Live: Premier League Title Race

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Live: Brighton vs. Man City

    via Bleacher Report

  • Live: Liverpool vs. Wolves

    via Bleacher Report

  • Liverpool Strike First 👀

    Sadio Mane’s has Reds on track for title with Man City drawing at Brighton

    NBC Sports Soccer @NBCSportsSoccer

    GOAL LIVERPOOL!

    The pressure is mounting in the title race. #MyPLMorning

    Watch on NBC or stream: https://t.co/xWxJPaCREu https://t.co/gBo2SsHlXv

  • Premier League Final Day Is Here 🍿

    Premier League USA @PLinUSA

    Welcome to the Show. https://t.co/SA90ZPOcsp

  • Premier League @premierleague

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Premier League @premierleague

  • Liverpool Are Pumped 🔴

    B/R Football @brfootball

    For one last time at Anfield this season—Allez, allez, allez 🎶 https://t.co/yoUNmILDdx

  • Every Liverpool Fan Today

    Only Brighton can stop Man City winning the Premier League title

  • Comng Up: Man Utd vs. Cardiff

    via Bleacher Report

  • B/R Football @brfootball

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • OptaJoe @OptaJoe

  • Man Utd Fan with Aguero on His Kit

    Maybe he really doesn’t want Liverpool to win the league?

    Si Lloyd @SmnLlyd5

    Just delete this club https://t.co/TjLKxbsfro

  • Coming Up: Leicester vs. Chelsea

    via Bleacher Report

  • Live: Spurs vs. Everton

    via Bleacher Report

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Premier League @premierleague

  • Coming Up: Burnley vs. Arsenal

    via Bleacher Report

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • B/R Football @brfootball

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

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    Live: Premier League Title Race

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Live: Brighton vs. Man City

    via Bleacher Report

  • Live: Liverpool vs. Wolves

    via Bleacher Report

  • Liverpool Strike First 👀

    Sadio Mane’s has Reds on track for title with Man City drawing at Brighton

    NBC Sports Soccer @NBCSportsSoccer

    GOAL LIVERPOOL!

    The pressure is mounting in the title race. #MyPLMorning

    Watch on NBC or stream: https://t.co/xWxJPaCREu https://t.co/gBo2SsHlXv

  • Premier League Final Day Is Here 🍿

    Premier League USA @PLinUSA

    Welcome to the Show. https://t.co/SA90ZPOcsp

  • Premier League @premierleague

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Premier League @premierleague

  • Liverpool Are Pumped 🔴

    B/R Football @brfootball

    For one last time at Anfield this season—Allez, allez, allez 🎶 https://t.co/yoUNmILDdx

  • Every Liverpool Fan Today

    Only Brighton can stop Man City winning the Premier League title

  • Comng Up: Man Utd vs. Cardiff

    via Bleacher Report

  • B/R Football @brfootball

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • OptaJoe @OptaJoe

  • Man Utd Fan with Aguero on His Kit

    Maybe he really doesn’t want Liverpool to win the league?

    Si Lloyd @SmnLlyd5

    Just delete this club https://t.co/TjLKxbsfro

  • Coming Up: Leicester vs. Chelsea

    via Bleacher Report

  • Live: Spurs vs. Everton

    via Bleacher Report

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Premier League @premierleague

  • Coming Up: Burnley vs. Arsenal

    via Bleacher Report

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • B/R Football @brfootball

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Liverpool FC @LFC

  • Manchester City @ManCity

  • Read More

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    ‘SNL’ asks: What would it take to end your support for Donald Trump?

    By Adam Rosenberg

    Is there a joke here? Isn’t this just what politics-as-usual looks like in 2019?

    The latest Saturday Night Live cold open paid a visit to NBC’s Meet the Press, as host Chuck Todd (Kyle Mooney) sits down with three key GOP legislators — Sen. Lindsey Graham, Sen. Susan Collins, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell — to ask an important question. What would it take to make you stop supporting Donald Trump?

    The answer, in real life and in joke life, is absolutely nothing. This isn’t so much a comedy sketch as it is a cold, hard slap in the face from reality. (Harder, daddy?)

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    Syria’s Assad silenced dissent in secret torture prisons: Report

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad‘s government has been running a network of secret torture facilities across Syria while the country’s civil war unfolded, a new report has found.

    In a lengthy report, the New York Times found that the rate at which people are being detained in the country is still increasing, despite Assad’s military win in the bloody conflict – now in its ninth year.

    In the report, several survivors shared gruesome testimonies of how they were arrested and tortured across a number of prison facilities run by the Syrian intelligence.

    The survivors are just a handful of hundreds of thousands of people believed to have passed through the secret prison system since the Syrian uprising kicked off in 2011.

    Memos sent to Syria’s head of military intelligence, and obtained by the New York Times, are reporting the deaths of those imprisoned, while also apparently showing government officials ordering crackdowns and discussing deaths in detention, the Times reported.

    “The memos were signed by top security officials, including members of the Central Crisis Management Committee, which reports directly to Mr. al-Assad,” the Times reported.

    The exact number of civilians detained in these prisons is unknown, but around 128,000 Syrians are either considered to be detained or dead, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights.

    Nearly 14,000 were killed as a result of torture. Testimonies by survivors of the prison system reveal torture methods including regular beatings, hanging by the wrists, being shocked with electricity, rape, and other forms of sexual assault.

    Other methods have forced detainees to “act like animals” and “beat or kill one another”.

    Methods of routine torture have been utilised as a tool to crack down on opposition and dissent, and according to the Times, have been “critical” to Assad’s military success in Syria.

