. interest. We don’t want either a Greater Israel in which most Arabs can’t vote (if they could vote they’d hold a majority and Israel would cease to exist) or has been ethnically cleansed of Arabs or a Palestine “from the river to the sea” from which Jews, Christians, Druze, and other minorities had been cleansed and, since over the last 30 years both sides have become increasingly radicalized, those are the only available alternatives.

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More Site Maintenance

At this point I have upgraded the version of PHP to the current version. This site runs under WordPress and WordPress is written in PHP. I have no upgrade one of my plug-ins to the current version. It’s the plug-in that allows users to edit their comments so it’s relevant to a problem reported with entering comments.

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While I’m On the Subject

What do you think of the reports that the Russian troops fighting in Ukraine have experienced 315,000 casualties? (killed and injured) Here’s the Reuters report by Jonathan Landay:

WASHINGTON, Dec 12 (Reuters) – A declassified U.S. intelligence report assessed that the Ukraine war has cost Russia 315,000 dead and injured troops, or nearly 90% of the personnel it had when the conflict began, a source familiar with the intelligence said on Tuesday.

The report also assessed that Moscow’s losses in personnel and armored vehicles to Ukraine’s military have set back Russia’s military modernization by 18 years, the source said.

I think this is part of that “full court press” I was talking about. i also wonder if they’re not comparing apples to oranges (“90% of the personnel it had when the conflict began” vs. percent who have been involved). Russian social media are not reflecting that level of casualties. Ukrainian social media are.

I genuinely don’t know what to make of it.

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Getting Behinder

There seems to be a full court press going on in the media to get the Congress to pass increased funding for Ukraine. The editors of the Wall Street Journal observe:

Washington is ready to close up shop for the holidays, and so far there’s no deal for more weapons for Israel and Ukraine with changes to border security. The question to start asking is whether the U.S. is really going to let partisan divisions turn into a betrayal of Ukraine.

Hard to believe, but perhaps it is. President Biden warned Tuesday that America is “at a real inflection point in history” that could “determine the future” of Europe. He is right on that point. Without more U.S. weapons, Ukraine will lose to Vladimir Putin. One result would be an unstable Europe. The blow to U.S. power and influence would be on the order of Saigon in 1975.

The media don’t seem to be pulling for the other components of the military spending bill making its way through Congress in quite the same way. There are some signs that they want the U. S.. to decrease funding for Israel and leave the situation at the border alone. That’s all somewhat odd since it at such odds with the views of Americans among whom the majority think we’re providing too much aid to Ukraine, agree with the support we’re giving to Israel, and 2/3s of Americans think the situation at our southern border is either a crisis or a major problem.

I think we should be providing support to Ukraine, should provide military support to Israel is they ask for it but shouldn’t go out of our way to support them, and that the situation at our southern border is one that only returning to the definition of asylum in the Immigration and Naturalization Act and turning back anyone who doesn’t meet that will fix.

However, the media really needs to come to a realistic understanding of our support for Ukraine. We don’t have munitions sitting on the shelf to send to Ukraine and we aren’t producing munitions as fast as the Ukrainians are using them. The best we can do right now is slow the pace at which the Ukrainians run out of ammo.

I agree with the WSJ editors that we’re betraying the Ukrainians but the betrayal took place a long time ago when we encouraged the Ukrainians to think they would be admitted to NATO and supported the overthrow of the legitimately elected but pro-Russian Ukrainian government in 2014.

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