Bullies understand one language. The U.S., West must speak with one voice | Friday Morning Coffee

Good Friday Morning, Fellow Seekers.

There are days when big news events just swallow up your entire schedule. Thursday was one of those days.

As was the case at the onset of the pandemic, and again with the 2020 election and its aftermath, and the violence of Jan. 6, it felt like the only thing we could do as a news organization was to burrow into the violent conflict taking place half a world away, explain to our readers how their elected leaders were responding to it, and try to tell them how it will affect their lives in both the near- and long-term.

If this were an ordinary column, this would be the part where I’d offer some neat prescription or exhort policymakers to take action on the solution that’s starting them in the face.

But the truth of it is that I don’t have a pithy solution or a soundbite-sized call to action as the United States and the west stares down a humanitarian disaster in the making.

And that’s because there are no easy answers. The fact that we are even in this place to begin with is the fruit of two decades of failures and missteps, across presidential administrations, to bring Putin to heel.

Soldiers from 1st battalion, 109th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 28th Infantry Division, work together to move across a course during combined arms live fire training on July 30, 2020, at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pa. Utilizing radio, hand signals, smoke, and more, the leadership of the Soldiers communicated effectively to cross the course while engaging targets (Pa. National Guard photo.)

I do, however, know one thing: There is only one language that a bully and murderous thug such as Russian strongman Vladimir Putin understands. And if our nation and elected leaders truly are serious about defending liberal democracy in Ukraine and around the world , they have to speak loudly, and with one voice, and tell Putin he can go no further.

I realize this is far easier said than done. It’s hard enough for the United States to speak with one voice at home on the most basic of issues.

It is a problem exacerbated by our polarized politics and the sad reality that there’s a whole segment of one of the major political parties that has proven, through its actions on Jan. 6 and beyond, that it has little to no interest in democratic norms. It can appallingly dismiss the carnage of that horrible day as an exercise in legitimate political discourse, and actively try to erase from its ranks those who think otherwise.

I am also painfully aware of the kind of reality distortion field that must be erected to decry Putin’s war of choice in Ukraine, even as the specter of three decades of American misadventures in the Persian Gulf and a war of choice in Iraq glares over our collective shoulder.

But it’s clear that every tool in the international community’s arsenal, short of direct force, has to be deployed as Putin tries to reset the international order that traces its origins to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the collapse of the former Soviet Union that followed just a few years later. Make no mistake, that is his goal – a resurgent Russia that stands above the west.

President Joe Biden talks on the phone with Senator Rob Portman (R-Ohio) following the Senate vote to pass the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, Aug. 10, 2021, in the Oval Office Dining Room of the White House. (Adam Schultz/Official White House Photo)

On Thursday, President Joe Biden piled more sanctions on Russia, decrying Putin’s “brutal assault” on Ukraine and its people, the Washington Post reported. The Pentagon ordered an additional 7,000 soldiers to Europe, the New York Times reported, in a move that cheered allies, but surely sent a shudder through American military families already weary of more than two decades of continuous war.

On Thursday, a veteran armed forces officer told me that they were closely watching developments in Ukraine unfold, and the Pentagon’s response to it.

The officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, so that they could speak freely, said a U.S. response could start with such rapidly deployable forces as the 82nd Airborne Division, as was the case with the evacuation of Kabul Airport last year. Indeed, elements of the 82nd already have deployed to Poland, according to published reports.

A military response is surely the least palatable and most potentially catastrophic option. History teaches that ground engagements with the Russians never end well.

As one expert notes, that currently does not appear to be in the cards. Instead, “the U.S. is rallying the world to isolate Russia through economic sanctions and to respond to cyber attacks,” analyst Jon Hutson wrote on Twitter on Thursday.

And with Putin muttering threateningly nuclear strikes if the west launches reprisal attacks, according to The Telegraph, the West cannot engage in similar saber-rattling. Thata’s effectively how Europe blundered into World War I.

Still, there’s no middle ground here. This is a battle between good and evil.

“Everything that the Kremlin says is a lie. Please don’t both sides this,” podcaster and analyst Terrell Jermaine Starr wrote on Twitter on Thursday.  “Putin is killing innocent people and Ukraine did nothing to deserve it.”

That’s a message that needs to be repeated over and over again.

Pennsylvania State Capitol Building. (Capital-Star photo by Cassie Miller.)

Our Stuff.

We have a full suite of coverage on Ukraine for you this morning.

Staff Reporter Marley Parish talked with members of Pennsylvania’s Ukrainian community about how they’re processing the invasion and staying in touch with family and friends in the now war-torn Eastern European nation.

Staff Reporter Stephen Caruso took a look at the invasion’s impact on the Pennsylvania National Guard, which has a three-decade-old relationship with the Baltic nation of Lithuania. The country borders Vladimir Putin’s Russia, and its leaders must surely be casting a wary eye on the conflagration to their south.

From me, there’s a catalogue of reaction from Pennsylvania’s elected officials, from Gov. Tom Wolf to U.S. Sens. Bob Casey (D) and Pat Toomey (R) and just about every member of the Keystone State’s delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives.

There’s also critical coverage from our Washington D.C. Bureau framing out the conflict and the Biden administration’s response to it.  A University of South Carolina expert also explains how the conflict could soon be hitting Pennsylvanians in their wallets.

Also today: A California political scientist started a firestorm in Pittsburgh over how he drew a congressional boundary through an Allegheny County municipality, Stephen Caruso reports.

En la Estrella-CapitalLos Republicanos de Pa. que compiten por el Senado de EE.UU. se enfrentan en un debate.

On our Commentary Page: Darrell Ehrlick, of our sibling site, The Daily Montanan, says that of all the things COVID-19 has taken from us, one of the most profound has been the change in workforce.

Philadelphia City Hall (Image via pxHere.com)

Elsewhere.
Former union leader John Dougherty, who’s already been convicted once, and is awaiting two more trials, was feted at a retirement party, the Inquirer reports.

U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, R-16th District, is among the U.S. House Republicans pressing for a full reopening of the Capitol, the Post-Gazette reports.

With demand rising, this is a good time to be in the used car businessPennLive reports.

The Morning Call talks to the Lehigh Valley’s Ukrainian community about the war at home.

School officials in Philadelphia have rolled out a plan to stem the tide of teacher departures.

More than one in four registered nurse positions are vacant, WITF-FM reports, citing a new survey.

Erie’s restaurants are busy, even as they contend with staff gaps and shortages, GoErie reports.

Black advocates are taking ownership of their ancestors’ historyStateline.org reports.

Here’s your #Pennsylvania Instagram of the Day.

What Goes On
The desk is clear. Enjoy the silence.

WolfWatch
Gov. Tom Wolf heads to York today for a 10 a.m. newser to celebrate a $4 million boost to the York County African American History Center.

Heavy Rotation
Here’s an absolute classic from singer-songwriter Steve Wynn that offers the kind of weary hopefulness that we need right now. From his indelible solo record ‘Here Come the Miracles,‘ it’s ‘There Will Come a Day.’

Friday’s Gratuitous Hockey Link
Vancouver snapped Calgary’s 10-game winning streak with a decisive 7-1 win on Thursday night at Rogers Center.

And now you’re up to date.



Originally published at www.penncapital-star.com,by John L. Micek

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