Austin Says NATO, U.S. Forces Will Leave Afghanistan, Continue Support to Afghan Forces – Department of Defense

Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III wholeheartedly supports President Joe Biden's decision to end America's longest war by September 11.

Austin spoke along with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and Secretary of State Antony Blinken during a news conference at NATO headquarters in Brussels.

Austin and Blinken spent much of the day explaining the American decision to NATO and partner nations. NATO invoked Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty in 2001 after al-Qaida operating from bases in Afghanistan launched an attack that killed more than 3,000 Americans. It was the first time the North Atlantic Alliance invoked the article which says an attack on one nation is an attack on all.

Austin and Blinken thanked NATO service members for their sacrifices in this common defense. There are currently around 10,000 NATO forces in Afghanistan, with 2,500 of them being American. This is down from over 100,000 in 2011.

"Our troops have accomplished the mission they were sent to Afghanistan to accomplish," Austin said. "And they have much for which to be proud. Their service and their sacrifices, alongside those of our Resolute Support and Afghan partners, made possible the greatly diminished threat to all of our homelands from al-Qaida and other terrorist groups."

Stoltenberg said the NATO effort in Afghanistan "prevented Afghanistan from serving as a safe haven for terrorist attacks." He said pulling the troops out of the country will not mean the end of NATO nation's efforts in Afghanistan. He cited diplomatic and economic efforts that will continue, and he called on the Taliban to seriously negotiate with the Afghan government.

The sacrifices made by NATO, partner nations and Afghan forces have enabled economic, civil and political progress in Afghanistan. "Today, the Afghan people police their own streets, defend their own interests, elect their own leaders many of whom are women send their children to school and own and operate more private enterprises than ever before," Austin said. "There is still too much violence, to be sure. And we know the Taliban still seek to reverse some of this progress. That is why we support wholeheartedly the diplomatic efforts ongoing to achieve a negotiated and political settlement that the Afghan people themselves endorse.

"But the commander in chief has ordered a new mission and American military personnel will follow these orders with professionalism," Austin said.

The United States will continue to fund key Afghan capabilities like the Air Force and the Special Mission Wing. The United States and allies will continue to fund the Afghan Security Forces. "We will also work closely with them and with our allies to maintain counterterrorism capabilities in the region sufficient to ensuring Afghanistan cannot become a safe-haven for terrorists who threaten our security," Austin said.

The retrograde movement will be done deliberately and in an orderly fashion, the secretary said. "I must add that we will respond forcefully should the Taliban attack any of our forces or those of our allies during this drawdown," he said.

The end of the action in Afghanistan will allow the U.S. military and NATO allies to focus on other more dangerous threats for the future: Notably China and Russia, the secretary said.

"I want to thank all those who served in Afghanistan," Austin said. "I know all too well the sacrifice we've all made to get us to this point. And to the families and loved ones of those who did not make it home, for all those forever changed by this war, I pledge our unwavering support for the grief and the challenges you still endure. We honor you. And we honor their memory. And we always will. And I believe the Presiden's decision proves exactly that."

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Austin Says NATO, U.S. Forces Will Leave Afghanistan, Continue Support to Afghan Forces - Department of Defense

General Says NATO Prepared to Respond to Aggression Should Deterrence Fail – Department of Defense

Generals provided testimony today regarding tensions on the Russia-Ukraine border and the ability of U.S. allies to move large numbers of forces quickly over great distances.

Air Force Gen. Tod D. Wolters, commander of the U.S. European Command, and Army Gen. Stephen R. Lyons, commander of the U.S. Transportation Command, testified at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing to review the fiscal 2022 defense authorization request and the Future Years Defense Program.

The current NATO security posture in Europe is strong, yet challenged by Russia's actions in the vicinity of Ukraine, said Wolters, adding that America's allies and partners in Europe remain a key strategic advantage.

"NATO remains the strategic center of gravity and the foundation of deterrence and assurance in Europe. Everything we do is about generating peace," said Wolters. "We compete to win. We deter, and, if deterrence fails, we're prepared to respond to aggression with the full weight of the transatlantic alliance."

Wolters noted that NATO has a robust exercise program. This summer, NATO will conduct Defender-series exercises composed of some 30,000 U.S. service members, allies and partners.

That exercise will demonstrate NATO's ability to move massive forces over large swaths of Europe at speed and at scale, he said.

Wolters also mentioned the addition of 500 soldiers to U.S. Army Garrison Wiesbaden in Germany.

These troops will be made up of field artillery; composite air and missile defense; intelligence, cyberspace, electronic warfare and space; aviation and a brigade support element. The Theater Fires Command will improve readiness and multi-national interoperability by integrating joint and multinational fires in exercises and operations, in support of U.S. Army Europe and Africa, said Army Col. Joe Scrocca, the spokesman for U.S. Army Europe and Africa, in a separate statement today.

"The Theater Fires Command and Multi-Domain Task Force in Europe will enable U.S. Army Europe and Africa to synchronize joint fires and effects, control future long-range fires across all domains, and will create more space, cyber and electronic warfare capabilities in Europe," Scrocca said.

Lyons told senators that Transcom's mission is to project forces globally on land, air and sea, including to support the upcoming NATO exercises.

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General Says NATO Prepared to Respond to Aggression Should Deterrence Fail - Department of Defense

NATO tests its hand defending against blended cyber-disinformation attacks – CyberScoop

Written by Shannon Vavra Apr 19, 2021 | CYBERSCOOP

Member nations of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have banded together in recent days to confront an apparent cyberattack carried out against a NATO members critical infrastructure, according to the alliance.

NATO is also working to battle a stream of disinformation about the attack against island state Berylia that has flooded social media, the alliance said.

While many world leaders have faced off with blended cyber and disinformation operations in recent years, the NATO members in this case are not in fact facing a real threat. NATO crafted the scenario, which was carried out by a fabricated non-NATO nation-state Crimsonia, as part of an annual simulation exercise. Known as Locked Shields, its designed to test leaders readiness to deal with live cyberthreats. Berylia, the target of the fake attack and disinformation, is also an imagined state.

The exercise which had Crimsonia target Berylias financial services sector, mobile networks and water supplies concluded Friday.

While the targets and attackers in the scenario were imagined, the blended operations depicted in the exercise are ones that world leaders have been grappling with for years.

The fabricated Crimsonia actors targeted Berylia citizens with information operations meant to sow seeds of doubt and discord. Thatsan approach that the governments of Iran and Russia used in information operations targeting U.S. citizens during the buildup to the 2020 U.S. presidential elections, according to a recent U.S. intelligence memo.

This year, the exercise featured several new dilemmas for the strategic decision-making element as well, Michael Widmann, the chief of the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence (CCDCOE) Strategy Branch, said in a statement. The cyber domain and information warfare operate hand in hand in the modern environment. Strong strategic communication policies can mitigate the effects of an enemys information warfare campaign.

It was just five years ago that NATO members agreed that a cyberattack on one NATO member state could be interpreted as an attack on all, which would trigger a collective response.

The inspiration to simulate both cyberattacks and information operations simultaneously came in part from the pandemic, during which Russia and China have conducted both cyber-operations and information campaigns to target democracies, NATO Deputy Secretary-General Mircea Geoaa said.

Russia and China have tried to use the COVID-19 crisis to exploit vulnerabilities, including those in cyberspace, with cyber-enabled disinformation campaigns, designed to sow distrust and division in our democratic societies, Geoaasaid in a statement.

Cyberattacks against critical infrastructure, too, have been top of mind for intelligence communities around the world for years. Just last week the U.S. intelligence community noted in an annual threat analysis that China is capable of causing damage to critical infrastructure in the U.S. and that Russia is known to target critical infrastructure such as underwater cables and industrial control systems.

Participants in the NATO simulation, which was organized by the CCDCOE, included the FBI, Estonias defense ministry, Cisco, Microsoft and the European Defence Agency, among others, according to Estonian World. More than 10 NATO allies participated, according to the alliance.

Its just the latest virtual cyber exercise allied national have convened to test leaders readiness to respond to cyber attacks that hit simultaneously with physical attacks or information operations campaigns. Cyber Command and allies participated in a virtual exercise last year, during which they simulated how they would respond to an attack on a European airbase. In that attack, hackers targeted virtualized industrial control systems.

This was the first time NATO has hosted this cyber exercise virtually. Past iterations of the event were hosted in person in Paris and London in 2018 and 2019 respectively.

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NATO tests its hand defending against blended cyber-disinformation attacks - CyberScoop

Ukraine Wants NATOs Action to Match Words on Russia – Voice of America

Brussels has been the focus this week of a full court diplomatic offensive by U.S. Secretary of State Tony Blinken who arrived earlier this week and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin who landed in Belgium Wednesday for his first in-person meeting since the coronavirus pandemic began with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

The main goal of the meetings with NATO and European Union leaders has been to repair transatlantic bonds strained during Donald Trumps tenure in the White House.

There are many issues to be discussed, Stoltenberg said on welcoming Blinken to the Belgian capital, noting appreciatively that Americas top diplomat had been in Europe recently for a gathering of NATO foreign ministers.

The fact that you are back again this month together with Secretary Austin, I think that demonstrates the strong U.S. commitment to NATO, to our transatlantic bond, Stoltenberg added.

But the Biden team is encountering some of the same headwinds that contributed to the straining of Euro-U.S. ties, first during Barack Obamas tenure in the White House, and then to a much greater degree under Trump, who identified Europe as an economic adversary and was querulous about NATOs purpose.

All EU national governments have welcomed President Joe Bidens aim of revitalizing U.S.-European ties. The adversarial language has gone, but Washington is now facing an EU thats turning inward with the bloc focused on protecting its own post-pandemic market and preoccupied about how to stem the coronavirus, analysts say.

And the post-World War II transatlantic consensus is being complicated by splits within the bloc over the best ways to handle the rising power of Communist China and how to manage Russia, they add.

Even before the flurry of diplomatic visits to Brussels this week some analysts were warning of challenges ahead. The rebuilding could well prove more difficult than it first appears, noted recently Steven Pifer, an analyst at the Brookings Institution, a U.S.-based research organization, and former U.S. envoy to Ukraine.

Worries on Russian buildup

But how to handle Russia, which is now piling up troops and military hardware along the eastern Ukraine border, and in Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014, is becoming the most pressing issue facing Western powers.

And it is one that may determine the longer run prospects for Bidens bid to revitalize the transatlantic alliance, some diplomats and analysts believe.

The largely unexplained Russian military buildup is prompting questions about whether the Kremlin is actually plotting another incursion into Ukrainian territory or whether it is taking the measure of Biden and testing the new U.S. president. Russia has told western officials the military buildup is just an exercise, but Kremlin officials have said publicly it is in response to Ukrainian aggression, a claim rejected by Ukrainian officials. The Ukrainians fear whatever Russias intentions the situation is become highly unstable and could easily tip into a full-scale war.

The U.S. and NATO have offered unwavering support to Ukraine and have denounced the buildup as provocative. Secretary of State Blinken said Wednesday, after a meeting of the North Atlantic Council, that he was pleasantly surprised at how all the NATO member states unreservedly condemned the Russian buildup.

What was striking to me was, in the North Atlantic Council meeting, listening to every single ally, all 30 of us, express those concerns and a determination to see Russia take steps to de-escalate the tensions that it is creating, Blinken said at a press conference.

Ukraine wants more

But a nervous Kyiv is looking for more than just words. That was stressed Tuesday by Ukraines foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, after meeting Blinken in Brussels. He told reporters condemnation needed to be supported by actions that will make it very clear for Russia that the price of its aggression against Ukraine will be too heavy for it to bear.

Kuleba added, It is better to act now to prevent Russia from further escalating the situation. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy will emphasize the same message to French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris Friday, say Ukrainian officials.