    Although the Syrian government has denied that it carries out systematic abuse, it has recently acknowledged the death of hundreds in detention by issuing death certificates, or “listing them as dead” in family registration files.

    The Times said the millions of relatives of those missing detainees remain living in “social and psychological limbo”.

    “Without death certificates, presumed widows cannot remarry. Children cannot inherit,” the report read.

    A United Nations panel said last year that the conditions of the prisons – where detainees, crammed in tiny cells, are often denied water, clean food, blankets, and clothes – amounted to “extermination”.

    Medical neglect and poor hygiene conditions have claimed the lives of many in detention, the Times revealed. The Times said those transferred to a military hospital are also unsafe as many have been tortured and killed by the staff.

    According to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, government detention accounts for about 90 percent of all disappearance cases in Syria – a figure significantly higher than the number of people detained by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, or ISIS), the Times said.

    While Assad and his aides remain in power, a growing movement is seeking justice via European courts. French and German prosecutors have arrested three former security officials, the Times said, and have issued arrest warrants for individuals including Syria’s national security head, Ali Mamlouk.

    Today, there are nearly six million Syrian refugees who fled the war in Syria. Even as the war ends, many fear persecution upon returning and have voiced their need for a UN-sponsored safe return process.

    Daraya: A Library Under Bombs in Syria | Witness

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    The In-Your-Face Diplomat

    In the case of the globetrotting American diplomat Richard Holbrooke, there is only one degree of separation between him and almost every significant figure in American foreign policy in living memory. His surrogate father in high school was Dean Rusk, JFK’s Secretary of State. He played tennis with General Maxwell Taylor, JFK’s top military adviser, as well with Bobby Kennedy. He had lunch with George Kennan, perhaps the most towering figure of postwar American foreign policy, the day his second son was born. He himself wrote one of the Pentagon Papers–yes, those Pentagon papers–commissioned by Robert McNamara. And years later, he ghostwrote the memoirs of Clark Clifford, counselor to presidents from Harry Truman to Lyndon Johnson.

    Holbrooke was even a member of Averell Harriman’s Vietnam peace delegation in Paris as a young Foreign Service officer. That friendship lasted decades and evolved into a special relationship with Pamela Harriman, through whom he socialized with Washington’s political and media elite, including future Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. Later in life, he befriended Pete Peterson, the billionaire and Commerce Secretary to Richard Nixon who kept him plugged into the New York worlds of finance, law and entertainment. These were just some of the older men who helped him thrive in international high society’s power elite, smoothing his path to high posts in the Carter, Clinton and Obama administrations. When it came to his peers, men like Anthony Lake, Frank Wisner, Strobe Talbott and Leslie Gelb, they were either the closest of friends or, in the case of Tony Lake, best of friends and best of enemies.

    Story Continued Below

    Especially for those of us from a younger generation of American diplomacy, George Packer’s new biography, Our Man: Richard Holbrooke and the End of the American Century, is not only a riveting read but also an eye-opening psychodrama, revealing the feuds and friendships behind the scenes that often drove and always colored American foreign policy for five decades, from Vietnam in the 1960s to the Balkans in the 1990s to Afghanistan today.

    But the book purports to be more than just a biography: This tale of Holbrooke’s diplomatic ambition and dramatic death is also intended as an authoritative historical statement about the end of an era—and a pessimistic one about the future of American power. When it was excerpted in The Atlantic, where Packer is a staff writer, the headline splashed across the cover was “Elegy for the American Century.” American diplomats, we are told, will never again be as relevant as Holbrooke and his predecessors were because America’s power to influence our world—the American Century—has come to a close. As a consequence of its brilliance as a biography and the seriousness of Packer’s ambitions, “Our Man” is sure to have an impact on the intensifying debate about the right level of U.S. engagement in today’s world. Even if a new wave of “America first” isolationism weren’t rising in our domestic politics, defining the U.S. role would still be difficult in an international environment marked by a return of great power confrontation with China and Russia, continued chaos and political upheaval across continents, biblical refugee flows, and a series of hot wars in the greater Middle East.

    Unfortunately, the book draws only part of the lesson it could take from Holbrooke’s career. It paints a compelling collective portrait of the Vietnam generation’s brutal infighting, and especially its disastrous consequences in Iraq—but in focusing only on the negative lessons from that history, it risks adding a defense of declinism to the debate over America’s role in the world just as an important presidential campaign season is starting up. With the Iraq fiasco still haunting both parties, Afghanistan’s conflict approaching the twenty-year mark, and President Trump destroying what remains of a domestic consensus on American internationalism, it is imperative to get the diplomatic history right.

    ***

    The Holbrooke story will never be told better than it is here, in Packer’s tale of this one-of-a-kind American diplomat. The author himself is a public intellectual whose evolution from journalist to prominent supporter of President George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq gives him a particularly profound appreciation of Holbrooke’s standing in the foreign policy firmament, which may be the reason Kati Marton, Holbrooke’s widow, allowed him unfettered access to all of his diaries and other documents heretofore unavailable. This rare access combines with Packer’s extensive reporting and gifted writing to bring us as close as we may ever get to the truth about Holbrooke’s life and work, its high and lows, and its rare intersection with many of the finest diplomats and journalists from Vietnam, Bosnia, Washington, and Afghanistan. The remarkable result reads more like a final draft than a first draft of history.

