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Politics

Taliban Advances in Afghanistan Might Deliver Political Peril for Biden

When President Biden announced his plan to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan, the politics seemed relatively simple: Many polls showed that Americans supported ending the country’s nearly 20-year involvement in a war whose goals had become obscure.

But four months later, with the Taliban storming across the country much faster and more ruthlessly than expected, new political risks are coming into view for Mr. Biden, who had hoped to win credit for ending what he has called one of America’s “forever wars.”

Now U.S. officials are racing to evacuate Afghans who assisted the American military and may be targets of Taliban reprisals, and are contemplating the prospect of hastily evacuating the 4,000 Americans at the U.S. Embassy in the capital city of Kabul.

The threat of a Taliban conquest and new risks to U.S. personnel and allies in the country could cause Americans who had been paying little attention to Afghanistan for the past several years to reconsider their views, particularly if Republicans amplify a message of American failure and capitulation.

“Everybody’s worried about a repeat of the Saigon images,” said Brian Katulis, a foreign policy expert at the liberal Center for American Progress, referring to the chaotic April 1975 evacuation of the American Embassy in South Vietnam’s capital. Desperate Vietnamese clung to the struts of departing helicopters as the city was being conquered by Communist forces.

Americans remain focused on domestic matters like the coronavirus and the economy, and are unlikely to care much that the Taliban have captured unfamiliar cities like Kunduz, said Mr. Katulis, who has studied public opinion about foreign policy.

“But this could change,” he added. “If you have a parade of horribles continue to unfold in Afghanistan, it could seep into the public consciousness the way Iraq did in 2013 and 2014” when the Islamic State stormed across that country after American troops withdrew.

Speaking to reporters at the White House on Tuesday, Mr. Biden said he did “not regret” his decision, noting that the United States continued to support Afghanistan’s government and security forces but adding, “They’ve got to fight for themselves.”

Officials in the Biden administration have repeatedly expressed hope that negotiations between the Taliban and the Afghan government might produce a peaceful resolution short of a Kabul-based Taliban emirate, but prospects for successful talks are swiftly fading.

Fortunately for Mr. Biden, many Republicans in Congress have turned against foreign military adventures and supported a full exit from Afghanistan, to which President Donald J. Trump first committed last year when he struck a deal with the Taliban. Under the agreement, the group halted its attacks on U.S. forces and began peace talks with the Afghan government.

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Both Mr. Trump and Mr. Biden were in sync with public opinion. Polls have shown for years that a plurality of Americans support withdrawing from Afghanistan, with a majority supporting either a full exit or a smaller U.S. presence.

But as the U.S.-backed Afghan government in Kabul appears more imperiled, some prominent Republicans are increasing their criticism of Mr. Biden.

“Reality was clear to everyone but the very top of the Biden administration,” Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the minority leader, said in remarks on Monday on the Senate floor, as he noted prior warnings that the Taliban might quickly overwhelm the Afghan government’s security forces. “From their bizarre choice of a symbolic Sept. 11th deadline to the absence of any concrete plan, the administration’s decision appears to have rested on wishful thinking and not much else.”

“No one should pretend they’re surprised the Taliban is winning now that we abandoned our Afghan partners,” Senator Ben Sasse, Republican of Nebraska, said in a statement on Tuesday.

But Mr. Sasse also nodded to the complicated political dynamic in which Mr. Biden is delivering on a promise made by Mr. Trump.

“Our troops served America and our allies admirably, but the last administration and the present administration chose to give up the fight,” Mr. Sasse said.

Updated 

Aug. 11, 2021, 9:06 p.m. ET

It may be a consolation to Biden administration officials that Mr. Trump is unlikely to join in the attacks. The former president, who made U.S. troop withdrawals a key campaign theme in the 2020 election, pressed his generals in vain to accelerate the American exit.

And Mr. Trump reiterated his support for leaving Afghanistan as recently as April, when he attacked Representative Liz Cheney, Republican of Wyoming, in a statement as a “warmongering fool” who “wants to stay in the Middle East and Afghanistan for another 19 years, but doesn’t consider the big picture — Russia and China!”

“If Trump is the Republican nominee again, I think it would be hard for him to criticize Biden for executing a plan that Trump put into motion,” said Richard Fontaine, the chief executive of the Center for a New American Security and a former foreign policy adviser to the hawkish Republican senator John McCain.

“Trump didn’t just open the door” to a withdrawal, Mr. Fontaine added. “What he did was force the issue in a way that it hadn’t been forced before.”

