Ukraine War, January 7, 2024: Fear of Putin and the Losing military strategy of Biden and the West

Dispatches

1) “„Kann das nicht nachvollziehen“ – Gauck kritisiert Scholz‘ Taurus-Zögern,” den 7. Januar 2024 (02:13 Ukr);

2) “‘Can’t understand this’ – Gauck criticizes Scholz’ Taurus hesitance,” Die welt, January 7, 2024 (02:13 a.m.);

Analysis

While further U.S. military aid for Ukraine is stalled in Congress and further European military aid is blocked by Hungary, it is important to stress that Joe Biden’s and Olaf Scholz’s fear of Putin and his nuclear threats severely handicap the military strategy of Ukraine and the West, denying Ukraine victories and dragging out the war.

Germany has many Taurus cruise missiles with a range of 500:kilometers which Ukraine desperately needs. Former President Joachim Gauck (the presidency us largely a ceremonial position) has strongly criticized German Chancellor Olaf Scholz for his failure to supply Ukraine with the Taurus missiles it so desperately needs.

Biden continues to enforce Putin’s “red line” that no Western-supplied weapons be used to attack targets in Russia proper or the Kerch Strait Bridge, which is a lifeline linking the Crimea to the Russian mainland.

The prohibition against striking targets in Russia prevents Ukraine from using Western-supplied weapons to attack military installations in Russia from which missile and drone attacks or aircraft making such attacks are being launched, and from attacking Russian supply lines for Russian military operations in Ukraine.

Biden refuses to allow the use of force with Western weapons to defend Ukraine against Russian attacks in exercise of the right of self-defense.

Similarly, he appears afraid and unwilling to use force to take out the sites in Yemen from which Houthi missiles and drones are being launched against shipping in the Red Sea.

Biden is weak, very weak, when it comes to using force to defend the vital national security interests of the United States.

Ukraine War, January 6, 2024: All wars escalate

Dispatches

1) Lluís Bassets,”Todas las guerras escalan; Cuando las armas arrinconan a la política, solo rige la espiral de la violencia. Lo vemos entre Ucrania y Rusia, entre Hamás e Israel y este miércoles en el doble atentado que ha costado la vida a un centenar de personas en Irán,” El País, el 3 de enero, 2024(17:06 EST);

2) Lluís Bassets, “All wars escalate; When weapons corner politics, only the spiral of violence governs. We see it between Ukraine and Russia, between Hamas and Israel and this Wednesday in the double attack that has cost the lives of a hundred people in Iran,” El País, January 3, 2024 (17:06 EST);

Analysis

Trump appears barred by Section 3 of the 14th Amendment from running for president

Dispatches

1) David French, “The Case for Disqualifying Trump Is Strong,” New York Times, January 4, 2024;

Analysis

Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides the following:

Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection and Other Rights

Section 3 Disqualification from Holding Office

No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.

Part of the breakdown in the Rule of Law in the United States is revealed by the number of calls for the Supreme Court to decide the case of Trump’s disqualification to run for president, one way or another, on the basis of political and/or practical arguments.

This reflects the widespread view, not without justification, that the Supreme Court acts on the basis of political considerations in important cases.

The Prime example is its decision in Bush v. Gore in 2000 in which it decided the presidential election in favor of George W. Bush.

The Court reversed the decision of the Florida Supreme Court which had found Gore won Florida and with it the electoral votes to become president.

Since the Florida Court’s decision was based in part on Florida law, the Supreme Court could not reverse the decision without basing its decision on a provision in the U.S. Constitution and a Constitutional right based on such a provision.

No such right existed under the Court’s previous ruleings.

So the Supreme Court pulled a rabbit out of the hat, and by tortured reasoning found the Florida Court’s decision violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.  Moreover, the Court held that its decision, which was based on no precedent, could not be cited as a precedent for the new right it had created out of thin air.

In this manner, the Supreme Court decided the future course of American history.

Think of it: Bush’s invasion of Afghanistan after September 11, 2011, Bush’s invasion of Iraq in 2003, Bush’s use of torture in secret CIA prisons and at Abu Gharib, and much more.

It is not an overstatement to say that the Supreme Court’s decision in Bush v. Gore changed the direction of the United States in history, and not in a good way.

The decision cost the Supreme Court much of its legitimacy and authority in the coming years, as the process of nomination and confirmation of Supreme Court justices became overtly political.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell refused to allow hearings or a floor vote on Barack Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland in 2016, depriving the Democrats of a justice they had nominated who surely would have been confirmed had McCullough not resorted to strong-arm tactics in the Senate to thwart such an outcome.

After Donald Trump became President in 2017, he nominated Neil Gorsuch to the Court. Gorsuch was confirmed in a bitterly partisan vote in the Republican-controlled Senate.

Let us now hope that the Supreme Court will uphold the Rule of Law by applying the plain text of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment and ruling that Donald Trump is disqualified from running for president in 2024–or ever again.

David French lays out in cogent arguments why the Supreme Court should hold that Trump is barred from running for president by Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.

It is time to end the politicization of the Supreme Court.  Pulling another rabbit out the hat to ignore Section 3 would destroy what is left of the Court’s legitimacy and authority.

In contrast, a decision based on the plain text of Section 3 of the 14th Amendment would be a necessary and important step toward restoring the authority of the Court.

Harvard is at fault for Dr. Claudine Gay’s plagiarism and for selecting her as President

Dispatches

1) Douglas Murray, “Claudine Gay has exposed the rot at the heart of the woke establishment; The former Harvard president failed to stand up against racism. The BBC and the Left are bizarrely treating her as the victim,” The Telegraph, January 3, 2024 (7:47 pm);

2) Maureen Farrell and Rob Copeland, “How Harvard’s Board Broke Up With Claudine Gay; Facing intense pressure, it went from standing behind her as the university’s president to pushing her out within weeks,” New York Times, January 6, 2024 (7:40 am ET);

UPDATE

3) Jennifer Wilton, “Niall Ferguson (Interview): ‘Dann wird diese Welt überhaupt nicht mehr existieren, sie wird zerfallen,'” Die Welt, den 8. Januar 2024;

4) Jennifer Wilton,”Niall Ferguson (Interview): ‘Then this world will no longer exist at all, it will disintegrate,'” Die Welt, January 8, 2024;

Analysis

The plagiarism charge, and ample evidence of plagiarism, is what forced Claudine’s resignation as President of Harvard University.

Elise Stefanik’s ambush of the presidents of Harvard Penn and M.I.T. on December 12, 2033 revealed what a vile politician Stefanik is, and her utter lack of principle in trying to generate headlines and controversy that will serve the campaign narratives of the authoritarian Republican party controlled by Donald Trump.

Many who opposed Dr. Gay on other grounds joined the mob calling for her ouster.

The Harvard Corporation rightly refused to fire her because she answered Stefanik’s theatical questions with a succinct statement of the Constitutional law of free speech in the U.S.

What were Stefanik and the Republicans doing anyway conducting hearings into the conduct of presidents and administrations at leading private universities in the U.S.?

The plagiarism charge is the one that stuck. It was a clear indictment of the president of Harvard for conduct that could not be ignored–although at first the Corporation did its best to do so.