    Too often the picture is not a pretty one. Holbrooke was already known for his in-your-face style—he could be aggressive, even bullying, in pursuit of U.S. objectives, which were often hard to disentangle from Holbrooke’s personal ambitions. Packer shows us this self-regard playing out in Holbrooke’s climb to the top of his profession. Again and again we see Holbrooke crossing lines of propriety like few others, revealing how often he leaked to the press and lied to his friends, then covered his tracks—sometimes, as in the case of Frank Wisner, by fingering a close friend for one of his damaging leaks during Vietnam. Although uncomfortable, we learn about a critical broken friendship that came back to haunt him, the feud between himself and President Bill Clinton’s national security adviser, Tony Lake, which Clinton apparently never could understand. It was not a matter of war and peace or bureaucratic intrigue that led to Lake’s hatred of Holbrooke, we learn: Instead, it was mostly a consequence of Holbrooke telling him that he had fallen in love with Lake’s wife. So much for policy differences.

    Which makes it even more mind-boggling that Holbrooke’s signature achievement was made possible by his lifelong friend, then nemesis, Tony Lake. Packer portrays Lake as having the rare ability to separate his personal feelings from diplomatic business, at least during the Clinton era. Indeed, it was his cooperation with Madeleine Albright in 1995, while Holbrooke was on an extended vacation, that drove a change in U.S. policy on the catastrophic war in Bosnia, from passivity and deference to Europe’s priorities and the United Nation’s studied neutrality to an assertion of American leadership with intensive diplomacy backed by NATO’s formidable firepower. This policy shift, in turn, led to the bombardment of the aggressor Bosnian Serbs and what would be seen as Holbrooke’s greatest diplomatic achievement: Ending the Bosnian war.

    Holbrooke’s role in NATO’s 1995 bombardment of Bosnian Serb forces is often misunderstood, as it is here by Packer. It was not until NATO finally decided to use air power that the Bosnian Serb military halted its campaign of ethnic cleansing and mass murder of Bosnian Muslims. Despite how it may have seemed to the public, the individual most responsible for setting those deadly air strikes in motion was British General Rupert Smith, who used his authority to unleash NATO airpower until the Bosnian Serbs agreed to end their brutal siege of Sarajevo. And it was Tony Lake, leading an interagency team on his most important diplomatic mission, who presented Clinton’s muscular new policy to our European allies in London and Paris. But when it came time to tell the warring parties of the new strategy, the torch was passed, with Lake’s approval, to the man he most despised to finish the job. Then, to give the diplomat his due credit, with the power equation finally shifted away from the Serb aggressors and in favor of the Bosnians, Richard Holbrooke’s brand of bluster, bluff and flattery at the negotiations in Dayton, Ohio, proved decisive in bringing peace to that troubled land after three long years of war and misery. At Dayton, Holbrooke ended a war.

    Packer is surely accurate in saying there will never be another Holbrooke. For one thing, the pool of America’s foreign policy professionals has expanded many times from the relatively small men’s club that dominated the halls of power for so long. For another, two powerful women, Madeleine Albright and Hillary Clinton, soon become the leading players, taking the stage as Packer’s narrative becomes a tale of frustrated ambition and sudden death worthy of a Greek tragedy.

    In fairness, I should say that as a close adviser and spokesman for Madeleine Albright, I had a difficult relationship with Holbrooke. As Packer himself reports, I wasn’t alone in finding Holbrooke exasperating in the extreme. In fact, I remember once smashing one of those large government-issue cellphones against the side of the Secretary of State’s Boeing 707 in frustration after “our man” and I argued over some detail of the Kosovo diplomacy in 1999. But I respected his boldness and unequaled knowledge of American diplomacy, and in subsequent years our relationship improved, to a stage which might be described as a wary professional friendship.

    Packer’s declinism is possible partly because he glides over important achievements. He spends many pages bemoaning the fact that the peace in Bosnia made at Dayton was flawed, which has meant little political development and continued ethnic struggles in that once peaceful center of ethnic coexistence. All of which is true.

    But it is also the case that most of the Balkan countries are democratic, independent and allies of the West. That came about because in the wake of the years it took to act in Bosnia, President Clinton and Secretary Albright developed a strategy for the emerging crisis in Kosovo that improved on the previous model, accelerating decision making, and thus managing to head off some of the shortcomings that were codified in Dayton.

    Holbrooke and Albright worked together on Kosovo, but as that province exploded into violence—when Albanians’ demands for equal rights began to trigger a violent crackdown by Serbian forces controlled by strongman Slobodan Milosevic—she felt a far greater sense of urgency with respect to the use of force, and resisted his continual pressures to make diplomatic engagement with Milosevic a higher priority. While a peace agreement and diplomatic solution were given every realistic chance, Milosevic’s clear guilt was not masked in a cloak of constant engagement and theater. Instead, the Albright State Department moved quickly to establish principles that would synchronize force and diplomacy. NATO unity and international legitimacy was one principle; another was a commitment to a U.S. led peacekeeping force in a post-war environment, agreed in advance. And American leadership was less bruising than in Bosnia, as a daily call was established with foreign ministers of the UK, France, Italy and Germany to guide the process. The partnership with our allies was real in Kosovo, and not just a fig leaf for Washington dictating every outcome.

    The result of this model was an unqualified success. Kosovo was free and Milsosevic was overthrown by his own people and sent for trial before the international war crimes tribunal in the Hague. And the truth is that back then Holbrooke was frustrated by his second-tier role and took to second-guessing Secretary Albright every step of the way.