But Mr. Fontaine, who opposes the American troop withdrawal, said that major political and security risks remained for Mr. Biden. He argued that domestic support for leaving Afghanistan had never been intense, coming nowhere near the mass demonstrations opposing the Vietnam and Iraq wars.

And he said that the possibility of a Taliban takeover followed by a return to the country of the group’s longtime Qaeda allies would be a huge liability for Mr. Biden.

“Polls show that a majority of Americans want to leave Afghanistan,” Mr. Fontaine said. “But they also show that if you ask Americans about their foreign policy or national security objectives, they will almost always rank preventing terrorist attacks on the United States as No. 1 or 2, and they will rank extracting America from military operations overseas far below that.”

Mr. Trump’s top lieutenants, who frequently lead political attacks on Mr. Biden, are similarly constrained in their ability to turn events in Afghanistan against him.

Mike Pompeo, who as secretary of state attended the signing ceremony in Qatar of Mr. Trump’s deal with Taliban leaders, has repeatedly attacked the Biden administration as weak on foreign policy.

In an appearance this week on Fox News, however, Mr. Pompeo — who is contemplating a 2024 presidential bid — called the troop withdrawal “the right thing to do.”

In language that closely echoed Mr. Biden’s recent remarks, he added: “This is now the Afghans’ fight.”

Some prominent supporters of a military withdrawal from Afghanistan say that Mr. Biden has little to worry about in political terms, noting that his decision enjoyed broad bipartisan support, including from politically diverse veterans’ groups.

“I think that the American public is much more likely to see what’s happening right now, as tragic and worrisome as it is, as ultimately the failure of two decades of war and occupation in Afghanistan,” said Kate Kizer, the policy director of the anti-interventionist group Win Without War.

“It’s important to remember that the reason the public supports a military withdrawal from Afghanistan, as well as from Iraq, is that they think these wars themselves are a mistake and failure,” she added.

Ms. Kizer said she worried that some “members of the foreign policy establishment in Washington took the lesson from Iraq that chaos ensues when the U.S. withdraws” and would be quick to press for renewed American intervention.

Mr. Katulis said he could imagine pressure for an American return to Afghanistan, years after President Barack Obama reluctantly sent troops back to Iraq after the Islamic State began to capture and execute American hostages.

Such a scenario would likely require worst-case outcomes, he said, like the killings of Americans or senior Afghan government officials. (After the Taliban first conquered Kabul in 1996, militants captured the country’s president, Mohammad Najibullah, shot him in the head and hung his beaten body from a tower.)

For now, Mr. Katulis said, “people care more about their bridges and roads getting fixed. Afghanistan right now is out of sight, out of mind.”

Categories
Politics

Biden warns of financial peril from Covid regardless of July job positive aspects

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden resisted the temptation to take a victory lap Friday following the release of strong July jobs numbers, instead telling the country that rising Covid cases pose an urgent threat to the economic recovery.

“My message today is not one of celebration,” Biden said in remarks at the White House. “It is one to remind us that we have a lot of hard work left to be done, both to beat the delta variant and to continue the advance of our economic recovery.”

The highly contagious delta strain of Covid currently accounts for at least 80% of new infections nationwide.

Still, hiring rose last month at its fastest pace in nearly a year, despite fears over the delta variant and as companies struggled with a tight labor supply.

Nonfarm payrolls increased by 943,000, while the unemployment rate dropped to 5.4%, according to the department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. The payroll increase was the best since August 2020.

The number of new jobs beat economists’ expectations by nearly 100,000, and the unemployment rate fell three tenths of a percent lower than experts had predicted it would.

In touting the strength and resilience of the economic recovery, Biden did something Friday that he rarely does: pointed to Wall Street analysts to validate his argument.

“What we’re doing is working,” he said. “Don’t take my word for it. The forecasters on Wall Street project that over the next 10 years, our economy will expand by trillions of dollars and will create 2 million good paying jobs.”

Trouble ahead

But July’s strong topline numbers do not accurately reflect a troubling new development in recent weeks: the rise in Covid infections and hospitalizations attributed to the delta variant.

That’s because the actual numbers for BLS monthly jobs reports are calculated during just the second week of the month, based on that week’s data.

In the three weeks since the July jobs figures were calculated, hospital emergency rooms and intensive care units have begun filling up again in parts of the country.

This has prompted some large employers and schools to freeze plans to fully reopen offices and campuses in the coming weeks.

