In a political world where literally anything can happen, it’s probably clichéd to say that the week about to begin is pivotal; just as pivotal, almost, as the week we’ve just left behind. But events on both sides of the Atlantic – and indeed around the world – are set to take further dramatic and portentous turns over the coming days, some predictable, others dangerously not.
The familiar Chinese curse, “may you live in interesting times” has rarely been more appropriate. Nor, sadly, have the words of Civil War General William Tecumseh Sherman: “It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation. War is hell.”
Conflict intensifies in Syria
Casualties are mounting by the hour after Turkish forces launched an offensive in northern Syria, in what the New York Times called “a powerful illustration of the forces unleashed by President Trump’s decision to pull back American troops shielding former Kurdish allies” and which has implications for a possible resurgence of ISIS.
Syrian Arab Fighters Backed by Turkey Kill Two Kurdish Prisoners – The New York Times https://t.co/jgKjlYrjP3
— Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) October 13, 2019
Turkish state-backed media hails a “successful operation” to “neutralize” an unarmed 35-year old woman working to unite Arabs, Christians, and Kurds in NE Syria. Ms. Hevrin Khalef was reportedly dragged from a vehicle and shot to death. That’s a war crime. https://t.co/O5hEVQ28jt pic.twitter.com/dn6cl7VUZr
— Brett McGurk (@brett_mcgurk) October 12, 2019
On Sunday morning, US Defense Secretary Mark Esper described the situation as “very terrible” and responded to reports that Turkey had bombed US forces. “There’s a fog out there,” he said. “Things happen.” He confirmed that about 1,000 US troops were being withdrawn from the region.
The EU looks set to discuss sanctions on Turkey at its upcoming summit – in response to which Turkish President Erdogan threatened a “refugee influx” – while several European governments have suspended weapons exports, but despite widespread condemnation and selective pushback from President Trump’s allies at home, the situation on the ground appears to be deteriorating rapidly.
Urgent: US official – the situation on the ground is deteriorating rapidly in Syria. Extremist Turkish proxies have advanced. US Forces at risk of being isolated. increased risk of confrontation between Turkish proxies and US Forces unless Turkey halts their advance immediately.
— Richard Engel (@RichardEngel) October 13, 2019
Turkey’s military strike against Kurdish fighters in northern Syria has been years in the making: a timeline of how it reached this point https://t.co/mzKKR0EYAa
— The New York Times (@nytimes) October 11, 2019
* Read ‘Kurds Are Under Attack, And We Can’t Sit Back’ by Northern Slant’s Michael Avila here.
All the President’s Men
In the US, the President’s inexplicable rationale for cutting the Kurds loose – “they didn’t help us at Normandy” – and his claim that “endless wars” needed to stop, was swiftly followed by the announcement that thousands of additional US forces would be deployed to Saudi Arabia. The difference?
NEW: On deployment of thousands of additional U.S. troops to Saudi Arabia, Pres. Trump says, "Are you ready: Saudi Arabia, at my request, has agreed to pay us for everything we're doing. That's a first!" https://t.co/8kdbxWyuln pic.twitter.com/IKNVrgFblt
— ABC News (@ABC) October 11, 2019
Congress reconvenes this week, with pressure growing on President Trump from the House impeachment inquiry and its rapidly-expanding support among American voters. After the president’s lawyer announced the White House would not co-operate with the “illegal” House inquiry, the president himself appeared to react in a familiar way:
As the House conducts an impeachment inquiry of President Trump, he says he's considering suing Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Adam Schiff, chairman of the Intelligence committee https://t.co/zLtTxTUsro pic.twitter.com/WPsLfH9D6V
— CNN Breaking News (@cnnbrk) October 13, 2019
But pressure on the president and members of his administration is growing among moderate Republicans. One of the president’s high-profile conservative critics, columnist George Will, argued this week why impeachment is necessary, even if it ultimately fails in the Senate.
“If Trump gets away with his blanket noncompliance,” Will writes, “the Constitution’s impeachment provision, as it concerns presidents, will be effectively repealed, and future presidential corruption will be largely immunized against punishment.”
Meanwhile, there is some sense that a defeat for impeachment in the Senate is not necessarily the sure thing it had been, even comparatively recently.
With developments and revelations in the Ukraine scandal unfolding almost too rapidly to absorb, the remarkable testimony by former ambassador Marie Yovanovitch on Friday set the scene for further crucial appearances this coming week: the president’s former Russia aide Fiona Hill will appear before the inquiry on Monday and then on Thursday, former ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland, one of the men at the centre of key text message exchanges, will appear.
It also emerged at the end of the week that Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani is reportedly under federal investigation after two of his associates were arrested at Dulles Airport in Washington.