    ***

    Packer’s excessive focus on the drawbacks of Dayton may be part of the reason for his pessimism regarding the power of the United States. This dim view of U.S. leadership is then reinforced by the final act of the drama, which centers on Holbrooke’s inability in 2009 and 2010 to convince the Obama administration to develop the necessary ingredients to negotiate an end to the war in Afghanistan.

    This is the most painful part of the book for admirers of Holbrooke to read. Having failed again in his never ending quest to be Secretary of State—this time to Hillary Clinton, who he regarded as a friend and supporter—he was still given a major post as Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. By this time the war in Afghanistan, having been ignored by the Bush administration, was in its eighth year and provoking comparisons to the Vietnam conflict where Holbrooke’s career began. This was different than Vietnam in an important way, since Afghanistan’s terrorist network had shown on 9/11 what can happen when a far-away conflict comes home to America, yet for Holbrooke and his generation, the lessons about getting trapped in a distant and misguided war seemed more and more relevant. Secretary Clinton obviously was hoping that the man who ended a war in Bosnia could achieve similar success here.

    But in a meaningful sense, Holbrooke did not get the mandate that he needed. If Holbrooke were alive today, I believe he would be looking over at Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, President Trump’s envoy to Afghanistan, with a certain degree of envy. Not only has the current administration decided not to expand America’s military deployment—a view Holbrooke secretly held back in 2009—but Khalilzad has also been given space to negotiate with the Taliban to end the Afghanistan war without a lot of oversight from American officials in Washington. There is a relevant historical analogy here that Holbrooke absorbed from his time with W. Averell Harriman. Harriman often told Holbrooke that when it came to his most successful diplomatic missions—keeping Stalin on side for President Franklin D. Roosevelt during World War II, and negotiating a partial nuclear test ban treaty with Russia on behalf of JFK—he had a straightforward objective and little or no micromanagement from Washington.

    By contrast, Packer tells us in excruciating detail how Holbrooke’s experience as Obama’s envoy to Afghanistan was exactly the opposite of Khalilzad’s today. Holbrooke said he had the worst office in the State Department, that the U.S. military was leading around the diplomats, rather than having the civilians in control. All the while, the White House was signaling its contempt for the Special Representative. President Obama would travel to Afghanistan and White House aides would hide the fact of the trip from Holbrooke until Air Force One was landing in Kabul. And not once would Richard Holbrooke—a man who saw himself as the bridge to America’s titanic inside players of diplomacy—ever meet the President alone.

    This was Holbrooke’s world back in 2009 and 2010, the last years of his life. And in his final months of his life, we learn how several generals work together to build a case for his dismissal. We watch how this formerly formidable bureaucratic infighter is reduced to begging colleagues for support and praise. With only Secretary Clinton still in his corner and little to show for all the effort expended, Holbrooke literally bursts his biggest blood vessel in the Secretary of State’s office—the office to which he had aspired for so many decades—and dies in the operating room later that night.

    As a biographer, Packer has proven beyond doubt that Holbrooke was an almost-great man.

    He is surely right to demonstrate how rare it is for someone who is not Secretary of State to be so dominant and prominent in American foreign policy.

    Is American international leadership really at end? Is it really true that American diplomacy is no longer capable of greatness?

    But the second part of his thesis is more assertion than analysis. Is American international leadership really at end? Is it really true that American diplomacy is no longer capable of greatness? “The American century,” he writes, “ended in Baghdad and Helmand, in Aleppo and Odessa, and in Beijing….Another place the American century ended was Bosnia.”

    The shortcomings of the Dayton plan for Bosnia’s future prospects and the length and seeming futility of the war in Afghanistan are reasons for frustration, but do they justify Packer’s grandiose assertions about the end of American leadership? No doubt America’s costly and ill-considered occupation in Iraq has also damaged perceptions of U.S. leadership. Confidence in international action has been shattered in many Western countries, too. Packer himself went through his own wringer on the question of U.S. intervention. He was one of many prominent liberals who supported the Iraq war, and then was understandably demoralized by the failures to stabilize Iraq after the fall of Saddam. His compelling account, “The Assassins’ Gate,” documents his disillusionment.

    Packer wasn’t the only liberal hawk mugged by the Bush administration’s multiple failures before, during and after the Iraq invasion. But just as lessons from history must be learned, they should not be over-learned. In my view, the model of American leadership using diplomacy backed by force that President Clinton and Secretary Albright enunciated and implemented in Kosovo—U.S. leadership, international support, a postwar plan and international peacekeeping—has never really been applied since. Indeed, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld famously told the Pentagon that nothing about the Balkan wars should be seen as a guide for the future. Sure enough, in Afghanistan the Bush administration refused allied support and rejected NATO’s historic offer of help before the war. And they refused to send a peacekeeping force to key areas when the Taliban fell. Instead, key resources and energy were diverted from Afghanistan back in 2002 when they could have been decisive, and attention turned to the ill-fated invasion in Iraq.

    Just as dangerous was the over-reaction to the Iraq fiasco that led to international abdication in Syria. Failure to act in Syria has devastated the international order, with hundreds of thousands dead, millions of refugees destabilizing Syria’s neighbors and Europe, and a previously unthinkable vacuum that the Kremlin has filled with its massive military campaign to save Bashar Assad and return Russia to the region, to the detriment of us all.

    ***

    The United States will never again have the near total monopoly on military power and economic production we had at the end of World War II. Too often that moment is set as some kind of baseline, when in fact it was an aberration. The growth of other global economies, such as Germany’s and Japan’s, is more a sign of a successful U.S. policy than a diminution of U.S economic power. It was our policy to promote American growth by building large trading partners in Europe, Asia and around the world. That policy has worked, as billions of people’s standard of living has risen. Nor will there be another unipolar moment like the 1990s, when Soviet communism’s collapse left the United States without rivals. Russia has rebuilt its military since then, and the Chinese are doing the same.