Despite the Ukrainians sense of urgency, the Biden administration and its European partners have so far not agreed on clear steps to deter Russia. Some fault a risk-averse and pandemic-preoccupied Europe for this.

While the U.S. has called on Russia to de-escalate, France and Germany have urged both Russia and Ukraine to show restraint. France and Germany are treating the perpetrator and victim of aggression alike, worries Edward Lucas, author of The New Cold War: Putin's Russia and the Threat to the West.

In a commentary for the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), a non-partisan research group headquartered in Washington, he noted that Frances Macron and Germanys Chancellor Angela Merkel recently discussed the Ukraine crisis with Putin over the Ukrainians heads.

"That sends a demoralizing message to the rest of Europe, and an encouraging one to the Kremlin: when things get serious, Berlin and Paris pursue their own interests, not wider ones, he added.

Former Estonian president Toomas Hendrik Ilves cautions that the Franco-German overtures risk reinforcing the impression in Moscow of European weakness. He suspects Putins military buildup is an act of intimidation to see how the West responds and he will play it by ear and see how it goes, he said at an event in the U.S. capital.

According to former U.S. envoy Pifer, the big dilemma facing the Biden administration is how to revive the transatlantic security alliance while not letting things get derailed by difficult issues that could divide the allies.

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Ukraine Wants NATOs Action to Match Words on Russia - Voice of America

Quad will never be like NATO: External Affairs Minister – The Tribune India

Sandeep Dikshit

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, April 19

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar completely ruled out the four-nation Quad ever evolving into a NATO-like structure.

Military alliances have never been Indias heritage... The people who use NATO-kind of analogy either dont understand us at all and dont know what our Independence means to us. One explanation I have is complete ignorance and lack of understanding of the Indian mindset, he said at All India Management Associations (AIMA) National Leadership Conclave today.

S Jaishankar, External Affairs Minister

Military alliances not Indias heritage

Military alliances have never been Indias heritage... The people who use NATO-kind of analogy either dont understand us at all and dont know what our Independence means to us.

Or these people are using these words deliberately to discourage or dissuade or mislead us from doing what is in our own interest, he said.

Jaishankar suggested a military alliance would be tantamount to abandoning Indias independence of approach. On Quad, he said it was very reasonable in international relations to have countries with convergences and shared interests to work together.

But I wouldnt exaggerate and wrongly create the imagery of a NATO military alliance, cold war etc. That has never been Indias heritage. During the cold war also, we stayed away from NATO, he added. Jaishankars outright rejection of the Quad evolving into an Asian NATO comes at a time when border talks with China and peace talks with Pakistan are stalemated.

Giving an insight into what is discussed at Quad, Jaishankar said the four ministers discussed how to ensure students move around and travel in a Covid environment easily.

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Quad will never be like NATO: External Affairs Minister - The Tribune India

NATO Keeps Wary Eye on Russia’s Military Buildup in the Arctic – The Maritime Executive

Russian nuclear sub surfaces through Arctic ice (Russian Ministry of Defense)

By Ankur Kundu 04-18-2021 07:32:33

Not all countries regret global warming. Take Russia for example: the country is actively pitching its Northern Sea Route, poised to connect Europe with Asia, as a viable alternative to the Suez Canal for maritime commerce.

However, satellite imagery is also showing a Russian military buildup in Arctic areas recentlyfreed from ice due to global warming. The reason: Russia securing its northern coastline and opening up the Northern Sea Route. The country has amassed considerable military strength in the Arctic, and analysts around the world are watching how this affects the geopolitical balance in the region.

Recently, CNN received satellite imagery by Maxar that detailed Russia's long-running buildup in its Arctic coastline. Along with with underground storage facilities likely to be used for storing the Poseidonnuclear long-range torpedo and other new high-tech weapons, the airfields host bombers and MiG-31BM jets.

NATO and the US have expressed increasing concern in the wake of this buildup, especially after reports were revealed about Russia's troop movements near the Ukrainian border. Speaking to CNN, a senior State Department official said, "There's a military challenge from the Russians in the Arctic. That has implications for the United States and its allies, not least because it creates the capacity to project power up to the North Atlantic."

Norway to host the biggest exercise inside Arctic Circle since the Cold War

The Russian buildup, both in the Arctic and the Ukrainian border, has prompted Norway to plan the biggest exercise inside the Arctic circle since the cold war. Dubbed 'Cold Response 2022,'next years war games will see active participation from Norway's Navy and Air Force. Set to take place in an area where U.S., British and Dutch soldiers frequently drill in Arctic warfare, it's meant to be a show of strength to the Kremlin as much as an exercise.

EU nations and NATO-aligned countries are committing more resources and military training in the region, according to General Eirik Kristoffersen, head of the Norwegian Armed Forces. There is a significantly increased interest among our allies for the north and the Arctic, he told The Barents Observer.

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NATO Keeps Wary Eye on Russia's Military Buildup in the Arctic - The Maritime Executive

NATO to improve cyber defense in bid to boost alliance resilience – C4ISRNet

COLOGNE, Germany Senior NATO officials vowed to boost the alliances cyber defense capabilities at a conference on Thursday, tucking the efforts under the top-priority thrust of hardening member nations against catastrophic disruptions.

The virtual NATO Cyber Defense Pledge conference, an invitation-only event hosted by the government of Estonia in a virtual format because of pandemic restrictions, brought together senior government and private sector officials to discuss needed improvements in the alliances cyber posture.

One theme in the publicly available remarks by top leaders was a newfound urgency in protecting key infrastructure against cyberattacks, as the coronavirus pandemic has forced an even greater reliance on data connectivity across all sectors of society.

Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said malicious cyber activities against NATO members had increased since the global COVID-19 outbreak began in early 2020. Sometimes it is by adversaries situated in our immediate neighborhood, sometimes by rivals across the globe, she said in an apparent reference to Russia and China.

We must recognize that cyberspace is at the forefront of increased global competition, and democratic nations must stand together against deviations from acceptable behavior, Kallas said in her opening speech.

The push to harden NATOs cyber defenses touches two key themes of the ongoing NATO 2030 reform process. For one, alliance leaders want to mandate certain levels of resilience in member nations, including in the cyber domain. The push entails everything from upkeep of transportation infrastructure to building fallback supply lines for vital goods, with the stated goal of making NATO as a whole able to bounce back from major shocks, including the ongoing pandemic.

The other theme aims to protect the alliances ability to harness next-generation technology for defense applications, including considerations for managing technological gaps between member states.

Enhancing resilience and leveraging technology will be key to a strong alliance in a more competitive world, NATO Deputy Secretary-General Mircea Geoan said. Those efforts are essential elements of the NATO 2030 initiative, which will be at the heart of the upcoming NATO summit later this summer, he added.

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For Estonians, cyber threats emanating from Russia loom large in the national defense calculus.

As the Estonian Foreign Intelligence Service recently concluded in their annual report, Russia continues to be one of the primary cyber threat actors to Western democracies, Kristjan Prikk, permanent secretary of the Estonian Defence Ministry, told Defense News. In the near future we need to prepare ourselves for potentially increasing cyber-enabled influence operations carried out by Russian special services, he added.

In the United States, meanwhile, the Biden administration on April 15 placed sanctions on Russia for its role in the SolarWinds attack that affected several U.S. government agencies. The National Security Agency also issued a cybersecurity advisory calling out the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVF) for continuing to exploit cyber vulnerabilities created by hacking the SolarWinds Orion system and other software.

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NATO to improve cyber defense in bid to boost alliance resilience - C4ISRNet

Bipartisan group of senators reintroduce bill blocking presidential NATO withdrawal – JURIST

A bipartisan group of US senators reintroduced a bill Thursday that would prevent a president from unilaterally deciding to leave the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), or for using any public funds to do so, without the approval of Congress. The legislation reintroduces a 2018 bill that failed to progress out of committee.

This resolution has support from high-profile senators from both parties including Tim Kaine (D-VA), Marco Rubio (R-FL) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN). The language of the bill forbids any president from suspending, terminating, denouncing or withdrawing the US from NATO, except by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, provided that two thirds of the Senators present concur, or pursuant to an Act of Congress. Furthermore, a president is also forbidden from attempting to divert funds to attempt to achieve a withdrawal from NATO.

Should a president unilaterally ignore this legislation and attempt to withdraw from NATO without the support of Congress, the bill empowers both the Senate and the House to independently or collectively represent Congress and initiate judicial proceedings against the president in federal court, an action that would likely lead to a court striking down the presidents unilateral withdrawal as illegal.

The NATO founding treaty does not outline specific procedures for withdrawing from NATO, other than requiring the withdrawing member state to submit a notice of denunciation one year ahead of the desired withdrawal date. The US Constitution only requires that the president have the Advice and Consent of two-thirds of the Senate before making international treaties.

The 2018 bill was originally introduced amid concerns that then-president Donald Trump would unilaterally withdraw the US from NATO due to his skepticism over its continuing value. Kaine affirmed NATOs value when introducing this recent resolution, saying, NATO has been a critical alliance for nearly 75 years, while Rubio called it a critical military alliance for our national security interests and the security of our allies in Europe. A majority of respondents in NATO member states view the alliance favorably, with more than half of US respondents supporting continued membership.

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Bipartisan group of senators reintroduce bill blocking presidential NATO withdrawal - JURIST

Eastward expansion of NATO and the Ukraine crisis – Monroe Evening News

opinion

James W. Pfister| The Monroe News

Back in the stable days of the Cold War, in August1983, I was on a comparative legal study (and vodka drinking) tour of the Soviet Union. (We were told by our charming tour guide that vodka was the only way to avoid bacterial illness; we didnt question her).

Traveling in the Soviet Union was an experience of empathy for those of us interested in international politics. Being on the other side of American power, seeing the United States from their eyes, was dramatic, with American power in NATO to the West, a mere 1,200 miles away.

The United States, not being content with being limited to the Western Hemisphere, also had power to the East in the Pacific region. And there, not limiting itself to an island ladder of defense, it asserted itself on the mainland of Asia in Thailand and South Korea, after having spent years in Vietnam.

Sitting in Kiev (Kyiv), Ukraine, we felt surrounded by American power. Today, American power is even closer, inside Ukraine itself! With American pushing, NATO expanded eastward toward the Russian border after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Some of the new states of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union became NATO members. Some were promised future membership. Those not directly part of NATO could become partners.

Ukraine last year sealed deeper ties with the alliance, becoming an enhanced opportunities partner. Wall Street Journal, 4/14/21.

Indeed, America has been triumphant, exercising its power right up to the Russian border. Gen.Colin Powells pottery maxim comes to mind when he was advising President George W. Bush on Iraq II: You break it, you own it. Or, the old adage: Be careful what you wish for; you may actually get it. To wit: Russia, our Great Power adversary, has recently built up its military forces, including Iskander missiles, on the Russian border with Ukraine, the biggest buildup since 2014, when it took Crimea.

On March 24, 2021, our secretary of state, Antony Blinken, gave a speech to NATO members in which he reaffirmed the American commitment to NATO and to our partnerships. Recently, on "Meet the Press," the secretary threatened Russia: Speaking for our president, Mr. Blinken said, there will be consequences if Russia uses force against Ukraine. This is a line-drawing threat by one nuclear power to another, about as dangerous as it gets. A miscalculation could be catastrophic.

From a political science, sphere of influence perspective, Ukraine is within the Russian sphere. Lately, the United States has been intruding upon that sphere of influence, and also on the Chinese sphere, regarding Taiwan, potentially threatening world peace.

From a legal standpoint, Ukraine is a sovereign state in international law, which should not be threatened or attacked under Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter, and it has under Article 51 the inherent right of individual and collective self-defense, under which NATO was organized. NATO and its members certainly have a legal and a moral right to organize with Ukraine for its defense.