The White House is deeply concerned that rising Covid caseloads could stall the economic recovery, imperiling Biden’s domestic agenda and Democrats’ electoral chances in the midterm elections.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki answers questions during the daily briefing on August 06, 2021 in Washington, DC.

Win McNamee | Getty Images

Sticks and carrots

And after months of relying on incentives, celebrity endorsements and local outreach to persuade Americans to get vaccinated, the Biden administration took a tougher line this past week, adding sticks to the proverbial carrot-stick equation.

Federal employees who cannot prove they’ve been vaccinated will be placed under a host of unpleasant restrictions at work, like being physically separated from their vaccinated colleagues.

The Pentagon also announced plans to include the Covid vaccine among the mandatory vaccines administered to U.S. service members.

Biden didn’t touch on these measures in his speech Friday, choosing instead to describe various measures the administration is enacting to protect the economic recovery.

He repeatedly referred to Covid as a “pandemic of the unvaccinated,” a phrase that some critics say fails to capture the universal impact of rising caseloads and things like reinstated mask mandates.

As the White House often notes, more than 90% of Covid hospitalizations are people who have not been vaccinated against the virus. And while vaccinated people can contract and transmit Covid, they typically exhibit mild symptoms akin to a flu or a sinus infection.

The White House view

Both publicly and privately, White House aides say that the stubbornly high rate of unvaccinated Americans — 30% of eligible recipients — is creating a situation where one virus, the coronavirus, is essentially creating two different, parallel public health challenges.

On one track are the 166 million fully or partially vaccinated people, whose individual Covid infections the government has not officially tracked since March.

For them, the virus looks more like a seasonal flu from past years than it does like the debilitating, weekslong pulmonary crisis that millions of Americans experienced in 2020, before the vaccine became available.

But for the unvaccinated, many of whom are concentrated in the Southeastern United States, the delta variant virus is just as deadly, and far more contagious, than the original virus was in the early months of last year.

Biden, however, believes there is reason for optimism. “I’m pleased to report in the past week we have seen first-time vaccinations in America go up by 4 million shots,” he said Friday. “That’s more than we have seen in a long time.”

— CNBC’s Jeff Cox contributed to this report.

Categories
Business

Google’s Authorized Peril Grows in Face of Third Antitrust Swimsuit

More than 30 states contributed to Google’s growing legal troubles on Thursday, accusing the Silicon Valley titans of illegally arranging their search results in order to crowd out smaller competitors.

A day after 10 other states accused Google of abusing its advertising dominance and overwhelming publishers, and two months after the Justice Department announced that the company’s dealings with other tech giants were curbing competition, the bipartisan group shared Prosecutors in a lawsuit on Thursday alleged that Google downplayed websites where users can search for information in specialized areas like repair services and travel reports. Prosecutors also accused the company of entering into exclusive contracts with phone manufacturers like Apple to prioritize Google’s search service over rivals like Bing and DuckDuckGo.

This suppression, so the states in their lawsuit, has secured Google’s almost 90 percent dominance in search and has made it impossible for the smaller companies to develop into excellent competitors. Google has been trying to extend that dominance to new venues like home voice assistants, according to prosecutors from states like Colorado, Nebraska, New York, and Utah.

The cascade of lawsuits against Google that the company will fight in court hints at the mounting backlash against the biggest tech companies. This movement seems to be initiating increasingly big changes for some of the world’s most popular digital services.

Critics have argued for years that Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon built sprawling empires over trade, communication and culture and then abused their growing power. But just recently, federal or state regulators have filed major cases against them.

The Federal Trade Commission and 40 attorneys general last week accused Facebook of buying smaller competitors like Instagram and WhatsApp to maintain their dominance in a case that threatens to break up the company. Regulators in Washington and across the country are also investigating Amazon and Apple.

In addition, Democratic and Republican political leaders have taken far more aggressive stances towards the industry, including calling for changes to a once sacrosanct law that protects websites from liability for the content posted by their users.

“Our economy is more focused than ever and consumers are under pressure when they are deprived of their choice of valued products and services,” said Phil Weiser, Colorado attorney general. “Google’s anticompetitive measures have protected general search monopolies and excluded competitors, deprived consumers of the benefits of competitive choices, prevented innovation and undermined new entries or expansions.”

The prosecution filed the lawsuit in the US District Court of the District of Columbia, asking the court to combine it with a Justice Department lawsuit in October containing similar allegations. If the court combines the suits, it will expand the scope of the federal proceeding to include a much wider range of allegations about Google’s search business. The resolution of the multiple cases can take years.

