2021
March
02
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 02, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Ahmed doesn’t ask for much. Maybe some walls for his bombed-out school in Yemen. Windows would be nice, too, so he doesn’t get wet when it rains, he smiles. But 9-year-old Ahmed doesn’t complain. Even though he is blind, he’s too busy teaching the younger kids when the adults on staff (who are not paid) can’t show up. He likes the Quran and science, he tells the BBC

Every day in Yemen, kids like Ahmed are starving. A civil war has spiraled out of control as Saudi Arabia and Iran use Yemen to wage a battle for regional influence. The children of Yemen are the greatest losers as the combatants weaponize hunger and misery. Yet those children still go to school. Yet Ahmed still teaches amid the wreckage. Still, they hope. 

The lack of global help is a “failure of humanity,” says Jan Egeland of the Norwegian Refugee Council. But how can we help Ahmed? Aid is one way, certainly. The Biden administration has also stopped supporting Saudi military operations in Yemen. That’s a “good thing,” Mr. Egeland adds.

But just as vital, he says, is to help those involved see the needless brutality of a senseless war. There can be a human impulse for all “these grown men with arms and power [to] sit down before they kill all the children.” That will take energy and leadership, Mr. Egeland says. Thankfully, a blind child in a destroyed schoolhouse is offering a glimpse of what that looks like.    


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

State vaccination programs reflect political and cultural values. Florida has found early success by rooting its COVID-19 vaccine rollout in simplicity.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Yvonne Lalyre poses by trees along Melnea Cass Boulevard in Boston, on Oct. 14, 2020. Ms. Lalyre is fighting to save the 40-year-old trees with a group called Friends of Melnea Cass Blvd. She added the ribbons to show which trees were threatened by city road work plans.

Trees offer urban benefits from beauty and cleaner air to coolness in shade. Cities are starting to grapple with the vast disparities, along lines of race and income, in how they are distributed. 

Samantha Sheehan/Courtesy of Molly Gray
Women were elected to many top jobs for the 2021 legislative session. From left, Senate President Pro Tempore Becca Balint, State Treasurer Beth Pearce, Speaker of the House Jill Krowinski, and Lt. Gov. Molly Gray stand on the steps of the Vermont State House in Montpelier on Jan. 7, 2021.

With women holding top posts in the Vermont legislature, they’re in a position to take on the problem that has prevented others from reaching such political heights: balancing a job and family.

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff
Places where the world saw progress, for the March 8, 2021 Monitor Weekly.

The Monitor’s roundup of global progress this week includes changing views of community, from a neighborhood in Atlanta to the voice of Nigerians in the U.K. to refugees in Colombia.

A letter from

Colorado
Mark Sheehan
Reporter Francine Kiefer enjoys German painter Gerhard Richter’s Cage paintings (2006), inspired by LA native and avant-garde composer John Cage, at Gagosian gallery in Beverly Hills, California, on Feb. 23, 2021. Three of the six paintings from left to right are “Cage 4,” “Cage 2,” “Cage 3."

When viewing paintings in person nourishes your joy, what happens when you have to do without? For our Los Angeles-based writer, the city’s gradual reopening means a return to art. 


The Monitor's View

Satellite image (copyright) 2021 Maxar Technologies/ via REUTERS
A satellite view shows destroyed buildings at the Iraq-Syria border after U.S. airstrikes Feb. 25.

In one of his first concrete actions as U.S. president, Joe Biden ordered his first use of lethal military force on Feb. 25. He sent two war jets to Syria where they dropped seven bombs on facilities used by Iran-supported militias. An estimated 17 people were killed. President Biden, who has warned of a heavy reliance on American military intervention, is now the seventh consecutive U.S. president to order strikes in the Middle East.

Two days later, he explained to Congress that the bombings were necessary as a reprisal against those militias for a Feb. 15 rocket attack in Iraq that injured an American service member and killed a U.S. contractor. It was also meant as deterrence. “You can’t act with impunity. Be careful,” he said in comments to reporters, sending a message to Iran and its armed proxies.

What these actions indicate are the qualities of leadership that Mr. Biden might use as chief executive and commander in chief over the next four years. In asserting a responsibility on an issue of war, was he transparent to Americans about his goals? Did he deliberate enough with top members of Congress to form a consensus on the use of force? Was he disciplined enough to stay within the law and not escalate a conflict?

That last question may be of most interest to lawmakers as the administration provides more details to Congress about the airstrikes during classified briefings this week. Democrats have been more critical than Republicans, especially as they want the president to focus on domestic needs. Some claim the strikes were offensive, not defensive. Others cite insufficient notice before the attack. Given how much Congress has walked away from its war-making powers and allowed presidents since the 1940s to act unilaterally with military actions, both parties are curious about Mr. Biden’s legal justifications.

One of his justifications, not used since Bill Clinton was president, was to claim an inherent right of self-defense for U.S. soldiers and their partners under Article 51 of the United Nations Charter. Mr. Biden did not justify the attacks by citing a 2001 law authorizing force against those responsible for the 9/11 attacks or 2003 law relating to the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Yet his most novel reason was that Syria was “unwilling or unable” to prevent the use of its territory by the militia groups held responsible for the attacks on Americans in Iraq, where there are about 2,500 U.S. troops.

Congress has not explicitly authorized U.S. military action in Syria. And a discussion of this issue may be a starting point for Mr. Biden to show a different kind of leadership by working with Congress to refine the legal underpinnings for future military action.

By being forthright in his justifications, Mr. Biden has earned enough trust with Congress for the two branches to define the proper thresholds and responsibilities for the use of force overseas. Qualities of leadership do matter on issues of war. With shared reason and wisdom, the separate powers of government can unite in deciding how military action can best achieve peace.


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.

Letting God, good, inform how we see ourselves and others empowers us to overcome seeming roadblocks in our lives.


A message of love

Sanna Irshad Mattoo/Reuters
A Kashmiri artisan is reflected in a mirror as he heats up a copper plate during its galvanizing process inside a workshop in downtown Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, on March 1, 2021.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Might a 9/11-style commission be a way to look into the events of the Capitol insurrection calmly and constructively? Tomorrow, our Christa Case Bryant will examine the idea – and why it might be hard in the current climate.

More issues

2021
March
02
Tuesday

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