Butis it prudent under the sphere of influence approach to use force to defend Ukraine? One is reminded that Khrushchev in 1962 had a legal right to put offensive weapons in Cuba with Cubas consent, a sovereign state under international law. President John Kennedy saw the situation in political science, sphere of influence termsand brought the world to the brink of nuclear war in the Cuban Missile Crisis to protect our interests regarding Cuba. (Kennedy tried to be legal; he had a legal authorization for the blockade under an Organization of American States authorization).

Butpolitical science trumps law, even morality, when it comes to security in the nuclear age, I believe. When we were sipping our prophylactic vodka cocktails in Kiev, Ukraine, that summer of 1983, we certainly could not have imagined that a nuclear-war threat could occur by an American defense of Ukraine, where we were, from a Russian attack. What dangerous irony.

My professor, Inis Claude, had a concept he called prudential pacifism peace based not on morality, or law, but on prudence between nuclear powers. Prudence should prevail over morality or law here in the case of defending Ukraine on the Russian border.

JamesW.Pfister, J.D. University of Toledo, Ph.D. University of Michigan (political science), retired after 46 years in the Political Science Department at Eastern Michigan University. He lives at Devils Lake and can be reached at jpfister@emich.edu.

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Eastward expansion of NATO and the Ukraine crisis - Monroe Evening News

NATO Relies on Thales for a Real-Time View of the Operational Situation in Joint theaters – Business Wire

PARIS LA DFENSE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--On 17 March 2021, NATO awarded to Thales the new increment to provide an operational situational awareness system that will give NATO commanders a shared picture of an area of interest or mission to enhance overall awareness of joint forces operations and support mission planning, coordination and command.

Joint operations today involve land, air and naval units with many different types of command systems, which generate huge amounts of georeferenced operational information. NCOP will capture, aggregate and correlate all this information to generate a single, comprehensive picture of the theatre of operations, providing a Common Operational Picture (COP) that will ensure that each entity has a shared view of the location, actions and intentions of the forces in the field.

To meet this requirement, Thales has developed a software system based on an open architecture, with specialised modules that draw on the companys experience of different aspects of the command chain and are fully compliant with commercial and military standards. This system is designed to provide the operational community with secure access to multiple COPs overlays on a geospatial reference. Tactical information from multiple systems and data sources will improve situational awareness for joint forces.

Each COP is displayed in real time and shows key elements such as operations in progress, friendly and enemy forces, their logistics and operational capabilities, weather conditions and possible action plans for future coordinated efforts.

NCOP allows for synchronised management of all deployed forces and provide effective support for collaborative planning and decision-making in an operations centre. This in turn will enable joint forces command to achieve information superiority.

With this second contract, NATO will benefit from Thaless extensive expertise in interoperability management. Thales will upgrade the technology used in the current system, which has been in service at NATO command centres since 2015 and national command centres in France, Poland and Spain. Thales will also add new functionality for time management, event correlation and future strategic analysis.

Thales is proud to strengthen its partnership with NATO and to help achieve greater decision superiority for NATO forces. We thank the Alliance for placing its trust in us once again and for this latest opportunity to support NATO's capacity to efficiently manage joint forces operations. Grard Herby, Vice President, Protection Systems, Thales.

About Thales

Thales (Euronext Paris: HO) is a global leader in advanced technologies, investing in digital and deep tech innovations connectivity, big data, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and quantum computing to build a confident future crucial for the development of our societies. The Group provides its customers businesses, organisations and governments in the defence, aeronautics, space, transport, and digital identity and security domains with solutions, services and products that help them fulfil their critical roles, consideration for the individual being the driving force behind all decisions.

Thales has 81,000 employees in 68 countries. In 2020 the Group generated sales of 17 billion.

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NATO Relies on Thales for a Real-Time View of the Operational Situation in Joint theaters - Business Wire

Today’s D Brief: US, NATO to pull out of Afghanistan; IC’s threat assessment; Biden diplomacy; Extremist airman; And a bit more. – Defense One

At long last: Americas military is leaving Afghanistan in September. Thats the big news we learned Tuesday, and expect to hear more about this afternoon when President Joe Biden addresses the topic in remarks planned for about 2 p.m. ET from the White Houses Treaty Room.

Also today: We could get a better sense of what Americas NATO allies think of Bidens decision. His Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin and top diplomat Secretary of State Antony Blinken are in Brussels to meet with Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, as well as foreign and defense ministers from across the alliance and Afghanistan is just one of a few interrelated matters the officials are discussing today. Others include NATO support to Ukraine and the immediate need for Russia to cease its aggressive military buildup along Ukraines borders and in occupied Crimea, according to a statement today from Blinkens spokesman Ned Price.

But about Afghanistan: [T]he NATO Alliance went into Afghanistan together, adjusted to changing circumstances together, and will leave together, Price said.

According to the White House: We will begin an orderly drawdown of the remaining forces before May 1 and plan to have all U.S. troops out of the country before the 20th anniversary of 9/11, a senior administration official told reporters Tuesday.

NATO troops will also depart; but exactly how many is unclear. We have discussed the drawdown with our NATO allies and operational partners, that administration official said. We will remain in lockstep with them as we undergo this operation. We went in together, adjusted together, and now we will prepare to leave together.

Worth noting: At the moment, of the 9,600 NATO troops officially in Afghanistan, about 2,500 of them are American, though that number can be as many as 1,000 higher, the New York Times reports today from Brussels. The second-largest contingent is from Germany, with some 1,300 troops.

ICYMI: 500 more U.S. troops will be headed to Germanys Wiesbaden area possibly as early as this fall, Austin announced Tuesday from Berlin. The new troops would bring the total U.S. forces in Germany to about 35,500; and it sends a notably different message to NATO than the one from Bidens predecessor, who sought to reduce troop levels in Germany and add to troop levels in Poland.

[T]his move will also create more space capabilities, more cyber, and more electronic warfare capabilities in Europe, and it will greatly improve our ability to surge forces at a moment's notice to defend our allies, Austin said Tuesday. Some 35 local national positions and 750 family members will also be coming to the Wiesbaden areas, U.S. Army-Europe officials said in a separate announcement Tuesday.

Germanys reax: It is great news that not only has the withdrawal of troops...from Germany been halted, but, quite the contrary; we will be able to welcome an additional 500 U.S. troops, Defense Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer said while standing beside Austin in Berlin.

US, NATO Troops to Withdraw from Afghanistan by 9/11, US Official Says // Tara Copp: Decision for a September pullout follows rigorous policy review.

Afghanistans Situation Didnt Change. American Politics Did // Kevin Baron: The Biden administration says it can fight terrorism in a way that its predecessors called impossible. Can it?

HASC Chair: White House Is Slow-Rolling Defense Budget Details // Marcus Weisgerber: Get us the numbers before May 10, Rep. Adam Smith said Tuesday.

New ODNI Report Sees Growing Cyber Threats, COVID-Related Instability // Patrick Tucker, Government Executive: Intelligence heads will brief lawmakers on Wednesday about threats from China, Russia, others.

'I Felt Hate More Than Anything': How an Active Duty Airman Tried to Start a Civil War // Gisela Prez de Acha, Ellie Lightfoot, and Kathryn Hurd, ProPublica: Steven Carrillos path to the Boogaloo Bois shows the hate group is far more organized and dangerous than previously known.

Welcome to this Wednesday edition of The D Brief from Ben Watson with Bradley Peniston. And if youre not already subscribed to The D Brief, you can do that here. On this day in 1865, President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., on the same night that a deserter in the Confederacy attacked Lincolns Secretary of State William Seward while he was being treated by an Army nurse in his home. Confederate Gen. Robert Lee had surrendered to the Union Army just four days earlier, but Lincoln and Sewards attackers thought there was still a chance the South could win the war. Seward somehow survived his attack; Lincoln passed away the following day. The South officially lost the war on May 9.

For the first time in two years, Americas top intelligence officials will testify on global threats to the U.S. That includes CIA Director William Burns; FBI Director Chris Wray; Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines; Army Gen. Paul Nakasone of the National Security Agency; and Defense Intelligence Agency's Army Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier. That started at 10 a.m. ET. Catch the livestream here.Some things theyre apt to bring up today: The worldwide effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, which is prompting shifts in security priorities for countries around the world, Defense Ones Patrick Tucker reports off the new worldwide threat assessment (PDF) from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which was released this week.In addition to COVID-19, A large section on cyber this year highlights the risk of supply-chain disruptions from China and particularly Russia. Read on, here.What does the future of U.S. cybersecurity look like? Thats what the Senate Armed Services Committee is looking into today during an afternoon hearing with NSA Cybersecurity Director Robert Joyce; the Defense Department's David McKeown and and Navy Rear Adm. William Chase III. That gets underway at 2:30 p.m. ET.

NORTHCOM and SOUTHCOM leaders are headed before the House Armed Services Committee today. The ostensible focus of that hearing: National Security Challenges and U.S. Military Activity in North and South America. Thats scheduled for 11 a.m., and comes an hour after the House Foreign Affairs Committee began its hearing digging into Root Causes of Migration from Central America.

Biden talked with Putin on Tuesday. During the leaders second phone call, the U.S. president emphasized the United States unwavering commitment to Ukraines sovereignty and territorial integrity," according to a White House readout of the call. The Hill has a bit more.Russia vows two more weeks of military maneuvers near Ukraine as U.S. warships plan Black Sea sortie, AP reported Tuesday.Heres a roundup of Russias recent military moves in the region, from Defense Ones Patrick Tucker.

The U.S. has also dispatched an unofficial delegation to Taiwan, according to Reuters: Former U.S. Senator Chris Dodd and former Deputy Secretaries of State Richard Armitage and James Steinberg headed to Taiwan on Tuesday at President Joe Bidens request, in what a White House official called a personal signal of the presidents commitment to the Chinese-claimed island and its democracy. Read on, here.ICYMI: Chinese and U.S. naval forces have been particularly active in the Western Pacific and South China Sea in the past few weeks. More at CNN.

And finally today: A company in Australia knows how to break into encrypted iPhones. Thats why the FBI asked them to help in the case of the San Bernardino shooters back in December 2015 and its also why Apple is suing the company, the Washington Posts Ellen Nakashima and Reed Albergotti report after some respectable sleuthing.Who are these guys? Azimuth Security, which the Post describes as a publicity-shy company that says it sells its cyber wares only to democratic governments.Where this story gets interesting: Even Apple didnt know which vendor the FBI used, Nakashima and Albergotti write. But without realizing it, Apples attorneys came close last year to learning of Azimuths role through a different court case, one that has nothing to do with unlocking a terrorists device. Continue reading here.

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Today's D Brief: US, NATO to pull out of Afghanistan; IC's threat assessment; Biden diplomacy; Extremist airman; And a bit more. - Defense One

Can Afghan Forces Hold Back The Taliban Without U.S., NATO Troops? – Gandhara

A powerful presence in Afghanistan for nearly two decades, the withdrawal of the last 2,500 U.S. troops from the war-torn country has U.S. intelligence chiefs and policy advisers concerned the Afghan military will be unable to hold off extremist Taliban forces by itself.

And it won't just be U.S. forces that will be leaving.

Shortly after U.S. President Joe Biden's announcement of the pullout on April 14, NATO confirmed it will follow Washington's timetable and pull its remaining 7,000 non-U.S. soldiers out of Afghanistan by September 11.

In fact, Afghan government forces have been responsible for security in their country since 2014.

But they depend heavily on the U.S. military and its contractors for logistics, close air support, and the maintenance of crucial equipment.

A recent U.S. intelligence report -- an annual threat assessment delivered to the Senate shortly before Bidens withdrawal announcement -- warns that the prospects for a peace deal between Kabul and the Taliban will remain low during the next year.

