In a White House that demands unswerving loyalty, what's a vice president with his eye on the future to do? In Mike Pence's case, it has meant rewriting the rules on how to be both humble and ambitious as the nation's second in command.
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Mark Sappenfield
This weekend challenged some deeply ingrained perceptions in interesting ways. When the United Nations Security Council voted to impose harsh sanctions on North Korea for its recent nuclear activity, it presented a more nuanced picture of both China and the Trump administration.
China is often cast as a foot-dragger at the UN, vetoing measures backed by the West and sheltering its ally, North Korea, from consequences for its actions. But China didn鈥檛 stand in the way this weekend. The Chinese foreign minister went so far as to endorse the goal of blocking North Korea鈥檚 鈥渘uclear development process.鈥
The Trump administration, meanwhile, is often seen as a drop-the-mother-of-all-bombs-first-and-ask-questions-later operation. But it clearly helped engineer a powerful diplomatic response to an urgent, delicate situation. 鈥淎merica First,鈥 in this case, meant building meaningful cooperation.
More broadly, the sanctions are a sign of a positive development that might be too easily overlooked. Yes, the world still disagrees on everything imaginable. But the response to North Korea鈥檚 wanton recklessness shows some shared sense of how far is too far for acceptable conduct.
Here are our five stories for today.
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( 6 min. read )
In a White House that demands unswerving loyalty, what's a vice president with his eye on the future to do? In Mike Pence's case, it has meant rewriting the rules on how to be both humble and ambitious as the nation's second in command.
( 5 min. read )
Russia's crackdown on foreign aid agencies has been worrisome. Yet something positive is percolating: Russians are helping themselves, from street cleaning to hospice care. In the process, they're challenging the expectation that the state do everything.聽
( 6 min. read )
Here鈥檚 some irony for you: As college students become increasingly wedded to their opinions, they're losing an understanding of the importance of free speech and that it works both ways. Some colleges are taking up the call to address that disconnect.
( 4 min. read )
What's happening in Tilos is remarkable. Syrian refugees could absolutely reshape life and culture on the island. But the desire among locals to help is stronger than fear. And the small-town feeling of welcome is having a dramatic effect on the newcomers. 聽聽
( 4 min. read )
This is one of those 'stranger than fiction' stories about, well ... fiction. It's about how a professor in Boston made Japanese author Haruki Murakami聽a star in Poland, and it shows how the right pairing of translator and author can be almost alchemical.聽
( 2 min. read )
After a meeting last weekend with Russia鈥檚 foreign minister, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the United States harbors an 鈥渆xtraordinary鈥 mistrust of Moscow, caused in large part by its hacking of the 2016 US election. In recent days, that mistrust has resulted in tougher sanctions on Russia and a beefed-up US military presence along its borders. Many US allies have followed suit after Russia meddled in their democracies.
Yet at the same time, Mr. Tillerson also spoke of addressing differences with Russia and finding 鈥減laces we can work together.鈥 And indeed, Russia did support tough measures against North Korea at the United Nations on Aug. 5. It is also seeking cease-fires in Syria and renewing talks about its role in Ukraine.
For those who remember how the cold war was won against the Soviet Union, these latest US moves reflect a tried-and-true stance toward aggression by Moscow whether it be cyberattacks or military attacks. It is a policy of patience, restraint, and deterrence.
More than a dozen US presidents have now accepted the idea that Russia鈥檚 expansionist tendencies reflect more weakness than strength, and by containing Russia鈥檚 aggression, it can eventually reform or come to its senses. Bad ideas, in other words, collapse on their own fallacies.
This containment theory requires vigilance and statecraft 鈥 and a measure of hope that enough Russians will tire of isolation and economic stagnation. Then they will want to join the West rather than accept the Kremlin鈥檚 artificial fear of it.
The deterrence side of containment is certainly growing in many ways. Germany, for example, has improved its cyberdefenses after a shadowy group with ties to Russian intelligence broke into the computers of think tanks associated with Germany鈥檚 top two political parties. Sweden, which has long stayed out of NATO, plans a joint military drill with the alliance. And in Lithuania and Latvia, civic activists, who call themselves 鈥渆lves,鈥 are working to counter Russian misinformation in their countries鈥 media.
The new cyberdefenses reflect a deep faith in the values of Western democracy. 鈥淚 see no reason why we should be losing,鈥 says Janis Sarts, director of the NATO Strategic Communications Center of Excellence. 鈥淚t is about acknowledging the problem, resourcing solutions, and using what is best in our societies (free speech, civic engagement, innovation) to win it for our future.鈥
Russia鈥檚 aspirations to dominate its neighbors and split the Western alliance must be taken seriously. But the response must not be in kind. Rather the West can once again be firm when needed but offer opportunities for Russians to adopt another national identity. Russia鈥檚 illusions about imperial greatness do not have a long shelf life.
Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication 鈥 in its various forms 鈥 is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church 鈥 The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston 鈥 whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.
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鈥淯npredictable.鈥 That can certainly seem like an apt description of the world today. But contributor Deborah Huebsch shares how she鈥檚 come to trust in God as a presence of good that we can always count on, even when faced with unexpected or rapidly changing events. When her husband of 34 years passed on unexpectedly, she felt overwhelmed. But by turning to God, she felt the presence of divine Love and Life sustaining her, and was quickly healed of grief. 鈥淭o those leaning on the sustaining infinite,鈥 wrote Monitor founder Mary Baker Eddy, referring to God, 鈥渢o-day is big with blessings鈥 (鈥淪cience and Health with Key to the Scriptures,鈥 p. vii). This knowledge can go far in resolving fear of the unpredictable.
Thank you for reading today. Tomorrow, we鈥檒l have a report from Nairobi, Kenya. Concerns that the country鈥檚 2007 election violence could repeat itself have been growing ahead of Tuesday鈥檚 election. We鈥檒l look at why a peaceful result matters so much 鈥 both in Kenya and beyond.