Adam Cohen, director of economic policy at Google, said in a blog post that the lawsuit “seeks to redesign search so that Americans can no longer get helpful information and reduce the ability of companies to interact directly with customers. “

“We look forward to taking this case to court and continuing to focus on delivering a quality search experience to our users,” he said.

The company has long denied allegations of antitrust violations and is expected to use its global network of lawyers, economists, and lobbyists to combat the multiple allegations against the company. The company has a market value of $ 1.18 trillion and cash reserves of over $ 120 billion.

Taken together, the three lawsuits make Google a ruthless corporate giant deterring competition across a wide range of companies. It’s a far cry from how Google has portrayed itself in the past (made famous in a company-approved movie, “The Internship”): a good-natured and conscientious organization full of playful nerds.

Google has grown from a start-up in a garage to a technology conglomerate with 130,000 employees. The company that once stated that “Don’t Be Angry” was its corporate motto and was seen as a counterbalance to Microsoft and other industry bullies of the past is now seen as the dominant force of Silicon Valley and one of the companies that carve the tech landscape .

“Overall, this will be a comprehensive study of Google’s rise to power over the past 25 years,” said William Kovacic, former chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. “These are tremendous threats to the company.”

The Justice Department and attorneys general have inquired into how Google maintained its dominance in search and advertising technology by entering into deals with other tech heavyweights like Apple and Facebook to seal the markets off to competition.

The lawsuit filed on Thursday focuses on how Google has maintained online search. While Google has long strived to make a directory for the entire web, other companies over the years have developed search engines that specialize in a specific area. Yelp provides reviews for local businesses. Tripadvisor offers hotel reviews. Angie’s list directs users to reliable home repair services.

Prosecutors said Google methodically downplayed these websites in its own search results, often prominently displaying its own competing reviews or services. This prevented any company from creating a broader grouping of specialized services that could challenge Google’s search engine.

More recently, the company has used illegal tactics to expand its dominance to new vehicles for online search, including connected cars and home voice assistants, prosecutors said.

Mr. Weiser said in an interview that they will not be intimidated by Google’s expected army of litigants and will stand up for their defense.

“We have done a thorough investigation and are confident about our case,” he said. At a press conference earlier in the day, he said it was “premature” to discuss certain outcomes for the case, such as how the company could be wound up.

States began their search investigation in late summer 2019, part of a tidal wave of new investigations into the power of big tech that has not been seen since the antitrust proceedings against Microsoft two decades ago.

The Google investigation progressed faster than the other investigations at Amazon and Apple, as rivals like Microsoft and Yelp made years of allegations of anti-competitive practices by Google and publishers like News Corp. European cases against Google and an FTC investigation into Google’s search practices ended in 2013 have created volumes of records and theories of harm. The agency’s investigation closed with no action.

States said they worked closely with the Justice Department in their investigation. They interviewed hundreds of witnesses from Google and other companies and collected more than 45,000 private documents as evidence.

Thursday’s announcement reflects the deep interest of regulators around the world in Google’s signature search product.

In Europe, regulators fined Google around $ 2.7 billion for privileging their own comparison shopping tool over those of independent websites. The European Union authorities also fined Google for bundling its services with its Android mobile operating system. Google has agreed that competing search engines may bid for the default place on some devices.

Gene Munster, longtime technology analyst and managing partner at Loup Ventures, a Minneapolis venture capital company, said he doesn’t expect consumers to give up Google products, but rather that the Google brand will thrive as a company.

“It’s a black eye for the public perception of Google. You are no longer able to present yourself as the company “Don’t be angry”, ”said Mr. Münster. “I think they’re right in the warehouse of a tech company that consumers are more suspicious of today than they were five years ago.”

Tom Miller, the Democratic attorney general of Iowa, who signed Thursday’s lawsuit, reflected the similarities of the case with the federal and state lawsuits against Microsoft. Mr. Miller was a prosecutor who led the states’ prosecution against Microsoft.

Although Microsoft settled the charges, years of litigation from the late 1980s to the early 1990s clearly forced the company to rectify its anti-competitive business practices. He said antitrust proceedings, which could stretch for years in court, could help encourage more competition, regardless of the outcome of litigation.

“Some people argue that if we hadn’t brought the case against Microsoft,” Miller said, “there wouldn’t have been Google.”