The Taliban is likely to make gains on the battlefield, and the Afghan government will struggle to hold the Taliban at bay if the coalition withdraws support, the April 9 report predicted.

Kabul continues to face setbacks on the battlefield, and the Taliban is confident it can achieve military victory, the U.S. intelligence chiefs warned. Afghan forces continue to secure major cities and other government strongholds, but they remain tied down in defense missions and have struggled to hold recaptured territory or reestablish a presence in areas abandoned in 2020.

Meanwhile, an Afghan Study Group report issued by the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) warns that the risks of state failure and renewed conflict are extremely high.

"A withdrawal would not only leave America more vulnerable to terrorist threats; it would also have catastrophic effects in Afghanistan and the region that would not be in the interest of any of the key actors, the Afghan Study Group concluded.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has responded with a brave face to Bidens withdrawal announcement, tweeting that Afghanistans proud security and defense forces are fully capable of defending its people and country, which they have been doing all along.

Biden insists Washington will continue to support counterterrorism efforts from a distance to prevent Afghanistan from becoming a base for terrorist attacks on the United States or its interests.

He notes the Afghan government has more than 300,000 security troops in its ranks, including many trained by U.S. and NATO forces during the past two decades.

According to the U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), the Afghan forces include about 187,000 troops within the Defense Ministry and about 118,000 paramilitary police under the command of the Interior Ministry.

The United States has also for years been delivering military equipment to bolster the combat capabilities of Afghan government forces.

Afghan Deputy Defense Minister Shah Mahmoud Miakhil says the government by the end of 2020 had received from Washington at total of 1,383 Humvees, 55 Mobile Strike Force vehicles, 10 Black Hawk helicopters, and four fixed-wing A-29 light-attack planes for close air support.

Preservation of the Afghan Security Forces is of vital importance to Afghanistans long-term stability and security, says U.S. Lieutenant General John Deedrick, commander of Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan.

Looks Good On Paper

But security analyst Ted Callahan, a former adviser to U.S. Special Forces in northern Afghanistan, says what exists on paper and what exists in reality is often very different.

What matters is what is available to the frontline troops, Callahan tells RFE/RL. Whenever something gets written up by the Afghan security forces, its usually quite positive. Everything looks good. Its working. Its where it is supposed to be. But then, when you go and check, nothing is there. Its missing. Its broken. Its been stripped of parts.

He says the reality is that "all of that equipment may very well have arrived at some point, but where is it now? What is its current condition? Who knows how to operate it? Who has the keys to whatever garage its locked into? Who has been selling it to other parties -- possibly even the Taliban?

Callahan says the combat power of Afghan forces suggests it should be able to hold off future Taliban assaults, but experience shows they probably will not be able to.

By any metric, Callahan says, the combat capabilities of Afghan forces are superior to the Taliban in terms of aircraft, small arms and light weapons, artillery, and manpower.

But he says "history has shown us that [government forces] lack the will, the commitment, and the discipline that the Taliban have. That intangible factor gives the Taliban the edge over the Afghan security forces.

Attrition of forces has also been a thorny issue plaguing the Afghan government since the earliest efforts by NATO and the U.S.-led international coalition to build up an Afghan security force that is loyal to Kabul.

The latest SIGAR quarterly report shows attrition at a normal level for the Defense Ministry -- about 2 percent per month -- despite increased pay incentives.

Meanwhile, SIGAR says the Interior Ministry has seen a slightly elevated monthly attrition rate of about 4 percent.

The concern is that falling morale caused by the U.S. withdrawal, along with potential difficulties in paying Afghan troops, will lead to even higher attrition.

Torek Farhadi, a former adviser to the Afghan government, says Kabul is entirely dependent upon U.S. financial support for the salaries and supplies for its forces.

The United States will continue [financially] supporting Afghan security forces, albeit at a lower level, but for some time to come, Farhadi told RFE/RL. The Afghan Air Force is more dependent on support from contractors for the maintenance of its aircraft. This support from the United States will also be necessary going forward.

Farhadi says Washington's attempts to get the Afghan government to forge a peace deal with the Taliban would make the army more capable "to address foreign terrorist groups [in Afghanistan] such as Islamic State and others.

But a deadlock in the peace talks held in Qatar since September 2020 between Kabul and the Taliban, as well as increased attacks by the militant group, have raised doubts about the prospects of any peace deal being reached.

Sustainability And Logistics

Callahan says the weakest link in the Afghan security forces is, arguably, its ability to sustain itself until a Taliban-Kabul peace agreement is reached.

There are very few aircraft in the Afghan inventory, and their ability to maintain those is pretty much nil -- especially with the U.S. providing Black Hawk helicopters to replace their [Soviet-built] Mi-17s, he says.

Basically, they would have about a one-year period in which all their aircraft would stop flying if the U.S. were to suspend assistance in terms of maintenance, training, and everything else that is required to fly a helicopter in Afghanistan, Callahan says. They obviously have huge problems there.

He adds that poor logistics and corruption keep vital supplies from getting to "where theyre supposed to be."

Because of those weaknesses, Callahan predicts the Talibans 2021 spring offensive will see the militants push pretty hard on some of the provincial capitals that theyve already surrounded -- places like Tarin Kowt [in Uruzgan Province], possibly down in Helmand. Kunduz is a perennial favorite up in the northeast," he says. "Weve already seen fighting in Badakhshan that suggests they may be shaping operations in advance of an assault on Kunduz.

Callahan adds that The combat weaknesses will be exposed first. But what is going to be the real problem for the Afghan forces is going to be moving things around getting ammunition there, getting men there.

Lack Of Coordination

Tactical coordination between Afghan security force units is also an issue.

Within the ranks of the Interior Ministry, the paramilitary police force has grown to some 118,000 officers within the past year under a program that dissolved local Afghan police units and brought them under the ministrys command.

Defense Ministry forces include the Afghan Special Security Forces, the Afghan National Army Territorial Force, and the Afghan Air Force.

The Afghan Air Force currently relies on U.S. airborne communication platforms and U.S. air-strike controllers to coordinate close air support for Afghan ground troops engaged in combat against the Taliban.

That has raised concerns about future ground-and-air coordination after the departure of the last U.S. and NATO troops.

Specific troop levels for individual units of the Afghan forces is classified by the Kabul government.

But Afghanistans elite special forces are thought to be comprised of about 20,000 to 30,000 soldiers -- grouped within a Special Mission Wing, the Special Operations Corps, General Command Police Special Units, and other elements.

There are a number of special operation forces and they have different command-and-control structures, Callahan explains. Not all of them are going to be housed in the [Defense] Ministry. Some are under the [Interior] Ministry.

"The largest is the commandos," he says. "That unit is not only the most capable but also the unit thats going to be called on the most in terms of retaking areas that are captured by [the] Taliban, whether urban or rural.... They get overused.

Callahan says the commandos are not supposed to be a holding force or a light infantry force. They are not supposed to sit in the field for weeks on end or guard checkpoints. But thats often how they are utilized.

In fact, SIGAR notes, for more than a year Afghan special forces have been restricted mostly to defensive postures in order to hold the Taliban back from Kabul and provincial capitals.

In the meantime, Taliban fighters have expanded the territory they control by seizing isolated rural checkpoints -- in some cases allowing the Taliban to surround provincial capitals.

The Afghan Territorial Force is larger than the Special Security Forces. The Territorial Force has been trained to provide security in less violent security zones and to carry out general-purpose troop responsibilities.

The problem is that the conventional Afghan National Army, by and large, tends to cluster in large garrisons, Callahan says. It has a very defensive posture and, thus, a defensive mindset. And it tends not to do many offensive operations against the Taliban.

But when commandos go into a city like Kunduz and clear the Taliban out, they need somebody to come in and replace them so they can rest, refit, rearm, and then go out on another mission, he says.

What tends to happen is they get stuck sitting in a recaptured city like Kunduz for weeks on end -- holding checkpoints and conducting minor operations on the outskirts trying to degrade the Taliban so they dont come back in and take it. It really creates this dysfunctional dynamic that weve seen for almost 10 years now where one unit of the security forces has to do almost everything.

"It creates a lot of wear and tear and it just degrades their abilities as well," Callahan says.

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Can Afghan Forces Hold Back The Taliban Without U.S., NATO Troops? - Gandhara

Richard J. Evans Staying Alive in the Ruins: Plato to Nato LRB 22 April 2021 – London Review of Books

Just over forty years ago, in 1980, I found myself by chance teaching for a semester at Columbia University, armed with the grandiose title of Visiting Associate Professor of European History, provided with a free apartment and paid a salary not far short of what I earned in a whole year as a lowly lecturer in the UK. Id never been to the US and knew nothing about Columbia or indeed any other American university. The faculty mostly seemed rather elderly to me, and so far as I could tell they lived upstate and only came in to New York City once a week to dispense their wisdom ex cathedra in very lofty and very lengthy lectures, which were later explicated for students by a phalanx of teaching assistants. Most of the professors evidently thought I was a grad student, and in any case it was the grad students on whom I quickly came to rely for my social life.

Several of my friends were engaged in teaching a two-semester sophomore course called Contemporary Civilisation, and at first I thought how admirable this was: the university introducing its students to the world today, no matter what subject they were majoring in. What a splendid preparation for life after graduation! My friends soon disabused me. It was a great books course. It began with Platos Republic and continued with the Bible, before going on to Augustine, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Smith and so on. There was, it seemed to me, little sign of contemporary civilisation. Fully occupied with delivering twice-weekly lectures on Europe from 1870 to 1919 and a weekly graduate class on imperial Germany, I considered myself fortunate that I didnt have to teach this course as well: Id have struggled to keep up since Id never studied anything remotely resembling it myself.

Contemporary Civilisation was Columbias version of what in other American universities went by the name of Western Civilisation. Like them, Columbia had introduced it in the aftermath of the First World War, with the intention of informing the next generation of Americans about issues of war and peace, and, more generally, telling them what their country had been fighting for. American and Allied propaganda in the war had portrayed the conflict as a struggle to defend European and American civilisation against German barbarism. The enemy then was the Hun: a term borrowed from an unfortunate speech given by the kaiser in 1900, when German expeditionary troops confronting the Boxer Rebellion were instructed to make themselves remembered as the actual Huns had been after they trashed the Roman Empire. A widely distributed American recruitment poster showed a gorilla-like figure standing before the ruins of Louvain cathedral, wearing a spiked helmet, with a club marked Kultur in one hand and a swooning, half-naked maiden in the other. The poster urged young Americans to destroy this mad brute.

In wartime propaganda, as in the newly created Western Civ surveys, civilisation was seen as the creation of Ancient Greece and Rome. Plato to Nato courses may have introduced the mediating influence of Christianity, but essentially they emphasised the classical origins of the civilisation which educated elites in Europe and the US claimed to defend. There were few major politicians in the first half of the 20th century, and for some time afterwards, who hadnt received a classical education. In Britain, Margaret Thatcher, a scientist, was a rare exception; far more typical is Boris Johnson, who likes to quote great chunks of Ancient Greek from memory.

In his original and engrossing book, the Oxford historian Paul Betts, an American who experienced Western Civ at first hand, perhaps underplays the classical origins of the idea. Civilisation in the classical tradition already incorporated many of its contemporary meanings, from advanced technology and material comfort to enlightened philosophising and artistic sophistication. When, in his television series Civilisation (1969), Kenneth Clark asked himself, What is civilisation?, the answer was: I dont know But I think that I can recognise it when I see it. What Clark recognised was very much the Western Civ idea, stretching back to the Ancient Greeks and given new life by the Renaissance. These assumptions were shared by Norbert Elias, whose The Civilising Process (1939) had charted the history of manners and civility, and the emergence of the modern state. What Betts shows, however, is that the term had many uses and many different definitions, even in the relatively short time between the end of the Second World War and the present day.