Administration stalwarts Mike Pence, Mick Mulvaney, William Barr, and Mike Pompeo are all implicated, too.
https://t.co/yQz1BlvGMI— The Nation (@thenation) October 11, 2019
As the wagons appear to be circling, though, the president seems set to continue to rely on his “great and unmatched wisdom.”
Trump: and after. Timely discussion. https://t.co/c6wtYAeS8N
— Nahlah Ayed (@NahlahAyed) October 8, 2019
For good measure, the latest TV debate among the Democratic contenders aiming to take Donald Trump’s job is scheduled for Tuesday evening in Ohio. Northern Slant’s Julia Flanagan will have a curtain-raiser here tomorrow.
Brexit still treading water
It seems that time is – still – running out to avoid a no-deal Brexit, with the British PM set to talk with EU leaders again tomorrow. Earlier in the week, Boris Johnson and Taoiseach Leo Varadkar met to discuss Northern Ireland’s position in relation to the EU Customs Union, resulting in some optimism of a shift, but chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier said on Sunday that “a lot of work remains to be done.”
Column, on Johnson becoming acquainted with the first rule of Brexit: when it collides with reality, reality wins. https://t.co/zb4N9D5Cys
— Rafael Behr (@rafaelbehr) October 8, 2019
Ahead of Thursday’s meeting of the European Council, EU officials continued to talk up the prospects of a “technical extension” past 31 October, amid the continuing possibility of a NI-only backstop, as envisaged in a previous Withdrawal Agreement. Either way, this coming week is increasingly being described as “make or break” for the British Prime Minister, and could culminate with a rare parliamentary sitting next weekend, on what is already being called “Super Saturday.”
Back in the real world, though, the gloomy economic projections of a no-deal Brexit continue. The first part of the government’s Operation Kingfisher report shows that 29 of the 33 areas in the UK most vulnerable to significant job losses all voted to leave.
This is the first part of Operation Kingfisher – the business bailout part of no deal planning – to leak, and it’s grim reading https://t.co/kaIPU6YX99
— Rosamund Urwin (@RosamundUrwin) October 13, 2019
Tomorrow is the Queen’s Speech, widely seen as the starting point on the road that will lead to the next general election. Her Majesty won’t be wearing the “EU Hat” again.
Meanwhile, SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon said she would request consent by the end of the year to hold a second referendum on Scottish independence. Her plan would be to hold the vote in the second half of 2020.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn appeared to confirm that he would step down if his party failed to win the next general election.
Oh, and today marks 1,000 days since Northern Ireland had a functioning representative assembly. On the 1009th day, local abortion and same-sex marriage legislation is set to be enacted.
Assembly members claimed more than £280,000 in travel expenses for travel to Stormont and within constituencies from April 2018 until March 2019.https://t.co/W1yNYyOMv7 pic.twitter.com/S0cVzprWGv
— BBC News NI (@BBCNewsNI) October 13, 2019
Around the world in 80-ish protests
Long-running protests continued by pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong and the Gilets Jaunes in France, but they’re far from the only ones this week…
Quito
An indigenous group in Ecuador that led massive protests to reinstate a fuel subsidy said it has decided to hold direct talks with President Moreno, the first sign of a potential breakthrough in a dispute that has triggered more than a week of unrest https://t.co/I6KbEf25tD pic.twitter.com/wYeyUPYe2y
— Reuters Top News (@Reuters) October 12, 2019
Haiti
The massive anti-government protests in Haiti are primarily denouncing corruption, says journalist @Jacquiecharles. Haitians "feel that because of mismanagement of the economy, because of corruption, this is why the social situation is the way that it is." https://t.co/akvlErZN9S
— Democracy Now! (@democracynow) October 5, 2019
Seoul
Wow! See the scale of people gathered!!
Korean people's great protest against dictator Moon for the 3rd time in Seoul.
Video: 10/9/2019 pic.twitter.com/NCqjPwjDVf
— saveworldforus (@sldfkje) October 11, 2019
Even Barcelona
Protests against Spanish repression emerging today in Barcelona and all Catalonia. Main railway station in Barcelona occupied by protesters asking for immediate release of Catalan political prisoners and exiles. We will not surrender pic.twitter.com/vQvrPCumht
— Josep Lluís Alay 🎗 (@josepalay) October 13, 2019
As columnist Will Bunch writes:
“Both our limp liberal democracies and the far-worse authoritarian governments that are increasingly replacing them tend to rely on the same trick: That the great masses of people won’t notice what they’ve been up to.
“For many years, the world that was predicted in the 1980s by the late, brilliant theorist Neil Postman – that popular mass culture would create a society amusing itself to death and shunning any civic responsibility – allowed them to get away with it. In 2019, there’s been a wave of recognition, that the corruption is so blatant and out of control that it’s finally time to put down the TV remote and head outdoors.”