    China and Russia are genuine adversaries seeking to undermine American power and potential. And many of our successful friends around the world have grown weary of a sometimes-aggressive leadership style. But most of the ingredients of America’s leadership position remain. It will require a new resolve to lead internationally, new approaches to tap the potential of our partners and friends, and restored confidence in American leadership. In truth, it is more a matter of will than wallet.

    Books that suggest American greatness is behind us can serve to sap that will without justification. We are still the indispensable nation, for instance, when it comes to leading our hemisphere against a regime in Venezuela that has impoverished its people and caused chaos and instability across the region, or leading our European allies to contain Russia’s international aggression and contempt for the Western institutions many thought it wished to join. And in Asia, where China’s new, more aggressive leadership presents clearer dangers to the region, the openness to American leadership shows what distinguishes us from global powers of the past. We have voluntary military relationships with dozens of countries in East Asia and the greater Middle East—the kinds of alliances China will never have. Countries like Vietnam want American ships visiting their ports. Japan, Thailand, and others may have specific problems with the current administration, but they do not want to be dominated by China. They still look to America to balance Chinese power, keep the sea lanes open and allow their economic growth to continue. None of them, not even North Korea, wants an alliance with Communist China.

    The secret to wielding American power on behalf of enlightened international leadership is much the same today as it has been since the days after World War II, when American diplomacy was harnessed to create decades of international peace and growing prosperity. Just as those diplomats created alliances and a structure of partnerships to support American leadership, it is the way we manage our allies and partners that will be the key determinant of what is possible and what is not . Maintaining and expanding alliances has not been a high priority for the Trump administration, and the president’s statements and actions too often weaken our key asset. But after President Trump is gone, those alliances can be rebuilt and strengthened. Perhaps they won’t be quite as strong as they were in the 1990s, but the world has changed since then. Certainly they can be strong enough for American diplomacy to matter again and for American diplomats to do great things.

    They may do these great things without the kind of personal references to the wise men of the postwar era that Holbrooke was famous for. But there is still a lot of work to do. And for as far as we can see, America will still be the strongest military power—with alliances that multiply that power exponentially, with economic strength still second to none and with a political system that, painful as it to watch sometimes, is far more admired and emulated around the world than the alternatives.

    Ironically, Packer deploys some of the hubris and hyperbole he correctly attributes to Holbrooke by making a subtheme of his biography the idea of the end of an era of American leadership. And unfortunately it seems that Packer the biographer has adopted some of the myths of American decline that have been popular in recent years. Certainly, we have had successes and failures. But it is far from clear from this account that American leadership has reached a point of no return.

    In the end, if we marshal our substantial power and the energy of our allies, there is every possibility that the United States will play an equally important role in the next century as we did in the last one. Yes, we need to regain the will we have lost since the Iraq fiasco and the 2008 financial crisis, but the possibilities are still there, whether our brilliant biographer can see them or not.

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    Saudi state media: Eight ‘terrorist suspects’ killed in Qatif

    A Saudi police officer checks cars at a security checkpoint in Saudi Arabia's eastern Gulf coast town of Qatif [File: Fahad Shadeed/Reuters]
    A Saudi police officer checks cars at a security checkpoint in Saudi Arabia’s eastern Gulf coast town of Qatif [File: Fahad Shadeed/Reuters]

    Eight members of what Saudi authorities call a terrorist cell were killed on Saturday in a police raid in Saudi Arabia‘s eastern Qatif region, a Shia minority stronghold, state media has reported.

    The recently-formed cell was preparing to carry out “terrorist activities” against the security of the country, the official Saudi Press Agency reported, citing a state security spokesperson.

    The spokesperson said the men were killed after they fired shots at security forces, who had surrounded a residential apartment in the Sanabis neighbourhood.

    “They were called on to surrender, but they did not respond and opened fire at the security forces … which resulted in their killing,” said the spokesperson.

    No civilians or security forces were injured in the operation, he added.

    Earlier this year, the Saudi authorities announced they had killed several people after an exchange of fire in Qatif.

    According to local media, Saudi security forces besieged the town of Umm al-Hamam in Qatif for more than 15 hours, during which they raided several houses in search of wanted suspects. The Saudi authorities had accused them of committing acts of terrorism in the eastern region.

    Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province – which includes Qatif – has seen bouts of unrest since 2011 when protesters emboldened by the Arab Spring uprisings took to the streets.

     

    The demonstrators have demanded an end to what they say is discrimination by the Sunni-dominated government, a charge Riyadh denies.

    One of the leaders of the protest movement, prominent Shia leader and scholar Nimr al-Nimr, was executed in 2016 after he was convicted on terrorism charges.

    Nimr’s execution exacerbated sectarian tension both across the Gulf and with Saudi Arabia’s main regional rival, Iran.

    The Shia community is estimated to make up between 10 and 15 percent of the kingdom’s population of 32 million, but the government has released no official statistics.

    SOURCE:
    Al Jazeera and news agencies

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    Nigeria: ISIL claims killing 11 soldiers in Borno state

    Nigeria: ISIL claims killing 11 soldiers in Borno state

    ISIL fighters killed 11 Nigerian soldiers in an attack on the northeastern town of Gajiganna, the group claimed through its news agency AMAQ.