During the war, Goebbels proclaimed that Germany was defending European civilisation against the barbarism of the Bolshevik hordes. Nazi propaganda condemned the British barbarism demonstrated by the bombing of historic German towns an example, Goebbels said, of Englands assassination of European culture. Hans Frank, governor general of Nazi-occupied Poland, said his aim was to elevate the Polish people to the honour of European civilisation, even as he trashed and looted the vast art collections of the Polish aristocracy, banned performances of Chopin and sent millions of Jews and other Poles to their deaths.

Contemplating the heaps of dead and dying in the liberated concentration camps, the British MP Mavis Tate thought that German rule in Europe represented the negation of civilisation. She noted that it exposed the deep streak of evil and sadism in the German race, such as one ought not to expect to find in a people who for generations have paid lip-service to Western culture and civilisation. When the surviving German war criminals were put on trial at Nuremberg, the American prosecutor Robert Jackson told the judges that the real complaining party at your bar is civilisation.

In 1945, the victorious Allies faced many of the same problems they thought they had faced in 1918. But the destructive effects of barbarism were now greater and more obvious. For one thing, the scale of the material damage inflicted on Europe was unprecedented. Entire cities were razed. Tens of millions of people were starving, destitute and homeless. And the Nazis had departed radically from the widely understood standards of decency and humanity that were central to the concept of civilisation.

Initially, there was a marked reluctance on the part of the Allies to embark on a programme of re-civilising the Germans. Betts doesnt mention the Morgenthau Plan to deindustrialise Germany, which, though it was never formally adopted, exerted a powerful influence on American policy in the immediate aftermath of the war, but he does make clear that it wasnt until 1946 that food and funds and other kinds of aid began to flow into Germany. The Marshall Plan, which poured millions of dollars into Western Europe on the condition that recipient countries accepted the principle and practice of liberal democracy, was intended, in the words of the director of the CIA, Allen Dulles, to fulfil the task of saving Europe for Western civilisation. The reconstruction effort was driven by a growing fear that, without it, the Germans would become susceptible to Communist or neo-Nazi propaganda. The doctrine of collective guilt underpinned a policy of non-fraternisation with individual Germans until it was suggested that the Red Army, more lenient in this respect, might be winning over more Germans than the British and Americans might like. The Cold War had begun.

The re-civilising of Germany was made easier by the concession that Germany had been civilised before 1933, possessing legal norms that the defendants at Nuremberg knew they were violating. Amounting to a distinction between the Nazis and the Germans a distinction which wartime propaganda and early postwar reactions to Nazi atrocities had threatened to obliterate this helped the occupying powers in their efforts to re-educate ordinary Germans. While the British adhered to the well-established concept of the two Germanies, and tried to bring out the civilised tradition of Beethoven and Goethe while suppressing the uncivilised tradition of Bismarck and the kaiser, the French sought to convert the Germans by introducing them to the universal values of French culture. Germans themselves paid little attention, at least to begin with, as they tried to stay alive among the ruins.

American policy was driven by the belief that the Germans needed reconnecting with contemporary Western civilisation. This could prove tricky, however. When the CIA sponsored a travelling exhibition called Advancing American Art, showcasing work by Abstract Expressionists such as Adolph Gottlieb and designed to show that American culture was a world away from the pseudo-classicism of Nazi art and the crude propaganda of Soviet socialist realism, the House Un-American Activities Committee condemned it and funding was withdrawn. The CIA continued to promote exhibitions in Germany by Abstract Expressionists, but covertly. Backing these initiatives was another CIA-sponsored institution, the Congress for Cultural Freedom, which supported magazines such as Der Monat and, in Britain, Encounter, to cultivate American values. For a long time, the identity of these magazines backers remained hidden from most of their contributors. Regardless of the controversy aroused when it was eventually exposed, the CCF illustrated a key aspect of the mainstream US concept of civilisation in the 1950s: its identification with liberalism.

Betts emphasises, perhaps overemphasises, the contribution of photojournalism to these efforts, though this enables him to include illustrations that give a good flavour of the period. Policies such as the shift in 1946-47 from starving the Germans to feeding them were made in the end by politicians, not journalists. The Cold War was remoulding Western civilisation into Judeo-Christian civilisation, a concept endorsed by Eisenhower in 1952, shortly before he entered the White House. Catholic-Protestant reconciliation underpinned the Christian Democratic idea that, as the Italian politician Alcide de Gasperi put it, Christianity lies at the origin of this European civilisation. Faced by the threat of atheist communism from the east, politicians relegated the classical heritage to a subordinate role. Whats more, downplaying democracy and human rights in favour of Christianity allowed the Catholic dictatorships of Franco and Salazar to be welcomed into the club.

The Cold War also brought the threat of nuclear annihilation. Eisenhowers warning in 1953 that nuclear war would mean the probability of civilisation destroyed was echoed by the Soviet premier Georgy Malenkov: he said it would bring the end of world civilisation. Fear of catastrophe encouraged the negotiation of agreements such as the 1949 Geneva Convention for the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, which strengthened similar agreements signed before 1914 but treated as a dead letter between 1939 and 1945 (and not just by the Nazis). For most people in Europe, though, civilisation in the 1950s meant material progress. America, as the French poet Louis Aragon complained, was a civilisation of bathtubs and Frigidaires. Betts cites a 1954 opinion poll which asked French women what they wanted out of life: 22 per cent said love and 54 per cent material wellbeing. Left-wing European intellectuals worried openly that American consumerism was undermining European civilisation and drowning it in a wave of Coca-Cola and rocknroll. American sociologists decried the dumbing down of civilisation in a levelled-out mass society. On both sides of the Iron Curtain, a proliferation of etiquette books emphasised the importance of civility and moderation, in contrast to the fascist values propagated before 1945.

Perhaps the most distinctive aspect of Bettss book is the attention he pays to the reconstitution of European overseas empires as part of the effort to reconstitute European civilisation overall. Integral to this effort was the familiar claim that the colonial empires were justified because they were extending the benefits of European civilisation to parts of the world that remained uncivilised in many ways. But in the climate of the postwar world this was a lost cause. Japans easy conquests in the Far East had torpedoed the claims made for British, French and Dutch superiority to Asians. India became independent in 1947. Brutal campaigns waged by the French in Algeria, and by the British in Malaya and Kenya, destroyed the idea that European civilisation meant peace, order and the defence of human rights. Both the US and the USSR distanced themselves from European attempts to cling on to empire. In 1956 there was the debacle of Suez. In 1960 Harold Macmillan recognised the inevitable when he conceded the power of anticolonial liberation movements in his wind of change speech.

African nationalist intellectuals were by now appropriating the language of civilisation for themselves. Colonialism, they argued, had corrupted or displaced African civilisations, whose achievements could be seen in spectacular archaeological sites such as Great Zimbabwe that had been ignored by the colonisers, or falsely ascribed to mysterious white people by racists such as Ian Smith. Hugh Seton-Watson, an anti-communist historian of Eastern Europe, claimed that decolonisation was not a glorious extension of democracy, but a tragic decay of civilisation, similar to the decline of the Roman Empire, and followed by the same result, reversion to barbarism. His views were echoed by other conservatives. But they were challenged by writers such as Lopold Sdar Senghor, who borrowed from the German anthropologist Leo Frobenius to argue there had been a major precolonial African civilisation. He had to be somewhat selective in his borrowings, since Frobenius, a friend of Wilhelm II, believed that the civilisation had been founded by white men and had degenerated once they abandoned it.

For newly independent African states, exhibitions of precolonial sculptures, masks and monuments provided evidence of a vibrant cultural heritage. This idea blended into the concept of world civilisation, which became influential in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Unesco, founded in 1945, expressed the idea in the multi-volume History of Mankind (1963-76), whose bland optimism and avoidance of controversial political issues was widely criticised by historians. Far more successful was the parallel forty-volume History of Civilisation series, which brought together a diverse collection of historians including Eric Hobsbawm, Friedrich Heer and Michael Grant to produce single-author volumes on particular time periods and parts of the globe. Underpinning the concept, developed by its enterprising publisher George Weidenfeld, was the French idea of civilisation as encompassing material life and economies, ideas and mentalities, science and the arts, alongside the politics, revolutions and wars that were the traditional subjects of history.

Unesco scored a far greater and more lasting success with its invention of World Heritage Sites, a popular idea that had its origins in the multinational effort to rescue Ancient Egyptian monuments and artefacts threatened in the 1960s by the building of the Aswan Dam. As they proliferated across the globe, World Heritage Sites succeeded in breaking the identification of civilisation and heritage with Europe. The initiative also ran counter to the Western designation of civilisation as Christian. Communist governments in Eastern Europe saw that they could put themselves on an equal footing with the West by propagating the idea of socialist civilisation, which they sought to extend to the global south, supporting liberation movements in colonies such as Angola and Mozambique and backing the anti-apartheid cause in South Africa. This challenged the concept of Judeo-Christian civilisation adhered to by spokesmen for apartheid such as D.F. Malan, who declared the racial differences between blacks and whites to be the physical manifestation of the contrast between two irreconcilable ways of life, between barbarism and civilisation, between heathenism and Christianity.

The backlash against the secular, progressive concept of civilisation found dramatic expression in Greece in the coup of April 1967, led by colonels in fear of a socialist victory at the upcoming national elections. The coup had been necessary, one of the colonels proclaimed, because we had arrived at a situation of anarchism in this country of Helleno-Christian civilisation. Greece is a mission, another said, and this mission consists of civilisation. This did not prevent them from arresting and torturing thousands of their opponents. Nor did it stop them adding the plays of Aeschylus and Sophocles to their already extensive list of banned works. The coup earned the colonels condemnation across the globe, and few were sorry when the regime was brought to an end in 1974. But neither the overthrow of the Portuguese dictatorship in 1974 nor the death of Franco the following year prevented the return of civilisations identification with Christian conservatism in the following decade.

The Islamic revolution in Iran and the ascendancy of hardline theocracy sparked a sense that civilisation was in crisis, fanned ten years later by Khomeinis incitement to Muslims to kill Salman Rushdie after the publication of The Satanic Verses. When the end of the Cold War determined that Russia could no longer serve as the antithesis of civilisation in the eyes of Christian conservatives, Islam provided a handy substitute. Global politics, Samuel Huntington wrote in 1996, is the politics of civilisations, a politics in which the rivalry of the superpowers is replaced by the clash of civilisations. The sense that Christian civilisation was threatened by violent Islamist barbarians was deepened by 9/11, the Iraq War, the Taliban and Islamic State. Beheadings and public stonings werent civilised and nor was the destruction of ancient monuments such as the city of Palmyra and the buddhas of Bamiyan.

Unesco condemned these and other acts of cultural vandalism as crimes against world civilisation, though the civilised world did not scruple to exploit these crimes for its own purposes: between 2007 and 2009, customs officials at Heathrow confiscated 3.4 tons of antiquities looted from war zones in Iraq and elsewhere, intended for sale on the international market. Civilisation under threat was the theme of a BBC television series broadcast in 2018, which opened with video footage of the destruction of Palmyra. Entitled Civilisations, it was clearly intended to dethrone the Eurocentrism of Kenneth Clarks series of the 1960s. But Unesco-style liberal multiculturalism had to compete with the growing resurgence of older and narrower ideas of civilisation, summed up in Niall Fergusons 2011 TV series and book Civilisation, which argued that the West had achieved world dominance through a combination of competition, science, property-owning democracy, modern medicine, the consumer society and the Protestant work ethic. Even this upbeat account ended, however, with a warning that civilisation in the West was now under threat though if, as the subtitle asked, the West was about to become history, this was only because it had lost faith in itself.