From Baghdad to Kyiv to Haiti, people everywhere are rising up. The U.S. is a big part of the problem. | Will Bunch https://t.co/TsBokcI9gM via @phillyinquirer
— Wendell Potter (@wendellpotter) October 6, 2019
Meanwhile, the Met Police said more than 1,300 people had been arrested in London after the first week of Extinction Rebellion protests. Expect climate protests and high-profile demonstrations across major capitals to grow.
"I was compelled to do what I did because of my concerns for the future of my children. We all know the catastrophe that awaits them… We also know that nonviolent civil disobedience have proved itself… to bring radical change", Paralympian, Rebel and hero James Brown. pic.twitter.com/5hPcf7kTlO
— Extinction Rebellion ⌛️ (@ExtinctionR) October 13, 2019
Incredible turnout for the #ExtinctionRebellion march – 20,000 rebels stretching the length of Oxford Street
We united in grief for the species lost and those at risk die to the climate emergency
We demand urgent action to prevent a 6th mass extinction#InternationalRebellion pic.twitter.com/SRjHYTDxiC
— Extinction Rebellion Hammersmith & Fulham ⌛️ (@XR_Hamm_Fulham) October 12, 2019
Now for the weather…
More than 20 people were killed and several are missing after Typhoon Hagibis struck Japan, the most powerful such storm to hit the country in 60 years. More than 350,000 homes have no power and 14,000 have no running water.
Japan sends in thousands of troops after massive typhoon hammers Tokyo https://t.co/jVID7VZPs7 pic.twitter.com/gzW0Gg9frf
— Reuters Top News (@Reuters) October 13, 2019
Incidentally, today is UN Disaster Risk Reduction day. More than four billion people were affected by disasters between 1998 and 2017; 96 per cent of the events were weather-related.
Today is #DRRday
#Didyouknow that internal displacement in 2018 was caused primarily by extreme weather events?⚫️ 9.3 m people were newly displaced due to storms and another 7.9 m people due to cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons. @IDMC_Geneva https://t.co/A4ppYzKesG pic.twitter.com/Y2DfzZafgj
— IOM GMDAC (@IOM_GMDAC) October 13, 2019
Meanwhile more severe wildfires in California destroyed homes and forced about 100,000 residents to flee – something that is becoming part of the state’s “new normal.”
An apocalyptic scene is emerging in Southern California after fast-moving wildfires broke out overnight, destroying homes and forcing residents to flee. https://t.co/RchnrmtCLE pic.twitter.com/D6b1xa9ehj
— ABC News (@ABC) October 11, 2019
PG&E, the California utility whose equipment has been blamed for deadly wildfires, shut off power this week to prevent another blaze. But as the utility turned off power to millions of Californians, the company's systems faltered and its website went down. https://t.co/XYNWMoTAvn
— The New York Times (@nytimes) October 12, 2019
And I don’t know about you but this doesn’t sound good…
VIDEO: In Italy, unseasonal weather events caused by climate change means beekeepers make "pitiful" quantities of honey that are not even enough to keep the bees alive, sparking fears for the future pic.twitter.com/5n4yBmJeol
— AFP news agency (@AFP) October 13, 2019
Climate campaigner Greta Thunberg didn’t – as some people had expected – win the Nobel peace prize (and maybe Newsweek’s reaction was a little too woke…) The award went to Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, for a record of reform initiatives and leading a local accord with Eritrea ending 20 years of conflict.
With recognition of how quickly Thunberg has grown the School Strike movement, though, she will still have plenty of opportunities to demonstrate its effectiveness for making a contribution to peace. But hey, who needs a Nobel Prize when Fatboy Slim plays a remix of your UN speech…?
Absolutely superb night at Shindig / Mainyard, this #GretaThunberg vocal goes perfect with @FatboySlim !! 😍😍 pic.twitter.com/9yvFeER672
— Scott Jackson (@scottjack79) October 5, 2019
And finally…
In the midst of the world’s madness, and with inevitable questions circling around another sporting hero, there was a moment of genuine human achievement and joy this week, when 34-year-old Eliud Kipchoge of Kenya became the first person to complete a marathon in under two hours.
Kenyan long-distance runner Eliud Kipchoge just became the first person to run a marathon in under 2 hours pic.twitter.com/u6GyJvYLjG
— NowThis (@nowthisnews) October 13, 2019
Want to know how amazing Kipchoge’s run was today?
Go up to your local track and try to run a 68-second lap. Then imagine doing that 104 more times without resting and then going and being one of the most eloquent and seemingly wonderful human beings in the world.
— Liam Boylan-Pett (@liam_bp) October 12, 2019
We planted 159 trees in honour of legend. Eliud Kipchoge. I call on the world to celebrate Kipchoge with 159 trees to heal the planet. pic.twitter.com/GieKGMLzWE
— Jedidah Wanyeki (@WanyekiJedidah) October 13, 2019
Believe.