    The armed group said on Saturday the attack on the soldiers took place in the town in northeastern Borno state on Friday. It published pictures of burned barracks and dead bodies it claimed belonged to the soldiers.

    Three sources, including one hospital source, confirmed the attack to Reuters news agency. The sources said the fighters stormed the town on a motorbike at roughly 6:30pm (17:30 GMT) and opened fire on residents and the military in sporadic shootings.

    The fighters fled after the military called in air force support and reinforcements from a battalion in a neighbouring town.

    Nigeria violence: Widespread attacks by armed gangs (3:13)

    Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), an affiliate of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, or ISIS) has carried out a string of attacks in Nigeria in recent months.

    The group split in 2016 from Nigeria-based Boko Haram, which has waged a decade-long insurgency in northeast Nigeria that has killed some 30,000 people and displaced a further 2 million.

    SOURCE:
    Reuters news agency

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    UFC 237 Results: The Real Winners and Losers

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      Rose Namajunas (left) and Jessica Andrade

      Rose Namajunas (left) and Jessica AndradeBuda Mendes/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

      This was Rose Namajunas’ first main event, so the biggest question was if she would be able to capitalize on the opportunity.

      Namajunas made her second UFC strawweight title defense Saturday in hostile territory at UFC 237She has one of the best stories in all of the UFC as an underdog who continuously plows through those expectations. Her openness about issues such as mental health also makes her a prime candidate for crossover celebrity status. 

      Her opponent, the highly regarded Jessica Andrade, was the slight favorite heading into the bout, which took place in Andrade’s home nation of Brazil.

      In the co-main event, the great Anderson Silva, now age 44, was looking for a win over a nasty headhunter in Jared Cannonier. The GOAT candidate had an uphill battle facing Cannonier in what one might hope is a last grasp at glory.

      What about the rest of the card? BJ Penn was in action, among others. As always, the final stat lines only reveal so much. These are the real winners and losers from UFC 237. 

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      Jeffrey McWhorter/Associated Press

      We have a new UFC women’s strawweight champion.

      Jessica Andrade was getting picked apart early. A steady Namajunas jab bloodied her eye, and the champion’s speed helped her avoid Andrade’s forward rush.

      But in the span of about 20 seconds, the challenger turned it all around. In the second round, she used a brilliant and brutal bit of strategy to gain the upper hand once and for all.

      Along the cage, Andrade grabbed for a takedown. As a counter, Namajunas reached for a kimura. As a counter to the counter, if you will, Andrade, who was always assumed to have a strength advantage in the bout, lifted Namajunas into the air. The champ held on to the kimura longer than was probably advisable to do so. That held her position firm and facilitated a big slam from Andrade. Namajunas hit the mat head first, lost consciousness almost immediately, and there you have it.

      “I was certain what I had to do in the second round … I knew she was slowing down, and I knew I had to knock her out,” Andrade told broadcaster Jon Anik through a translator in the cage after the fight. 

      Namajunas said afterwards that, “It was a great pressure off my shoulders.” Although it’s not entirely clear what she meant by that, she was and is a tremendous UFC champion. Her humanity is striking in a sport that doesn’t always value that quality so much. There’s plenty more to come for Namajunas, in the UFC and beyond.

      But this was Andrade’s night. She earned the belt not just Saturday night but through a UFC career that has seen her battle and defeat the best in a very competitive division. Congratulations, champ.

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      Jared Cannonier

      Jared CannonierBuda Mendes/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

      Brazilian fight fans can be tough. Very tough. As Jared Cannonier crumpled Anderson Silva with one final, brutal kick—a scary moment for anyone who has followed Silva’s career—the Rio de Janeiro crowd loudly registered its dismay.

      Silva fell in unabashed agony. The referee waved off the bout almost before he hit the ground. Cannonier had the win. So, why is he a loser?

      It was the best win of Cannonier’s career, even though Silva is 44 years old. Cannonier knew both facts full well, and he danced around the cage following the win. As the merciless boos rained down, Cannonier mockingly raised a hand to his ear. He went over to check on a hobbled and grimacing Silva later.

      When Anik came over for the customary post-fight comment, Cannonier declined to immediately answer, instead letting the boos wash over the broadcast for a good 15 seconds. One might speculate that the message was to point out the disrespect of those merciless fans. But this was happening as Silva, a local hero, stood one-legged and howling in his corner. 

      “The [fans] don’t respect me, [so] I don’t have any respect for them,” Cannonier told Anik. “And that’s just it.”

      But this was not about Cannonier. All he had to say was, “I hope Silva’s OK. I know he’s your hero. What a great champion he is. This win is my honor, and I’ll do what I can to expedite Anderson’s transfer to the hospital and hope that he makes a full recovery.”

      He didn’t do that. Instead, he indulged his hater fantasies. Somewhere out there, there’s a face missing its nose.

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      Alexander Volkanovski (left) kicks Jose Aldo.

      Alexander Volkanovski (left) kicks Jose Aldo.Buda Mendes/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

      The stage was set for a continued feel-good story for Jose Aldo.

      Three months ago, he knocked out a plucky young up-and-comer in Renato Moicano. That was preceded by a first-round smearing of Jeremy Stephens.

      Alexander Volkanovski was a great test to see if Aldo was truly back. Behind a sharp stand-up game, the Australian hadn’t lost in six UFC bouts.

      Brazilian fans who wanted the same fireworks as Moicano or Stephens were not impressed with Aldo’s performance. When he attacked, it tended to work. The jab was particularly effective, though an overhand or two found the mark as well.