Ferguson shared Unescos emphasis on scientific progress, legal accountability, human rights and democratic politics. But in his pessimistic concluding chapters, Betts charts the narrowing of the idea of civilisation to a strong identification with Christianity, political authoritarianism and scientific denialism. Real and would-be populist authoritarians, from Orbn to Trump, have uncoupled the idea of civilisation from many of the concepts with which it was associated in the Unesco tradition. Where George W. Bush, speaking in Warsaw in 2003, referred to democracy thirteen times, and talked, like his predecessors since Truman, of the free world, Trumps inaugural address in 2017 mentioned democracy only once. In Trumps parlance, Betts notes, civilisation replaced democracy and human rights as sources of allegiance and identity. In 2017, Trump declared that his mission abroad was to defend the civilised world against terrorism: Our civilisation will triumph.

In the view of modern conservatives, civilisation is Christian, and it is under threat above all from the Islamic world. In this view, secularism is too feeble a force to ward off the threat. This brings with it in turn a populist scepticism about secular science, above all the science of climate change, with its unacceptable attacks on material civilisation: cars, fossil fuels and all the other sources of global warming that have underpinned the prosperity and wellbeing of advanced industrial societies. On the far right, a racist understanding of civilisation has been used to warn the white majoritarian culture about the dangers of immigration. Orbn, who has built a wall on the Serbian border to keep out migrants, declares that he is defending the whole of European civilisation. Yet for liberals and the left, Betts observes, the idea of civilisation is a source of chagrin and loathing, a hangover from the era of imperialism. By vacating the field, they have left the rhetoric of civilisation to the right, to be deployed in the service of nationalistic and anti-democratic ambitions. Perhaps, given the many reconceptualisations of civilisation over time, this may change at some point in the future. But it doesnt look likely soon.

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Richard J. Evans Staying Alive in the Ruins: Plato to Nato LRB 22 April 2021 - London Review of Books

Local Sons of Confederate Veterans camp to hold memorial – The Albany Herald

ALBANY The Sons of Confederate Veterans Camp 141 in Albany will host its annual Confederate Memorial Service Saturday from 9 a.m.-noon at the CSA Memorial Park on Philema Road.

The observance is held each year during April, which is Confederate History and Heritage Month in the state. The designation was ratified by the Georgia General Assembly in 2009.

The ceremony will pay tribute to the Confederate battle flag, according to SCV Camp 141 Commander James King.

The Confederate flag represents honor, faith, courage, dignity, integrity, chivalry, Christian values, respect for womanhood, strong family ties, patriotism, self-reliance, limited constitutional federal government, states rights, and belief in the free enterprise system, King said in a news release. It symbolizes the noble spirit of the Southern people, the rich heritage, the traditions of the South and the dynamic and vigorous Southern culture. No other symbol so proudly says Dixie as the Cross of St. Andrew waving in the breeze.

Liberals have falsely indoctrinated many black Americans to believe the flag represents racism, bigotry and a painful reminder of slavery. But white Christian Southerners who fly the Confederate battle flag are not the enemy of responsible black Americans who are working to better themselves.

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Saturdays memorial service will include a musical tribute to the Confederate States of America consisting of CSA songs and Southern Gospel. Music will be preformed by Ed Eschman and the band Southern Sounds. The formal memorial service will begin with an invocation by Pastor Bobby Brown, followed by a singalong of the Southern National Anthem, Dixie. George Ray Houston, the poet laurate of the Georgia SCV Division, will read the poem The Long, Lonesome Road.

The events keynote speaker is Eugene Bo Slack, who is the commander of the Sylvester SCV Camp Yancey Independents. He will present a summary of the lives of Christian CSA Gens. Robert E. Lee and Thomas Jonathan Stonewall Jackson. Following Slacks speech, King will read the order and date of the secession of states that formed the Confederate States of America. Descendants of each state who are in attendance will stand to be recognized when the state in which their ancestor served as a soldier is called and a flower will be placed at the CSA Monument in memory of the soldiers of that CSA state.

A rifle and cannon salute by re-enactors in Confederate uniform will be followed by a singalong of Amazing Grace and the event will conclude with a benediction by Brown.

All members of the public who have an interest in Confederate history and heritage are invited to attend. For additional information contact King at jkingantiquearms@bellsouth.net or (229) 854-1944.

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Local Sons of Confederate Veterans camp to hold memorial - The Albany Herald

6 Confederate memorials could be removed from the Texas Capitol if state bill passes – KXAN.com

AUSTIN (Nexstar) State lawmakers on Monday are considering a bill that would remove certain Confederate monuments and memorials, and rename other parts of the Capitol Complex, due to Confederate ties.

Before laying out the bill in the House Committee on Culture, Recreation and Tourism, the author of the bill, Rep. Rafael Anchia, (D Dallas), held a press conference to rally support for the bill.

Confederate artifacts are undeniably a representation of hate, racism, and oppression, Rep. Anchia said, Theyre an insult to the many descendants of slavery to the many people who visit our Capitol today, in the state of Texas, and the intent of admission of the Confederacy are clear and indisputable.

The bill would require the removal of the following monuments from Capitol grounds:

It would also rename the John H. Reagan Building to the Jackson-Webber Building in honor of Nathaniel Jackson and John Webber.

Those testifying against the bill on Monday said the bill would be erasing history.

David Wylie, Republican Party of Texas, testified that it would in fact be rewriting history.

I cant agree with that. This calls for the removal of things that reminds people of where weve been, Wylie said, It shows what weve been through, and where we are today.

But, Rep. Anchia countered that the existing monuments rewrite history, and misrepresent the intent of the Civil War.

Instead of using tax dollars to celebrate and glorify people who are secessionists, people who were traitors to America, and people who wanted to preserve an institution, where one human could own another human and force that human to do labor on their behalf, raped that other human, own their children and their progeny as if they were property, we seek to change that, Rep. Anchia said.

The hearing for the bill is continuing into the evening, with 30 witnesses signed up to testify.

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6 Confederate memorials could be removed from the Texas Capitol if state bill passes - KXAN.com

From dystopia to utopia: How UK co-working spaces are redefining the new normal – UKTN (UK Technology News

The pandemic suddenly forced millions of workers out of the offices to work from home. Before the pandemic, flexible-office companies like WeWork made up a growing sliver of real estate 2.3% of leasable space in the US as of the first quarter of 2020, according to JLL research, and the sector has grown an average of 23% per year since 2010.

Now, insiders predict a short-term pinch for the industry, as employees fear returning to people filled floors and as some of the small businesses that relied on these spaces have reduced their headcount. Addressing these concerns will be of paramount importance for co-working space providers.

Addressing the elephant in the room

Given the current situation, anyone is bound to think twice before deciding to work out of a co-working space. Addressing these concerns that weigh down on everyones mind will be critical for co-working space providers such as Spacemade and WeWork. How will the companies make sure that users are comfortable enough to return back to coworking spaces?

To make this happen, Jonathan Rosenblatt, co-founder and co-CEO at Spacemade notes that establishing trust is of paramount importance. Businesses dont want to think about building compliance, air quality, sanitisers, extra cleaning and more, but they do want all of that to be taken care of. Thus, the trust rests with flexible workspace operators.

Spacemade is a first-of-its-kind operational partner for landlords looking to provide a bespoke flexible workspace offer directly to their customers. The group has over 100,000 sq ft of flexible office space under operation in London, Leeds and Bristol. The business was founded by Jonny Rosenblatt and Dan Silverman. Recently, the startup also bagged 1 million funding to grow its flexible workspaces in the UK.

WeWork, the most controversial name in this space, failed to become public, last year and got battered hard. Industry experts believed that it was time for the co-working player to make peace with the sunset, but a year and a pandemic later, the office-sharing firm is still standing strong.

UKTN also had a chat with Mathieu Proust, General Manager from WeWork UK and he emphasises how the company is working really hard to make sure their spaces are as safe as possible. The company has invested heavily in doubling up on sanitisation, installing HVAC systems for constant air filtration and regularly sanitising frequently used elements like door handles and lifts.

Additionally, it even changed the layout for some of its offices to enable a roomier environment and to shape users behaviour within a space. WeWork also obtained third-party certification from Bureau Veritas, which ensures that they are actually living up to the high standards of sanitisation.

Overall, establishing trust with consumers, having mitigations in place and delivering on promises of sanitising their spaces will be crucial for coworking spaces to thrive again.

Moving towards the flexible new normal

Both WeWork and Spacemade have numerous buildings available across London. While some of their spaces follow the modern dynamic workspaces landscape, others are collaboration hubs. These hubs are geared towards enabling idea exchanges with no traditional desk or chairs layout and a lot of whiteboards.

WeWork also recently launched All Access, which is its monthly membership. It is different from its standard subscription as one receives their badge, which grants access to any of the companys buildings around the world. Essentially, it makes the entire city your campus. One can open the app and decide if they dont want to work in the same location as yesterday. If they have a client meeting in Victoria, for example, they can work in a location nearby, Proust explains.

WeWorks Growth Campus

WeWork also recently announced an allocation of 15 million for subsiding rents for struggling SMEs. Additionally, in London and other cities, it will provide free mentoring and education opportunities to help SMEs recover.

It is no surprise that the work from home scenario has changed our lives forever. However, it is something that will be difficult to support indefinitely because it hampers collaboration and in turn, innovation. For smaller and even medium-sized companies, collaboration serves as an important tool to fuel innovation. WeWork aims to deliver it through Growth Campus.

Additionally, Growth Campus will also enable a new generation of entrepreneurs to come into the limelight. Proust calls them the COVID generation of entrepreneurs, which is something WeWork wants to be a part of. In the UK, specifically, we witnessed the rise of new entrepreneurs. Last year, new business formations stood at 13% and thats why we created Growth Campus, to do our part and give something back to the SMEs and the entrepreneurial attitude, Proust adds.

WeWork will consider any company under the new program if their employee headcount is below 20 and if they have a vision to scale within the UK or internationally.

Changes for co-working spaces in a post-pandemic world

Rosenblatt predicts that in a post-pandemic world, where almost everything is changing, the short-term outlook will be highly competitive. This is expected to create notably attractive pricing propositions for the customers. If this turns out to be true, it will be good news for end customers as it makes returning to the office even more attractive.

Talking about mid-to-long term changes, he says there will be a pretty seismic shift to a more flexible and hybrid work approach as flexibility also means one can repurpose their office. Flexibility is key and we see most businesses moving towards using space on demand with requirements such as different spaces for different uses throughout the week. This can be difficult for businesses to deliver without professional support from specialist co-working providers, Rosenblatt adds.

The future for coworking spaces

It can be difficult to accurately predict whats going to happen next in any sector at the moment. However, Proust opines that the future for co-working spaces is all about flexibility.

Proust notes, Now that places are reopening, were going back to a new normal. But what is the new normal? This could look something like enabling members to choose how many days they want to work and what can we set up for them. Do they want an exciting office? And those are the kind of problems we are solving.

Rosenblatts thoughts align similarly as well. He says, The question we need to ask is; if youre a team of 10, on the days that youre in the office, would you rather have a small leased space with no amenity, or would you rather have access to thousands of sq ft of the hospitality-driven workspace where you can be surrounded by new people to interact with?

New coworking spaces in the works

For current and future plans, Both WeWork and Spacemade are opening more co-working spaces across London and the UK. SpaceMade recently launched a new space, Neighbourhood Works at London Fields a few weeks ago and many new spaces are said to be in the pipeline.

As for WeWork, it recently opened up a new space in Shoreditch. It is also in the process of curating new workplaces all around the UK.

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From dystopia to utopia: How UK co-working spaces are redefining the new normal - UKTN (UK Technology News

Offspring’s first new album in nine years, 5 Things to Know – The Oakland Press

These are good times for the Offspring -- even if the California punk group's new album is called "Let the Bad Times Roll."

