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Best of the Web: Beginning of the end of America's longest war? US signs peace deal with Taliban to remove all troops from Afghanistan

afghanistan peace deal
© AP Photo/Hussein SayedU.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, left, and Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban group's top political leader shake hands after signing a peace agreement between Taliban and U.S. officials in Doha, Qatar, Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020.
Updated at 10:22 a.m. ET

The U.S. and the Taliban have struck a deal that paves the way for eventual peace in Afghanistan. U.S. Special Representative Zalmay Khalilzad and the head of the militant Islamist group, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, signed the potentially historic agreement Saturday in Doha, Qatar, where the two sides spent months hashing out its details.

Under the terms of the deal, the U.S. commits to withdrawing all of its military forces and supporting civilian personnel, as well as those of its allies, within 14 months. The drawdown process will begin with the U.S. reducing its troop levels to 8,600 in the first 135 days and pulling its forces from five bases.

The rest of its forces, according to the agreement, will leave "within the remaining nine and a half months."

The Afghan government also will release up to 5,000 Taliban prisoners as a gesture of goodwill, in exchange for 1,000 Afghan security forces held by the Taliban.

"We owe a debt of gratitude to America's sons and daughters who paid the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan, and to the many thousands who served over the past nearly 19 years," Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a statement celebrating the deal, which comes on the heels of a seven-day "Reduction in Violence" agreement in Afghanistan.

Comment: While it may seem all well on paper, it's hard to see the US giving up the lucrative drug trade in the region.

We believe Trump when he says he wants out, but will he be so committed post-reelection this November?

See also: Afghanistan's 'peace deal' riddle


Satellite

Pentagon vows not to let Russia, China deny West's space superiority

General John Raymond
U.S. General John Raymond
A senior Pentagon official has warned that China and Russia are stepping up efforts to develop sophisticated space capabilities in a bid to deny the United States and its allies of their current superiority.

James Anderson, performing the duties of deputy undersecretary of defense for policy, told a House of Representatives panel on February 27 that China and Russia are developing sophisticated on-orbit capabilities and an array of space weapons capable of targeting nearly every class of U.S. space assets, many of which were developed when there were few threats in space.

In his written testimony to the House Armed Services Committee's strategic forces subcommittee, Anderson said the United States is responding to the threat by "transforming its space enterprise, fielding resilient architectures, developing space war-fighting expertise, and working closely with allies in combined operations."

Space Force General John Raymond, chief of space operations, told lawmakers that the United States "can no longer assume that our space superiority is a given."

Comment: See also:


Bullseye

Hillary Clinton is launching a podcast and Twitter has a few suggestions: 'The Shillary Show?'

hillary clinton
'Quiet! Grandma's gonna talk now!"
News that failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is planning to launch her very own podcast has been met with a collective eye roll and plenty of sarcasm on social media.

Clinton is planning to launch the podcast in late spring, "just in time for her to have a powerful new megaphone during the 2020 election," Politico reported on Thursday.

The show will be co-produced by iHeartMedia, which distributes a bevy of right-wing radio shows as well as the left-wing Joe Rogan Experience, which has endorsed Clinton's 2016 archrival Bernie Sanders for president.

Attention

SOTT Focus: Turkey's Eurasianist Moment: The importance of Idlib and Russia

Putin erdogan
© 21st Century WireRecep Tayyip Erdoğan and Vladimir Putin
Turkey and Russia have enjoyed a good relationship over the past years. The Islamist President of the Republic, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (aka the Prez), and Russia's President Vladimir Putin (aka the Czar) have enjoyed very cordial connections in that time - having spoken approximately 40 times over the phone and about 24 times face-to-face since 2016's Coup-that-was-no-Coup, according to data provided by BBC Türkçe.

Gone are the days that the Republic of Turkey's internal and external affairs were encapsulated in Atatürk's famous phrase 'Peace at Home, Peace Abroad' (20 April 1931). That was then and this is now, and now is the New Turkey, a nation of believers led by an overly ambitious Tayyip Erdoğan:

NPC

'Defund racist border wall!' Warren's 'solution' to coronavirus crisis causes mass eye-rolling on Twitter

liz warren
© REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Senator Elizabeth Warren announced a bill that would use funding for President Donald Trump's "racist border wall" to combat the coronavirus outbreak - a plan that is earning plenty of eye rolls on social media.

Warren is not letting the coronavirus crisis go to waste. The Massachusetts senator tweeted on Thursday a bill that would move funding from construction of the southern border wall in the US to the Department of Health and Human Services and US Aid to fight the disease.

The senator warned that the virus poses a "serious health, diplomatic and economic threat." Her bill would remove "all funding" from Trump's "racist border wall" to "combat" the disease.

Star of David

Erdogan the crypto-Zionist? Just as Turkey launches offensive with al-Qaeda in Idlib, Israeli helicopters strike Syrian military near Golan

syrian soldier
© Reuters / Omar Sanadiki
Israeli helicopters have struck Syrian Army positions in the Golan Heights, leaving at least three wounded, Syrian state media reported. The rocket attacks follow earlier reports of an Israeli drone strike in the same region.

