Opinion: Biden is on a roll as commander in chief - Rubin
The pundits were emphatic: President Bidens withdrawal from Afghanistan in August was disastrous, leaving the United States more vulnerable to terrorists and less trusted around the world. In case anyone needed a reminder of the danger of prematurely pronouncing Biden a failure, take a look at the events of this week.
The president announced on Thursday a successful raid in Syria to take out the global leader of the Islamic State, Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, also known as Hajji Abdullah. Thanking the skill and bravery of our intelligence and armed forces, Biden stressed, This operation is testament to Americas reach and capability to take out terrorist threats no matter where they try to hide anywhere in the world. One could sense a bit of vindication in Bidens voice after months of ridicule from critics who claimed our withdrawal from Afghanistan would leave us blind to threats from terrorist groups such as the Islamic State. Clearly, the United States has antiterrorism capabilities that do not require troops on the ground in Afghanistan, and it faces threats far from Afghanistan that demand our focus. For now, Biden can claim the strategic underpinning for the withdrawal if not its execution was correct.
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Likewise, the notion that the United States lost the trust of allies because of the decision to end a fruitless war never held up to scrutiny. The United States forged a deal with Britain and Australia to allow the latter nation to deploy nuclear submarines to counter China; led the world in international efforts to distribute coronavirus vaccines; and, most dramatically, mounted a formidable NATO response to Russian aggression.
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It was not preordained that Biden would knit together a resolute position, send troops to reinforce our Eastern European allies (while encouraging allies to do the same), and smoke out Putins efforts to create a pretext for war. The Post reports: U.S. officials say they have evidence that Russia has developed a plan, approved at high levels in Moscow, to create a pretext for invading Ukraine by falsely pinning an attack on Ukrainian forces that could involve alleged casualties not only in eastern Ukraine but also in Russia. The United States willingness to present evidence of Russias plan signals a proper appreciation for Putins weakness. He has lost justification for saber-rattling and now is properly seen as the aggressor on the international stage.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/02/03/biden-on-a-roll-syria-raid-isis-russia-ukraine
Response to question everything (Original post)
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Fiendish Thingy
(15,611 posts)Isnt Russian Oil priced separately from Saudi Oil, which is separate from US Oil, which is separate from Canadian Oil? (Brent crude vs. Tar sands, etc.)
Lucky Luciano
(11,256 posts)Those prices are highly correlated and often trade at a spread to Brent or West Texas. Correlations can totally break down due to extraordinary geopolitical events though of course.
Fiendish Thingy
(15,611 posts)On the Ukraine border. $18bbl was the price in March 2020. The price in March 2021 was $62bbl.