It's actually been nine years since the quartet's last studio album, albeit with an EP and some singles in between. "Bad Times," due out Friday, April 16, was recorded over the course of that interim with producer Bob Rock, and was previewed during 2015 with the single "Coming For You."

In addition to the album, the Offspring has launched a new video series, "How To: With the Offspring," which will share "a vast amount of useful knowledge -- starting with an episode in which frontman Bryan "Dexter" Holland and guitarist Kevin "Noodles" Wasserman teach viewers how to surf...

Despite the long gap between albums Noodles says the Offspring was never concerned about getting "Let the Bad Times Roll" finished and out. "We always knew we were gonna get to it eventually. It might seem like a saga from an outsider's standpoint, but it's really just something we've been working on when we're not touring, or when one of us (Holland) isn't working on his Ph. D. There's a lot of reasons why it took this long to get it done, but honestly the majority of this record, and I think some of the better parts of this record, came together in the last couple years. We just had a real creative time, and things started clicking."

The official music video for The Offsprings Let The Bad Times Roll.

Get the new song and pre-save the upcoming album LET THE BAD TIMES ROLL now at https://found.ee/OffspringBadTimesRoll

While "Bad Times" is not a concept record, Noodles says the title and title track, as well as songs such as "This is Not Utopia," were inspired by recent and current events. "It's kind of look at where we find ourselves in the world right now. Our country just went through four crazy years, politically and societally, and it's not over. We're still going through it. Then throw a pandemic on top of that. Things haven't changed that much in nice years since (the Offspring's last album). There's still plenty of (bad stuff) going on in the world that makes people go, 'Omigod!'"

"Bad Times" includes a stripped-down, acoustic version of the Offspring's 1997 single "Gone Away," an arrangement that's been part of the band's live set in recent years. "It really works live. We thought, 'Let's strip it down a little bit. Let's purify it, keep it to its simplest emotions.' It's really a dramatic moment in the show, and our fans really took to it. They've been asking, 'When can we get a studio version?' and eventually we thought, 'OK, we should try it. It's a great idea. Let's dee if we can pull it off,' and this is the result."

Noodles says the "How To" video series is "something that's just fun for us to do when we can't go out and play shows. We don't take it that seriously; It's like, 'Yeah, I know a little something about this...' Some of them are going to be more serious than others, but we want it short, sweet and easily digestible, but also something we know the fans are gonna dig."

With plans to tour the U.K. during November pending, the Offspring is using videos and interviews to promote "Bad Times'" release. Meanwhile the band is continuing to work on material with hopes that it won't take as long to release its next album. "There are some songs that we were working on that we can't put all the pieces together yet. You don't just trash 'em. We probably have four or five songs I want to say are done or close to done for the next record. Right now we're just focusing on getting this record out and touring some, but the next record is also in the back of our heads. We're definitely thinking about that."

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Offspring's first new album in nine years, 5 Things to Know - The Oakland Press

Broadway Baby: Michael Kors on 50 Years of Opening Nights, Diva Crushes and a Dream Revival – WWD

Michael Kors love of theater is a close second to his love of fashion.

He has been to hundreds, probably thousands, of live performances over the past 50-plus years, starting at age five, and has been deeply concerned about the shutdown of Broadway, which he calls the beating heart of New York, and how it has impacted some 87,000 jobs.

Our office is close to the Theater District so we feel part of the community, said Kors, who dedicated his 40th anniversary runway show to Broadway, including making a donation to nonprofit The Actors Fund. When people hear The Actors Fund they think actors, and its for them but also to support the entire army of talent behind the scenes that brings a show to light.We dont want this pool of talent to disappear.

While Kors has been trying to get his fix by streaming theater during quarantine, its not the same, he said. Recently, as New Yorks COVID-19 restrictions have eased, he was able to see Rufus Wainwright perform live as part of an audience of 40. I felt like someone had reconnected a body part that was missing, he said of the thrill, which he is sharing with viewers of his 40th collection film Tuesday, featuring Wainwright and appearances by a cavalcade of Broadway legends, including Chita Rivera and Billy Porter.

As a curtain raiser, WWD dished with the designer about his favorite opening nights, diva crushes, the show hed like to revive and design costumes for.

WWD: What was your first Broadway show?

Michael Kors: Ethel Merman in Annie Get Your Gun. Of course, I was five, so I had no way to know this was not the norm. My mom never took me to see the clunkers. To see Hair, she had to lie to my father and tell him we were going shopping. He thought it was not a good show for an 11-year-old.

WWD: Mine was Annie, and one of my classmates was an orphan, so we were all so jealous.

M.K.: Thats big.

WWD: Who are the divas youll always love? Besides Bette, because thats a given.

M.K.: When I was working at Lothars the hottest ticket was seeing Patti LuPone doing Evita, and you literally felt like you were blown out of your seat backward. Bernadette Peters Sunday in the Park With George, when the first act was finished, I had tears rolling down my face. Anyone who is in the creative world, that show knocks you out. And her voice broke my heart. Angela Lansbury in Sweeney Todd. How did Stephen Sondheim even conceptualize we were going to sit through a show about a mass murderer and find it entertaining? Watching Audra McDonald do Billie Holiday on the stage by herself in Lady Day at Emersons Bar & Grill, you are so riveted. Anything Goes is one of my favorites. When Sutton Foster finished the big tap number, and the audience is feeding off the energy on stage and each other, you cant recapture that on Zoom, streaming or film.

WWD:Did you see Starlight Express with the roller skaters? I loved that.

M.K.: [My husband] Lances first show was Starlight Express, it was Audra McDonalds first show, and Jane Krakowski was in Starlight Express. We were all at a dinner and they looked at me and said, You didnt go see it? I said No, roller skating was not meant to happen on Broadway.

WWD: What about Glenn Close in Sunset Boulevard? That was a moment.

M.K.: We saw it with Glenn, with Betty Buckley, then we saw it in London with Rita Moreno, and Rita let me go onto the stage and got them to press the hydraulic lift, so I got to experience walking down the staircase when it was moving.

Actress Glenn Close in Sunset Boulevard in New York, 2017.Greg Allen/Invision/AP

WWD: Thats big. Craziest experience in the seats?

M.K.: Opening night of revival of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, we sat down and the person in front of us was dressed all in white with an enormous picture hat on. Even though she was very fabulous from behind and I loved what she was wearing, I kept thinking she was going to ruin the show for me, so I leaned over to say something and realized it was Yoko Ono.

WWD: When I went to see Slave Play, they held the show 25 minutes because Rihanna was late.

M.K.: Did she get a standing ovation?

WWD: Oh no.

M.K.: At Lincoln Center for a celebration for Sondheims 80th birthday, we got there just as the lights were going down, and realized Sondheim was sitting directly across from us. I was knocked out being that close to him as he was experiencing all his work.

WWD: Soundtrack you listen to on repeat?

M.K.: A Chorus Line. I know every word, and I use some of the lyrics in life. All of them are taken from the recordings of the dancers, so they are often the perfect comeback or thought.

Lena Hall and Neil Patrick Harris on opening Night of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, 2014.McMullan/Sipa USA

WWD: Best song in A Chorus Line?

M.K.: I love the song, I Can Do That. In life, even if you think you cant, you figure it out. If you said to me, after 40 years what have you learned, its this: Know that things change thats the point and you have to say, I can do that. When I told them I didnt want to do Project Runway, then they said you are a critic at Parsons, you work with students at FIT, I said, I can do that.

WWD: And you did. Worst Broadway behavior youve witnessed? I remember seeing M Butterfly, and at the pivotal moment right before the characters identity is revealed, someone in front of me blurted it out.

M.K.: Thats terrible. We were in the theater the night Patti LuPone stopped the show because someone was using their cell phone. Watching her admonish that man was something. The night we saw Bruce Springsteen on Broadway, his fans were so rabid and started screaming Bruce, Bruce, Bruce and he very gentlemanly said, There will be a moment for that later. And later he let everyone take out their phones, cheer and take photos. The audience is not used to unplugging. Its the same with fashion shows, which people are now often watching through their phones. Backstage in the 80s, I didnt even have a monitor, I had a peep hole.

WWD: Do you remember the before times when you couldnt bring drinks and snacks to your theater seats? Are you team seat snacks or no?

M.K.: Never, ever. Intermission only. Give me a vodka on the rocks at the bar at Sardis during intermission and I run back in time for the second act.

WWD: Last show you saw before the COVID-19 shutdown?

M.K.: David Byrnes American Utopia. If it had to be my last memory, it was a spectacular one. And I dont want to sound like a shallow fashion person but that show was so chic. Chic! Chic! Chic! Everything about it.

David Byrne on opening night of American Utopia in New York, 2020.Greg Allen/Invision/AP

WWD: Fashion-wise, any other shows that have echoed with you?

M.K.: I remember seeing Lauren Bacall in Applause when I was young. It was so big city glamorous. Sign me up for black sequins for days.

WWD:Have you done costumes for Broadway?

M.K.: Not Broadway, but when I was designing Celine in Paris, I got a call from costume designer Arianne Phillips, she was working on the play Up for Grabs in London. She said, well, Madonna is starring, she plays a very powerful art dealer, and I thought the clothes you showed for Celine would be perfect for her character, who is very successful but not the nicest person the world. So she wore a lot of Celine.

WWD: You should do a Broadway show.

M.K.: Id love to redo A Chorus Line.

WWD:What are you excited to see after Broadway reopens? Ahem, Game of Thrones?

M.K.: To be honest with you, we will be so excited well go to things we dont even care about. I will go to a musical version of Designing Women.

WWD: Thats a great idea, you should produce that.

A Chorus Line, 1987.AP Photo

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Broadway Baby: Michael Kors on 50 Years of Opening Nights, Diva Crushes and a Dream Revival - WWD

OPPO’s O-Tower Connects Ground to Sky in a Continuous Loop of Collaboration – Greenroofs.com

Camilla Borggaard, Head of Communications of BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group writes:

BIG Bjarke Ingels Groups design for the new OPPO R&D Headquarters will exemplify the OPPO design philosophy of pursuing the perfect balance between refined aesthetics and innovative technology, in a building that will be environmentally, economically, and socially sustainable a responsible citizen and iconic gateway to Hangzhous Future Sci-Tech City.

Founded in 2004, OPPO has grown over a short period of time to become Chinas largest smartphone company. The setting of OPPOs new R&D Headquarters in Hangzhous Future Sci-Tech City represents a commitment to the brands spirit of endless innovation in the pursuit of perfection. Hangzhou, colloquially know as Heaven on Earth, is not just a hub for innovation, but is also home to Chinas most popular natural attractions including three of the worlds 57 UNESCO Heritage sites. The city has been shaped by a rich cultural history of technology, information exchange and trade for over 5,000 years as one of the origin sites of the Silk Road and Grand Canal.

BIG began working with the leading global smart device brand at the beginning of 2019 to create an R&D Headquarters and Masterplan. The design expresses OPPOs mission of the elevation of life through technological artistry, with an overarching vision of being a sustainable company that contributes to a better world.

Technology at its best should be a seamless extension of life. The new OPPO R&D Headquarters embodies this notion, sitting with ease in the scenic wetlands of Hangzhou, while negotiating between the dense urban fabric on one side and the natural landscape on the other. It will be an architectural manifestation of an OPPO product: effortlessly elegant, while elevating the quality of human life in the city, said Brian Yang, Partner, BIG Bjarke Ingels Group

Image by IMIGO and BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

Prominently located in the heart of Yuhang District, Hangzhou, OPPO R&D Headquarters rests between a natural lake, an urban center, and a 10,000 square-meter park. As an anchor point along a major access road stretching east to west from Hangzhou, the OPPO R&D Headquarters Tower will be an iconic landmark and gateway to the Future Sci-Tech City and Hangzhou itself.