The rockets struck army positions in Quneitra early on Friday morning local time, according to the Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA). Early reports suggest the attack targeted the Lebanese militia Hezbollah, which works in tandem with the Syrian Army.

An Israeli drone strike late on Thursday, near the village of Hader, reportedly killed one civilian, according to local news agencies. Quneitra Governor Humam Dibyat identified the casualty as a police officer.

Comment: Previously:


Light Sabers

'Aggressive designs': Pakistan blasts India's $3bn arms deal with Washington for 'destabilizing already volatile region'

indian navy
© Reuters / Francis Mascarenhas
Islamabad has voiced concern over a recent multi-billion dollar weapons deal signed between Washington and New Delhi, insisting its nuclear-armed rival is upsetting stability in southern Asia.

On the heels of the $3 billion exchange inked last week - which will see India purchase 24 MH-60R Seahawk helicopters from US arms giant Lockheed Martin - Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesperson Aisha Farooqui said the move was alarming and revealed New Delhi's hostile intent toward Islamabad.

"Pakistan has concerns regarding defense deals with India, particularly the sale of sophisticated weapon systems to India which we believe would further destabilize an already volatile region," Farooqui told reporters on Thursday, adding that Pakistan takes "the rhetoric and threatening language" of Indian leaders "very seriously."

Health

Pompeo dangles empty gesture of 'help' to Iran, despite years of sanctions

pompeo
© Reuters / Carlos Barria / Wana News AgencyL: Pompeo speaks at House committee hearing R: China prepares to ship masks to Iran
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has criticized Iran's healthcare infrastructure while offering empty gestures of help, adding insult to injury after years of devastating sanctions have deprived the nation of lifesaving supplies.

Pompeo's dismissive take on Iran's struggle with the coronavirus epidemic verged on scornful, managing to gloss over the US' role in creating the supply and drug shortages exacerbating the outbreak, and to slam Tehran for not sharing "enough" information in just a few short sentences during a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing on Friday.

Pressed by Democratic congressman David Cicilline (Rhode Island) to explain precisely how Washington was putting aside its "maximum pressure" economic offensive against Iran to help fight an epidemic that doesn't respect geopolitical alliances, the diplomat chose his words carefully. He stated only that the US has "made offers to the Islamic Republic of Iran to help" with medical relief.
Their healthcare infrastructure is not robust, and to date, their willingness to share information about what's really going on inside the Islamic Republic of Iran is not robust, and I'm very concerned... that Iran is not sharing information.
The coronavirus outbreak has been especially harsh on Iran, sickening several government officials and killing the country's 81-year-old former ambassador to the Vatican, who became the highest-profile death from the disease earlier this week. On Friday, parliament was suspended indefinitely, an unprecedented move reflecting the gravity of the epidemic. At the same time, the country has been grappling with serious shortages of specialty drugs since the reimposition of the US' harsh sanctions regime in 2018, which while it officially exempts humanitarian supplies has, through overzealous enforcement and the threat of "secondary sanctions," spooked many banks away from doing any business at all involving the Islamic Republic.

Comment: Meanwhile, the U.S. has placed its military bases in South Korea on lockdown, with the risk level raised to high.

See also:


Yoda

SOTT Focus: Craig Murray: The Assange Show-trial, Days 3 and 4

Escher Assange Belmarsh
In yesterday's proceedings in court, the prosecution adopted arguments so stark and apparently unreasonable I have been fretting on how to write them up in a way that does not seem like caricature or unfair exaggeration on my part. What has been happening in this court has long moved beyond caricature. All I can do is give you my personal assurance that what I recount actually is what happened.

As usual, I shall deal with procedural matters and Julian's treatment first, before getting in to a clear account of the legal arguments made.

Vanessa Baraitser is under a clear instruction to mimic concern by asking, near the end of every session just before we break anyway, if Julian is feeling well and whether he would like a break. She then routinely ignores his response. Yesterday he replied at some length he could not hear properly in his glass box and could not communicate with his lawyers (at some point yesterday they had started preventing him passing notes to his counsel, which I learn was the background to the aggressive prevention of his shaking Garzon's hand goodbye).

Bad Guys

US lists leader of Iraqi militia as 'global terrorist'

Kataib Hizbullah
Washington blamed the Iran-backed Kataib Hizbullah militant group for an attack on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad at the end of December.
The United States has declared the leader of the Iran-backed Kataib Hizbullah (KH) militant group in Iraq a terrorist following a number of recent rocket attacks on bases hosting U.S. and other foreign troops in Iraq.

A State Department official on February 26 said the United States had listed Ahmad al-Hamidawi, head of the armed faction of the group, as a "specially designated global terrorist."

The action will freeze U.S. assets that he might hold and make any transactions with him a crime. Kataib Hizbullah wasdeclared a terrorist group in 2009.

"Today we are intensifying our pressure on this terrorist group," Nathan Sales, the State Department counterterrorism chief, told a news conference.