2017
June
20
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 20, 2017
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Is the United States going to war with Russia? It’s a fair concern in light of recent events. But a better question might be this: Is the US sliding into a war with Iran?

What prompts the talk of war is an escalation of conflict above Syria. After a US jet shot down a Syrian fighter plane, on Monday Russia sternly warned that it would shoot down any aircraft flying over western Syria.

But on Tuesday, a more telling event occurred. The US shot down an Iranian-made drone. It was the fifth such incident in the past six months. The US says it’s protecting rebels (and American advisers) who are battling Islamic State (ISIS) near the Syrian-Iraqi border. That appears to be true and we wrote about that two weeks ago.

Iran is fighting ISIS, too. But there’s a bigger picture – and pattern – emerging. As ISIS retreats, the US, Saudi Arabia, and Israel see Iran’s influence expanding. They fear an emerging “Shiite crescent” of control from Iran to Lebanon.

The Pentagon says it isn’t picking a fight with Russia or Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces. But given Iran’s rising military reach, any path to progress in the region will likely go through Tehran.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

John Stillwell/PA/AP
A Christian women gives a Muslim man flowers as they gather close to Finsbury Park Mosque on Monday, June 19, after a van was driven into pedestrians near the north London mosque, leaving one man dead and eight injured.

Amid the mistrust and hate fed by terrorist attacks in Britain, we spoke to a community of individuals countering the fear by building bridges of trust and respect.

Even as attention focuses on the results of Georgia’s hotly contested Sixth District, we thought it was timely to look at how one Democrat in the Midwest is winning the trust of voters who supported President Trump.

Special Report

Juan Ignacio Llana/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Sarai Noriega, a former engineer, has gone back to school in Bilbao, Spain, to learn robotics. A single mother of two, she says she feels that a blue-collar job will allow her to make good money yet better control her hours.

In response to high unemployment rates, even among white-collar workers, Europe is finding innovative ways to tackle the problem. This next story is a lesson in flexibility.

SOURCE:

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

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Ken Baughman and Lisa Andrews/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Zhejiang Daily/AP
A Chinese researcher works on an ultracold atom device at the CAS-Alibaba Quantum Computing Laboratory in Shanghai, China, July 30, 2015. Such experiments promise future computers capable of breaking modern encryption in minutes, a danger cryptographic experts urge preparing for today.

Have you ever been hacked? Chinese scientists are working on one aspect of the problem: They’re toppling the barriers of time and space and taking the first steps to the ultimate in cybersecurity, an unbreakable quantum code.

Ramon Espinosa/AP
A man walks past a television showing US President Trump signing the new Cuba policy, in a living room festooned with images of Cuban leaders at a house in Havana June 16.

What’s the best path to progress on democracy and human rights in Cuba? We asked Cubans, and their answers have been shaped by the off-again, on-again US embargo of the Caribbean island.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A Franciscan monk stands near United Nations peacekeeping soldiers and an armored personnel carrier near the village of Ndim, Central African Republic, April 26.

One of Africa’s worst conflicts may have finally ended through a rare type of diplomacy. On June 19, more than a dozen armed groups in the Central African Republic signed a peace accord. Yet they did not do so through an official negotiator. Rather a religious group in Italy used what it calls a “spiritually inspired” method – building empathy and compassion – to help forge a truce.

This diplomatic feat was achieved by the Community of Sant’Egidio, a Roman Catholic lay group that works quietly and discreetly around the world to end conflicts. It puts prayer at the heart of its mediation. Its efforts have been so successful that the United Nations formally signed an agreement on June 9 to cooperate with Sant’Egidio in ending other conflicts. Its president, Marco Impagliazzo, says the group’s success lies in being seen as a neutral party that relies on patience and shared values to create trust between foes.

A Dutch scholar, Gerrie ter Haar, explains such faith-based diplomacy: “Bringing the spiritual dimension into the peacemaking process can create access to the more deep-seated, affective base of the parties’ behavior, enabling them to examine critically their own attitudes and actions.”

The conflict in the Central African Republic erupted in 2013 when the mainly Muslim Seleka rebels took power, triggering violent reprisals by militia groups that are nominally Christian. As many as 6,000 people have died. From the start, however, local religious leaders – Islamic, Catholic, and Protestant – played a key part in protecting civilians and initiating talks. They described their “weapons” as “prayer and dialogue.”

As fears of genocide grew, however, the UN, France, and the African Union sent in troops to quell the fighting. This allowed the election of a new president last year, although his influence barely extends beyond the capital. When fighting erupted again in May and more than 100,000 people had to flee, Sant’Egidio was able to bring 13 rebel groups to Rome for talks and reach a deal.

Many details of the pact still need to be implemented. And victims of the violence await the establishment of a commission to document the atrocities and achieve a level of justice and social reconciliation.

But the country, which is one of the poorest in Africa, is now rebuilding. And that is due in part to a type of conflict resolution that uses spiritual qualities to transcend divisions and end wars.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

We all have a variety of daily needs, and one thing we all undoubtedly require is health. At times, we may feel this need isn’t being met. But contributor Cate Vincent has learned, through Christian Science, about the mental and spiritual nature of health, and that God provides everyone with perfect health. More than just a positive thought, this is a spiritual fact that can bring healing. Cate shares an example of a time when warts covering her daughter’s hands completely cleared up through a better understanding of her relation to God. Nothing can prevent our daily needs from being met, including the need for health, since it is God who cares for us in every way.


A message of love

Feisal Omar/Reuters
Zebras graze in the grass of the Nairobi National Park near the Kenyan capital June 20, 2017.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. We've got a bonus for you from Tuesday's Monitor Breakfast in Washington: How the new Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin plans to improve treatment for vets. Mr. Shulkin served in the Obama administration and was also President Trump's choice. 

And come back tomorrow: We're working on a story about the US military: Is civilian control slipping? 

More issues

2017
June
20
Tuesday

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