1/ Like he did in Belarus, Putin is once again trying to ride to the rescue of a faltering kleptocrat, this time in Kazakhstan. Putin is extending himself unsustainably thin, and it's a matter of time before he pays a price. nytimes.com/2022/01/06/wor…
2/ Foreign militaries should leave the country immediately, and Kazakh authorities must end these unconscionable attacks on protesters. Kazakh citizens deserve a responsive government that doesn't murder and steal from its own people.
3/ Putin's attempts to rebuild the Soviet empire through troop deployments to Belarus, Ukraine and Kazakhstan will backfire. Just as the Soviet Union eventually collapsed of its own weight and corruption, so will Putin's ambitions. washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/…
4/ This moment requires unity of purpose amongst the democracies of the world. Not just the U.S. and Europe, but democracies in Asia, Africa and the rest of the western hemisphere. We must be together in our effort to oppose Russia's attempts to smash international law.
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I feel so lucky to have served under Harry Reid, and so sad he's gone.
You'll hear a ton of great Harry Reid stories in the next few days, but here's my favorite - my phone call with him in June 2016 to tell him I was about to launch a filibuster on guns. washingtonpost.com/local/obituari…
2/ First, you've got to understand that Harry and the NRA started out as allies. His NRA endorsement was an important calling card for him for a long time.
But as the NRA got more extreme, Harry simply couldn't stomach it. He couldn't stay silent.
3/ Harry was old school. His convictions mattered more than his politics. If something was right, he was ready to risk everything.
So after Sandy Hook - he took a big risk. He broke w the NRA and backed a background checks bill the NRA hated. He put it on the floor for a vote.
2/ This Tuesday marks 26 years since the presidents of Bosnia, Croatia, and Serbia signed the Dayton Accords, ending years of ethnic warfare after the collapse of Yugoslavia.
3/ The fighting killed a quarter million people. Another 2M had to flee their homes. Thousands were massacred and raped in episodes of ethnic cleansing.
This all happened just a short 30 years ago. Many of the perpetrators and victims are still alive. bbc.com/news/world-eur…
1/ As we celebrate Veterans Day, I want to lift up the story of my late grandfather, Val Murphy (his grandkids called him “Pop”), and the unique role he played in World War Two.
Here he is - a new recruit - in 1943, with my great Uncle Fred. Pop is on the left.
2/ Pop had just received his engineering degree from Duke, so he was recruited to join the Army Corp of Engineers.
During a one week leave in December 1943 he married my grandmother. Days later, he was shipped off to Europe. They wouldn’t see each other again for two years.
3/ After D-Day, one of the primary obstacles confronting the Allies were all the bridges that had been destroyed or damaged by Hitler in an effort to frustrate the Allies’ advance.
Pop was assigned to Patton’s Third Army to build and repair bridges, and to do it FAST.
1/ We all need to be deeply concerned by the Sudanese military’s seizure of power and condemn General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan’s actions to dissolve the transitional government.
2/ After decades of suffering under Omar al-Bashir’s corrupt and oppressive regime, the people of Sudan had found hope in a democratic future, but this military coup puts that at risk.
3/ Prime Minister Hamdok and other detained civilian leaders must be swiftly released, the country must return to civilian rule, and peaceful protestors must be allowed to make their voices heard.