      But as the fight wore on, Volkanovski gained a clear edge in output. Leg kicks found the mark time after time—an interesting thing to watch given Aldo’s mastery of that particular technique. Volkanovski had success when he got in deep and held Aldo against the cage. 

      Aldo seemed concerned largely with the big counter. He wanted to bring down the house with the perfect strike. But that golden opportunity never seemed to appear, and Aldo lapsed into extended inactivity. In MMA, the path to defeat is paved with ill intentions.

      Is Aldo’s career over? Not if he doesn’t want it to be. But Volkanovski certainly used him as a stepping stone in front of his countrymen tonight. Judging by the boos in the arena following the decision, that crowd wasn’t particularly satisfied with what it had seen.

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      Alexandre Schneider/Getty Images

      The UFC may not have intended it this way, but UFC 237 was an event at which some aging lions of the sport were publicly brought low.

      That included Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, aka Lil Nog, who fell in the first round to the immortal “I Don’t Even Have a Wikipedia Page” Ryan Spann. 

      Spann landed some heavy leather to end it just a shade over two minutes into the first round. It ran the 42-year-old Nogueira to 2-4 in his last six bouts, dating back to 2014.

      Lil Nog’s chin has been suspect going back to his 44-second knockout at the hands of Anthony “Rumble” Johnson. That was five years ago. This one ended in less than half of one round.

      Is Lil Nog at a crossroads? If he wasn’t before Saturday, there’s no telling when. He’ll always be a draw to some degree in his native Brazil. Is that the only consideration?

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      Ed Mulholland/Getty Images

      No, it’s not UFC 237. It’s not even the UFC. But we’d be remiss if we didn’t give an honorable mention to one Patricio “Pitbull” Freire, who on Saturday became a dual-division champion in Bellator.

      He didn’t take the easy route, either. Freire knocked out an objective Hall of Famer in Michael Chandler in the first round of the main event of Bellator 221 to take the lightweight title.

      The well-rounded Brazilian has won four straight, and at age 31 he’s got plenty left. We have a new star here.

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      MAURO PIMENTEL/Getty Images

      It’s been a broken record with BJ Penn for quite some time. 

      Clay Guida, who is 37 years old and competing for the first time in a year, tenderized the 40-year-old BJ Penn for a unanimous-decision win.

      Penn hasn’t won since 2010. He’s lost seven in a row. That’s a UFC record. Oy vey.

      No one wants to tell this champion to stop, but honestly, what’s it going to take for him to hang up the gloves?

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      Viviane Araujo (left) knocked out Talita Bernardo on the undercard.

      Viviane Araujo (left) knocked out Talita Bernardo on the undercard.MAURO PIMENTEL/Getty Images

      Main Card

      Jessica Andrade def. Rose Namajunas by KO, 2:58, Round 2 (for UFC women’s strawweight championship)

      Jared Cannonier def. Anderson Silva by TKO, 4:47, Round 1

      Alexander Volkanovski by Jose Aldo by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

      Laureano Staropoli def. Thiago Alves by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)

      Irene Aldana def. Bethe Correia by submission (armbar), 3:24, Round 3

      Preliminary Card

      Ryan Spann def. Antonio Rogerio Nogueira by KO, 2:07, Round 1

      Thiago Moises def. Kurt Holobaugh by unanimous decision (30-26, 30-26, 30-27)

      Warlley Alves def. Sergio Moraes by KO, 4:13, Round 3

      Clay Guida def. BJ Penn by unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-27)

      Luana Carolina def. Priscilla Cachoeira by unanimous decision (30-26, 30-26, 29-27)

      Raoni Barcelos def. Carlos Huachin by TKO, 4:49, Round 2

      Viviane Araujo def. Talita Bernardo by KO, 0:48, Round 3

      Scott Harris covers MMA and other sports for Bleacher Report. 

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    India elections 2019: Voting under way in penultimate round

    Voters in Delhi and elsewhere in India‘s north have lined up to cast their ballots in the second-to-last round of a seven-phase general election, with the opposition seeking a united stand to deny Prime Minister Narendra Modi a second term.

    More than 100 million people across seven states are eligible to vote in the sixth phase of the 39-day-long poll, which began on April 11 and will end on May 19. Votes will be counted on May 23.

    Sunday’s voting in 59 constituencies, including seven in the Indian capital, will complete polling for 483 of 543 seats in the lower house of Parliament. The voting for the remaining 60 seats will be held next Sunday.

    Turnout in the first five phases averaged 67 percent, nearly the same as in 2014 elections that brought Modi to power.

    India’s opposition parties have recently taken heart at what they see as signs Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) losing ground and have begun negotiations over a post-election alliance even before polling ends on May 19. 

    Some voters in Delhi said they were backing Modi because they were won over by his tough stand on security.

    “I have voted for Modi’s sound foreign policy and national security,” a 36-year old first-time voter who declined to be identified told Reuters news agency.

    Political analysts say that state-based and caste-driven parties could be decisive in determining the make-up of the next government, as a lack of new jobs and weak farm prices have hurt the BJP.

    “Regional parties will play a bigger role compared to the previous five years or even 15 years,” said KC Suri, a political science professor at the University of Hyderabad. “They will regain their importance in national politics.”

    Recent weeks have also been marked by personal attacks between leaders, including comments from Modi about the family of Congress president Rahul Gandhi, the scion of the Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty.

    At a recent rally Modi called Gandhi’s late father, former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, “corrupt no. 1”. The BJP says Modi was reacting to Rahul Gandhi calling him a thief.

