Joe Biden’s foreign policy as president has two signature declamations:
America is back – as the leader of NATO and as the leader of the Free World. In his first address to a global audience, Biden said:
“America is back, the transatlantic alliance is back I know the past few years have strained and tested the transatlantic relationship. The United States is determined to reengage with Europe, to consult with you, to earn back our position of trusted leadership.”
At the Munich security conference a year ago – the same conference where, over the weekend, Ukraine’s President Zelensky, pleaded for his country’s freedom and independence from Russia – Biden said:
“We are in the midst of a fundamental debate about the future and direction of our world. We’re at an inflection point between those who argue that, given all the challenges we face – from the fourth industrial revolution to a global pandemic – that autocracy is the best way forward, they argue, and those who understand that democracy is essential – essential to meeting those challenges.”
Biden has been true to these bedrock principles as he faces the prospects for war to return to Europe after 75 years.
President Joe Biden says he is ‘convinced’ Russia will invade Ukraine (AP)
In meeting this crisis, NATO has never been stronger – or more united.
NATO’s military forces have stepped up. Arms are flowing into Ukraine to help repel a Russian invasion.
Differences over the scope and stringency of sanctions if Russia invades have been bridged. All of NATL is all in on protecting Ukraine’s rights to determine its future – including a future with NATO in the years ahead.
The heart of this crisis indeed is perched on the fault-line between authoritarianism versus democracy.
Putin is not exporting Soviet communism; he is projecting power. So of course he would witness a nuclear weapons test exercise on Saturday with the president of Belarus – who stayed in power by crushing the movement supporting three women whose movement won the presidency in an election last year.
The Cold War is back thirty years after the Soviet Union died.
We are reliving its brinkmanship. The most frightening Cold War crisis was over the Soviet Union’s placement of nuclear missiles in Cuba, just 90 miles off Florida.
President Kennedy’s UN Ambassador, Adlai Stevenson, showed the U2 spy plane photos to the world in the UN Security Council. There was no doubt even as the USSR’s leaders lied about what they had done.
As we reach an era where private companies launch people into space, so private satellite imaging companies, such as Maxar Technologies, have replaced CIA satellites and Air Force spy planes.
The stationing of 150,000 Russian troops around Ukraine, the building of pontoon bridges for tanks, are all there is living colour.
Authoritarian Russia can hide at home, but nowhere else. In the Security Council last week, Secretary of State Antony Blinken showed the evidence and coalesced world opinion.
Twenty years ago, US Secretary of State Colin Powell also went to the Security Council, with intelligence that was devastatingly wrong. Saddam Hussein was not building and did not have weapons of mass destruction – which was the justification for the US (and allied, including Australia) invasion of Iraq.
Years later, Powell acknowledged the tragic mistake that he contributed to.
“It turned out, as we discovered later, that a lot of sources that had been attested to by the intelligence community were wrong. It has blotted my record, but you know, there’s nothing I can do to change that blot. All I can say is that I gave it the best analysis that I could.”
Memories are long, and Blinken understood this perfectly in the UN last week as he presented the evidence against Russia:
“Now, I am mindful that some have called into question our information, recalling previous instances where intelligence ultimately did not bear out. But let me be clear: I am here today, not to start a war, but to prevent one. The information I’ve presented here is validated by what we’ve seen unfolding in plain sight before our eyes for months.”
Biden said over the weekend: “We’re calling out Russia’s plans loudly, repeatedly, not because we want a conflict, but because we’re doing everything in our power to remove any reason that Russia may give to justify invading Ukraine, and prevent them from moving”
But it is likely not enough.
In the 60s and 70s, the Cold War embraced China too. Today’s Cold War is no different.
SHANGHAI, CHINA – MAY 20: Russian President Vladimir Putin (L) and Chinese President Xi Jingping (R) attend a welcoming ceremony on May 20, 2014 in Shanghai, China. Putin is on a two day visit to China (Photo by Sasha Mordovets/Getty Images)
For Putin and China’s Xi, they see a weak America and a weak American president. One of Australia’s great defence and intelligence scholars, Hugh White of ANU, had these words last week on China and Taiwan:
“It was always a little hard to believe either America or China would really risk a war over the rocks and reefs of the South China Sea… To repeat, neither side wants a war.
So, as the next Taiwan crisis unfolds, both sides will have a big incentive to talk and act as if they are prepared to fight, hoping and expecting that this will deliver them a costless victory by making the other side back down.
But there is a fair chance they will both be wrong about this. Both will face a disastrous choice between humiliation and war. In such situations, leaders in the past have often chosen war. This is how wars happen despite neither side wanting or intending them.”
Substitute “Ukraine” for “Taiwan” and “Russia” for “China” and it is crystal clear that the Cold War strikes back.
Bruce Wolpe is a Ticker News US political contributor. He’s a Senior Fellow at the US Studies Centre and has worked with Democrats in Congress during President Barack Obama's first term, and on the staff of Prime Minister Julia Gillard. He has also served as the former PM's chief of staff.
In Short:
– A fourth death is confirmed due to an Optus network failure affecting emergency calls for 13 hours.
– Optus CEO announced an investigation after communication failures and criticism from politicians and emergency services.
A fourth death has been confirmed following an Optus network failure that prevented emergency calls to Triple Zero for 13 hours.
Initially, Optus reported three fatalities, including an infant and two elderly individuals from South Australia and Western Australia. The latest victim is a 49-year-old man from Perth.Optus CEO Stephen Rue expressed deep sorrow over the incident and announced a full investigation into the network update that caused the outage.
He stated that approximately 600 calls to emergency services were disrupted, impacting residents across South Australia, Western Australia, and the Northern Territory.
Rue confirmed that the outage stemmed from a problematic firewall upgrade and revealed details of communication failures within the company. Politicians and emergency services expressed anger at the lack of timely information during the crisis.
System Failure
South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas criticised Optus for their incompetence in handling the situation.
The federal communications minister also condemned the company, highlighting that such failures are unacceptable.
The incident follows a previous outage for which Optus was fined $12 million, raising serious concerns about their emergency service handling.
Israel’s new “Iron Beam” laser defense system to deploy by year-end, promising cost-effective missile interception.
Israel’s Defence Ministry says its new “Iron Beam” laser system will be deployed by year’s end. The technology is designed to destroy incoming missiles, rockets, drones and mortars with precision.
Developed by Rafael Advanced Defense Systems in partnership with Elbit Systems, Iron Beam will sit alongside existing defences such as Iron Dome, David’s Sling and Arrow. Unlike traditional interceptors which can cost tens of thousands of dollars per shot, the laser comes at negligible expense.
Officials call it the world’s first high-power laser interception system to achieve operational maturity, hailing it as a game-changer for modern warfare. Military leaders expect the system to reshape air defence capabilities and cut costs dramatically.
Stephen Colbert condemns censorship and calls out Trump in powerful monologue dedicated to Jimmy Kimmel’s suspended show.
Stephen Colbert’s opening monologue is being hailed as one of the most powerful moments in modern late-night history. Standing on stage at the Ed Sullivan Theatre, Colbert dedicated his show to Jimmy Kimmel and his team after ABC suspended Kimmel’s programme under pressure from Washington.
Colbert called the move “blatant censorship” and directly accused President Trump of acting like an autocrat. “With an autocrat, you cannot give an inch,” he warned, making clear that the stakes reach far beyond late-night comedy.