Image by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

Through this project, Hangzhou will become one of the most important centers of research and development for OPPO in China. The iconic expression of the landmark O-Tower designed by BIG is perfectly complemented and enhanced by Yuhangs beautiful and pleasant natural waterbody and wetland landscape. Looking forward into the future, we believe through our collaboration, OPPOs Global Mobile Terminal R&D Headquarters will not only be a perfect representation of OPPOs brand identity and culture, but will also become the most iconic landmark in Yuhang, Hangzhou. This will precisely represent the keystone in OPPOs hundred-year-plan, said Jin Le Qin SVP of OPPO

The needs of contemporary tech companies frequently put them in a position to choose between ideal deep and flexible floor plates to support creative and dynamic workspaces, and shallow floor plates that provide optimal work environments including access to daylight and views that benefit employee well-being and productivity.

The new OPPO R&D Headquarters, or O-Tower, resolves these competing requirements by translating a traditional office slab with the perfect depth for access to daylight into a cylindrical courtyard building that is compact yet also providing large, contiguous floor area. Pushing down the southern edge of the building to the ground minimizes the external surface area of the more solar exposed faade while maximizing views out from the inward faade, which is in turn self-shaded from solar gain by the geometry of the tower. The massing is a manifestation of a building form optimized to reduce energy use and maximize access to natural light.

Image by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

A series of triple-height void spaces and interconnected terraces under the sloping O roof surface will provide visual and physical connectivity between floors, and the opportunity to introduce biophilic social spaces and shortcuts for all OPPO staff. These spaces will bring human interaction out to the facades, where staff can enjoy views out while populating and activating the skyline of the city.

Image by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

Image by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

Wrapped with adaptive faade louvers that are oriented according to sun angles and building geometry to minimize solar gain, the faade will become a fingerprint for the building, with a specific imprint that exists only for the O-Tower, and only in Hangzhou. The fingerprint faade will reduce solar gain by up to 52%, providing significant savings for cooling loads and better thermal comfort for OPPO staff, while at the same time reducing glare, reflectivity and light pollution.

Image by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

At the heart of the O-Tower, a publicly accessible courtyard will become an urban living room for the city. The mineral hardscape at its center transforms into a green and lush landscape at the periphery as it extends out to the waterfront. This urban oasis provides fresh air, retains water, and supports a biodiverse public realm connected to the daily life of the city.

Image by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

We have attempted to imagine the future work environment of OPPO to be sustainable on a triple bottom line: economically, ecologically and socially. The compact form folding in on itself provides large flexible floorplates with the daylight access and fresh air of a slender tower. The adaptive louvered faade omits incoming solar glare and thermal heat gain, enhancing the passive performance of the building. The tilted loop of the warped roof creates a social shortcut for the OPPO employees and their collaborators connecting the ground to the summit. And the central oasis and the surrounding wetland park expands the public realm into the heart of the complex. Each element is intrinsically intertwined forming the melted loop that is perceivable at all scales from the urban landmark to the human experiencebecoming a manifestation of the design simplicity that is an intrinsic part of OPPOs brand, said Bjarke Ingels, Founder and Creative Director, BIG Bjarke Ingels Group

The ground floor of the O-Tower will be open with an interconnected public space that seamlessly leads visitors and staff through lobbies, exhibition spaces, or out to the park. The first three floors will be reserved for public programming including exhibition space, conference centers, a canteen, and an incubator for external workshops.

Within the R&D Headquarters will be a variety of flexible floor plates from spacious and large floors suitable for R&D departments and special projects, to smaller more traditional floors for administrative and executive functions. On the upper floors, a dedicated OPPO canteen as well as executive and VIP lounges will overlook Hangzhous wetlands alongside the triple-height interconnected atria under the O-ring facade that will provide similar views for all OPPO staff. All floors of the building integrate workspaces with biophilia and social spaces.

Image by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

The new OPPO R&D Headquarters will not only bring OPPO employees to an innovation zone for global technology entrepreneurship, but will create a sustainable and vibrant community that will become an iconic destination on the Hangzhou waterfront.

Image by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group

BIG first started working in China in 2010 with the Danish Pavilion at the Shanghai Expo, followed by the Shenzhen Energy HQ completed in 2017, Terminus AI City in Chongqing announced in 2020, and now the OPPO R&D HQ in Hangzhou.The design for the O-Tower has been developed by BIG in collaboration with ZIAD (Local Design Institute), Co-Create Golden Technique Project Management (Client Project Managers), RBS (Structural Engineers), RFR (Faade Consultants), WSP (Traffic, MEP, VT Consultant), BPI (Lighting designer), Savills (Programming consultant), TFP (Foodservice planner), and UAD (Traffic evaluation agency).

OPPO R&D HQ FACTSName: OPPO Global Mobile Terminal R&D HeadquartersType: Office, Retail and MasterplanSize: Office 161,330m2, Retail 68,000 m2, Site area: 48,900 m2Location: Hangzhou, CNCollaborators: ZIAD (LDI), WSP (Traffic, MEP, VT Consultant), RBS (Structure Consultant), RFR (Faade Consultant) CCGT (Client project manager), BPI (Lighting designer), Savills (Programming consultant), TFP (Foodservice planner), UAD (Traffic evaluation agency)

BIG BJARKE INGELS GROUPBIG-Bjarke Ingels Group is a Copenhagen, New York, London, Shenzhen, and Barcelona based group of architects, designers, urbanists, landscape professionals, interior and product designers, researchers and inventors. The office is currently involved in projects throughout Europe, America, Asia and the Middle East. BIGs architecture emerges out of a careful analysis of how contemporary life constantly evolves and changes. By hitting the fertile overlap between pragmatic and utopia, we architects once again find the freedom to change the surface of our planet, to better fit contemporary life forms. Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, WeChat, http://www.big.dk

Partners-in-Charge: Bjarke Ingels, Brian YangProject Leader: Hung Kai LiaoProject Architect: Kekoa CharlotDesign Lead: Ewa BryzekFacades Lead: Aimee Louise DesertTeam: Adam Busko, Agnieszka Magdalena Trzciska, Alessandro Zanini, Alda Sol Hauksdttir, Andra Beler, Buster Christensen, Cristina Gimnez, Seongil Choo, Camille Breuil, Carlos Ramos Tendrio, Cris Liu, Daniel Ferrara Bilesky, Eddie Can, Eric Li, Filip Fot, Geetika Bhutani, Gl Ertekin, Jens Majdal Kaarsholm, Julia Gotovski, Karim Muallem, Liang Zhang, Laura Kovacevic, Malka Logo, Maria Capuozzo, Martyna Sylwia Kramarz, Mats Kolmas, Max Alexander Bonecker, Mengyuan Li, Mads Primdahl Rokkjr, Naphit Puangchan , Ombretta Colangelo, Rasam Aminzadeh, Roberto Fabbri, Stefan Plugaru, Steen Kortbk Svendsen, Su Myat Nge Nge, Shuting Zhang, Weronika Siwak, Xiaochang Qiu, Xavier Thanki, Yusheng Huang, Zhonghan Huang

For further information, please contact:Camilla Borggaard, Head of Communications, BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group, +45 4018 1912, [emailprotected]

Read more: INFINITY LOOP ON THE HANGZHOU HORIZON

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OPPO's O-Tower Connects Ground to Sky in a Continuous Loop of Collaboration - Greenroofs.com

Trimble and HORSCH Partner to Deliver Autonomy Solutions to the Agriculture Market – Lenoir News-Topic

MAPLETON, N.D. and SUNNYVALE, Calif., April 19, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --HORSCH and Trimble (NASDAQ: TRMB) announced today a collaboration focused on developing solutions that enable autonomy in agriculture with the goal of building a future for autonomous machines and workflows in the industry.

The collaboration extends beyond autonomously controlling machines, such as the self-propelled crop protection sprayers, to full workflow automation from the office to the field. This relationship integrates Trimble's established autonomy expertise in guidance systems, path planning and in-field processautomation with HORSCH's fleet of machines.

The first phase will bring automation to the complex planning, machine control and logistical challenges faced by sprayer operators to improve machine performance and reduce operating errors. This functionality can significantly reduce the driver's workload, while still allowing them to intervene at any time. In the long term, this technology establishes a basis for operating fully autonomous machines.

HORSCH and Trimble have successfully collaborated on implementing control technologies and are extending this to include full machine control solutions. The companies are currently implementing a high level of automation and driver support with steering systems. With this increase in automation, a driver can perform additional in-cab tasks during active field work, such as the required documentation, planning and coordination of work processes.

"Combining the forward-thinking nature of HORSCH with Trimble's cutting-edge autonomous technology creates an opportunity for the companies to develop innovative applications for the OEM and Trimble's agriculture network," said Finlay Wood, business area director for Trimble Autonomous Solutions. "We are building new customer-focused solutions as part of our existing connected farm ecosystem to deliver a unique and compelling solution for our customerssimplifying the complex, logistical and operational challenges of modern agriculture."

"The unique opportunity with this collaboration is not that we are presenting a future utopia but that we are moving step-by-step towards autonomy in a pragmatic, consistent manner," said Theo Leeb, managing director for HORSCH. "We consider automation in agriculture to be one of our next key technologies, and our goal is to ultimately deliver a platform of various applications to help farmers meet the challenges of the future."

About HORSCH

The family-owned company HORSCH is one of the world's leading manufacturers of modern and innovative agricultural technology. The focus is on the development of products for soil cultivation, sowing, crop protection and hybrid farming to improve sustainability. Around 1,800 employees worldwide stand for "farming with passion" from production to management. Contact and exchange with customers worldwide has always been a top priority at HORSCH. Due to this high level of customer contact, HORSCH is a thought leader within the agriculture industry, focusing on the issues facing farmers and anticipating the needs for their future. In order to continue to meet these future demands on agriculture, HORSCH is constantly working on new developments, which are also in use on its own farms with several thousand hectares of arable land. For more information, visit: http://www.horsch.com.

About Trimble Agriculture

Trimble's Agriculture Division provides solutions that solve complex technology challenges across the entire agricultural landscape. The solutions enable farmers and advisors to allocate scarce resources to produce a safe, reliable food supply in a profitable and environmentally sustainable manner. Covering all seasons, crops, terrains and farm sizes, Trimble solutions can be used on most equipment on the farm, regardless of manufacturer and production year.To enable better decision making, Trimble offers technology integration that allows farmers to collect, share, and manage information across their farms, while providing improved operating efficiencies in the agricultural value chain. Trimble solutions include guidance and steering; grade control, water management; flow and application control; harvest solutions; desktop and cloud-based data management; and correction services. For more information on Trimble Agriculture, visit:agriculture.trimble.com.

Trimble in Autonomy

For more than 20 years, Trimble has been connecting the physical and digital worlds in agriculture, construction, and mining with its automation technologies. These scalable solutions and services enable the next generation of autonomous functionality to improve productivity and safety. Trimble has been at the forefront of positioning innovation for over 35 years, providing autonomous solutions for off-road machines such as tractors and haulers. Positioning is the foundation for helping transform how the world leverages autonomy through a robust suite of solutions, which include GPS/GNSS, truthing, inertial, dead-reckoning, machine control, sensor fusion and more. For more, visit: https://positioningservices.trimble.com/industries/automotive.

About Trimble

Trimble is transforming the way the world works by delivering products and services that connect the physical and digital worlds. Core technologies in positioning, modeling, connectivity and data analytics enable customers to improve productivity, quality, safety and sustainability. From purpose-built products to enterprise lifecycle solutions, Trimble software, hardware and services are transforming industries such as agriculture, automotive, construction, geospatial and transportation. For more information about Trimble (NASDAQ: TRMB), visit: http://www.trimble.com.

GTRMB

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Trimble and HORSCH Partner to Deliver Autonomy Solutions to the Agriculture Market - Lenoir News-Topic