    “The political vitriolic has become intense, and negatively intense,” said Ashok Acharya, a political science professor at the University of Delhi.

    “It seems as if this particular election is all about a few political personalities. It is not about issues, any kind of an agenda.”

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    Philippines midterm polls to test Rodrigo Duterte’s grip on power

    Manila, Philippines – A national election of legislators and local executives may help strengthen Rodrigo Duterte‘s hold on power halfway through his controversial presidency.

    More than 61 million Filipinos are registered to vote in Monday’s midterm polls, with roughly 43,000 candidates vying for some 18,000 government posts.

    The election of 12 senators for the 24-seat higher congressional chamber will be decisive. The chamber has so far tempered some of Duterte’s more polarising objectives, such as his attempts at changing the constitution to change the form of government from unitary to federal or reinstating the death penalty.

    Senatorial candidates endorsed by Duterte have dominated voter preference surveys by private pollsters, indicating a likely affirmative outcome for his administration.

    But critics have expressed fears that a victory for Duterte’s allies would reduce the Senate’s independence and prevent it from keeping a check on the president.

    Duterte’s senatorial slate does not come from a single party. Aside from members of his PDP-Laban party, candidates from other parties comprise the “Hugpong ng Pagbabago” or “Collective of Change” fielded by his daughter, Sara Duterte.

    Among candidates Duterte has supported are Imee Marcos, Jinggoy Estrada, Ramon Revilla and Juan Ponce Enrile, with the first three seen as probable winners according to opinion polls. 

    Marcos is the daughter of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, who embezzled at least $5bn in government funds when he ruled from 1965 to 1986.

    Enrile and Estrada, veterans of the Senate, are facing plunder charges.

    Revilla, although acquitted by an anti-graft court of plunder last December, owes the national treasury the equivalent of $2.3m in public funds that went missing under his watch in an earlier Senate term.

    Straight eight

    No single political party has been able to challenge Duterte’s rule but a “coalition” of eight senatorial candidates from different backgrounds are running as an opposition bloc.

    Although the “Otso Diretso” or “Eight Straight” opposition bloc appears unlikely to win many Senate seats, “they were able to shape the campaign in terms of the issues at stake,” said Nicole Curato, senior research fellow at the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance at the University of Canberra.

    In their campaign, the opposition bloc criticised Duterte’s foreign and economic policies as being too favourable towards China. They denounced the impunity for thousands of killings in his “war on drugs”, and his endorsement of politicians tainted with grave allegations of corruption.

    “The Otso Diretso were able to make a sustained critique about China’s relationship to the Philippines, as well as insist on the importance of liberal values like human rights and gender equality,” Curato, who is also the editor of A Duterte Reader: Critical Essays on Rodrigo Duterte’s Early Presidency, told Al Jazeera.

    Owning their underdog status in the race, the Otso Diretso accused the pro-administration bloc of using public resources to fuel their campaign, calling them “dishonest”.

    Sara Duterte, who spoke for the pro-administration bloc, retorted that “honesty should not be an issue” in the elections. Her statement backfired, drawing the media spotlight on the candidates’ integrity and track record. 

    As the opposition bloc put more pressure on the pro-administration bloc, the Office of the President hit back by accusing the Otso Diretso of trying to overthrow Duterte, a claim that did not seem to gain credence among the public.

    But will it all translate into votes for the opposition?

    “The narratives and issues the Otso raised seems to have failed to capture the public’s imagination,” said Dindo Manhit, president of the Albert del Rosario Institute for Strategic and International Studies, a policy think-tank based in the capital, Manila.

    “We must accept that elections are about what people care about, and right now it is still Duterte and his candidates who are saying the right things,” Manhit told Al Jazeera. 

    Last week, a new survey showed that 81 percent of Filipinos expressed satisfaction with Duterte’s administration, citing its efforts to help the poor and improve security, among other reasons.

    Curato said Duterte’s enduring popularity shows that “people are willing to overlook some democratic values for the sake of Duterte’s promise of change.”

    Besides, midterm elections in the Philippines tend to affirm the status quo, especially when the president is popular, both analysts noted.

    Politics in the Philippines is strongly oriented towards personalities, which explains the general success of familiar names and faces even despite less-than-ideal track records.

    Duterte himself had ruled the major southern city of Davao for nearly three decades before becoming president in 2016.

    Among those likely to win another term as senators are Grace Poe, Nancy Binay and Lito Lapid – candidates popular enough not to need Duterte’s endorsement, and are running neither under the administration nor the opposition.

    Poe is the daughter of two of the Philippines’ biggest movie stars. Binay’s father is a former vice president. Lapid used to star in action films. 

    Grace Poe is the daughter of two of the Philippines’ biggest movie stars [Gallo/Getty]

    ‘Not necessarily puppets’

    Although Duterte can expect to gain more allies in the Senate after Monday’s vote, Manhit said they will “not necessarily act as his puppets”.

    “With those three strong candidates setting themselves apart from Duterte, there’s reason to think the Senate can continue to be independent,” he added. 

    As for the candidates supported by Duterte, “they are not a homogeneous bloc,” said Curato. “They have different interests, appeal to different constituencies and form different alliances.”

    Still, the new Senate will probably be generally supportive of Duterte, both analysts said. What will be crucial are their positions on Duterte’s dealings with China, and his proposal to shift to a federal form of government that may give him a chance to stay in power beyond the end of his legally mandated single term in 2022.

    “There is no precedent to think that the Senate will simply follow Duterte’s wishes,” Curato said, “though vigilance is always good.”

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