2019
February
04
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 04, 2019
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The Afghanistan peace framework emerging from US-Taliban talks has already generated its share of dark headlines. It calls for a cease-fire leading to US withdrawal, and includes a Taliban promise not to harbor terrorists. Veteran diplomats have invoked Saigon in 1975. The Senate rebuked the plan. But others see it differently.

Graeme Smith, who covered the war for years, writes movingly in the Globe and Mail about missed opportunities for peace in the past, and states “this is the best chance at peace that Afghanistan has witnessed in years.” Anand Gopal, author of one of the most powerful accounts of the war, “No Good Men Among the Living,” said in an interview over the weekend that “this is the most optimistic moment of the past 17 years,” with a US president serious about leaving and the Taliban serious about negotiating.

Mr. Gopal, who covered the war for the Monitor for several years, argues a withdrawal and some kind of settlement may not hold, but is a necessary step. “At some point there would be a settlement if external powers weren’t propping up certain parties,” he says.

Many concerns loom, including about gains in education and women’s status. But conflict has severely constrained progress in broad swaths of Afghanistan, something that could change with peace.

Gopal says these moves are going to face resistance from those “who offer no plan to end the war.” But, you “have to end the conflict. Ultimately you have to have peace.”

Now to our stories looking at the dynamics between commentator Ann Coulter and President Trump, the demise of the INF Treaty, and why, instead of ragging on the New England Patriots, their antagonists should study more closely what has made the Belichick/Brady duo so powerful over so many years.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

As President Trump prepares to address the nation Tuesday, he’s under withering attack over immigration from once-friendly conservatives. But some strategists say the president shouldn’t underestimate his own power to sell some sort of compromise. 

If the landmark Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty is truly entering its last days, it may signal that the world’s two nuclear superpowers' interest in arms control more broadly is waning.

Briefing

Oswaldo Rivas/Reuters
A demonstrator stood in front of graffiti that reads "Ortega Out" during a march against Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega's government in Managua, Nicaragua, in May 2018.

President Daniel Ortega rose to power decades ago after helping to topple a dictator. For many Nicaraguans and observers abroad, that’s made it all the more painful to watch his monthslong crackdown today.

Points of Progress

What's going right

So much of the coverage of immigrants to the US focuses on their status, and on their needs. We decided to look at something else: their three decades of educational attainment.

SOURCE:

Pew Research Center

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Karen Norris/Staff

Essay

Mike Segar/Reuters
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady celebrated his team’s win over the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LIII at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta Feb. 3.

From their famous work ethic to their steely mental discipline to their success working together as a team, the NFL champs have given a model for how to succeed.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Pope Francis and Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb, Grand Imam of al-Azhar in Cairo, stand at an inter-religious meeting in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Feb. 4.

This week’s visit of Pope Francis to the Arabian peninsula, the birthplace of Islam, is certainly a historic first. It symbolizes two faiths, Christian and Muslim, trying to build bridges. Yet the trip was far more than symbolic.

The pope was just one of many at the largest and most diverse gathering ever in the Arab world of religious leaders, including Jewish and Hindu clergy. At the top of the agenda for the confab in the United Arab Emirates was a demand for a new listening rather than a rehash of old debates.

The UAE, along with Jordan and Morocco, have been leaders since the 9/11 terrorist attacks in creating forums for interfaith dialogue. This latest gathering, called the Global Conference on Human Fraternity, builds on 17 years of hard work since 2001 to find a commonality in different theologies that can counter extremist violence and protect religious minorities. As the pope said before his trip, “Faith in God unites and does not divide, it draws us closer despite differences, it distances us from hostilities and aversion.”

Jordan, for example, which is a model of relative harmony in a religiously diverse society, found some success in 2007. It won global support from Christian and Muslim leaders for a statement on common values, such as “love of God” and “love thy neighbor.”

In 2016, a forum in Morocco issued the “Marrakesh Declaration,” a document that spells out how Islamic law calls for the protection of religious minorities. For its part, the United States launched an annual summit of religious leaders last year aimed at advancing religious liberty.

Such grand conferences are reflected in smaller efforts at religious reconciliation, especially after a mass killing. In Pittsburgh, the Muslim community raised $200,000 after the massacre of 11 worshipers at a synagogue in October. Similar responses occurred in 2016 after a mass shooting at a Quebec mosque and the killing of a Roman Catholic priest in a French church.

One scholar who helps define the theological threads that bind the great monotheistic faiths of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam is Jonathan Sacks, the former chief rabbi of Britain. 

“To be a child of Abraham is to learn to respect the other children of Abraham even if their way is not ours, their covenant not ours, their understanding of God different from ours,” he writes in a book, “Not in God’s Name: Confronting Religious Violence.”

“We know that we are loved. That must be enough. To insist that being loved entails that others be unloved is to fail to understand love itself,” he stated.

Practical ideas like that often flow at these world conferences among faiths. They may help communities of believers in deterring extremists who negate others to justify their own beliefs. The ideas are not new. But the level of listening is.


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.

Today’s contributor was freed from panic attacks, as well as an addiction to the drug she was taking to manage them, as she learned more about how God knows her.


A message of love

Dmitri Lovetsky/AP
A worker clears snow around the statue of Soviet Union founder Vladimir Lenin at the Lenin Hut Museum near Razliv Lake, outside St. Petersburg, Russia, Feb. 4. Another storm delivered a week of snowfall around the city.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. In tomorrow’s Daily, we’ll preview prominent appearances by two of the Democratic party's biggest stars: Stacey Abrams, who’s giving the Democratic response to President Trump’s State of the Union speech, and Beto O’Rourke, who will be interviewed by Oprah Winfrey in Times Square. Both lost their most recent elections. But branding has become more important than actually holding office when it comes to politics.

More issues

2019
February
04
Monday

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