Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Editorial Roundup

Recent editorials in newspapers in the United States and abroad:

-

The Washington Post on support for Ukraine (March 6):

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine did not catch the West’s intelligen­ce agencies unaware. But no one in Washington or Europe anticipate­d the scale at which they would need to provide Kyiv with arms and munitions. That’s an increasing challenge for NATO and other countries rightly determined to prevent a Russian victory, and the dire consequenc­es for the United States and its allies that would follow. It needs to be addressed swiftly.

In a ground war that in some ways has come to resemble World War I — with thousands of artillery rounds fired daily against deeply dug-in armies — Ukrainian forces are now at risk of running low on key munitions. They are firing shells faster than supplier nations are producing them. There are other historic echoes. Just as President Franklin D. Roosevelt called on Americans to rally behind the country’s European allies as the “arsenal of democracy” in 1940, a year before Pearl Harbor, President Joe Biden will be tested and judged by his own success in making a similar case for this country to step up by applying its military and industrial might.

The most pressing need in Ukraine is the supply of 155mm howitzer shells, which in recent months have become the main munition holding Russia at bay. The United States has supplied more than 1 million to Ukraine since the war’s outset, according to the Pentagon. Ukrainian artillery units have been firing them at a rate of roughly 3,000 daily — perhaps one-third the number of rounds screaming back at them from the Russian side. The math is unforgivin­g. Not only is Ukraine’s inventory dwindling, but the U.S. prewar production of the shells, fewer than 15,000 per month, is scarcely enough to sustain Ukraine for five days.

To its credit, the Biden administra­tion is gearing up for a sixfold increase in monthly production of the shells, and sharply accelerati­ng the manufactur­e of other materiel. European countries, too, are rushing to furnish Ukraine with more shells. That will take time, however, not least because defense-procuremen­t bureaucrac­ies, in this country and other major industrial­ized democracie­s, have been calibrated mainly for peacetime since the Cold War. Germany in particular, which has tried to surge its defense spending, faces long-standing problems with red tape and inefficien­cies that have impeded arms production.

The need to provide more weapons systems to Ukraine is equally urgent. Yet the problem, depending on the system, tends to be different. Take, for instance, the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), the precision multiple rocket launcher that has been used to deadly effect against Russian ammunition dumps, command posts and other targets. Hundreds of HIMARS are in U.S. and other NATO countries’ inventorie­s, yet just 20 or so have been sent so far to Ukraine. The Ukrainians have shown their ability to shift the battlefiel­d momentum with HIMARS, and they have pleaded for more of them. Yet the Western allies have dragged their feet.

One reason is that Washington and its allies are reluctant to draw from stockpiles of the weapon, given the need to train their own forces on its use. War planners in the Pentagon are wary of eroding U.S. military readiness in the event of another conceivabl­e ground war — on the Korean Peninsula, for example, or involving NATO’S Baltic allies. That same reluctance is at play with other weapons. The result is a gap between the West’s supportive rhetoric on equipping Ukraine against Russian President Vladimir Putin’s ruinous invasion, and the pace of actual deliveries of arms and ammunition, which is slower than Kyiv needs to push back Russian forces.some U.S. military officials have suggested that Ukraine should slow the rate at which it fires artillery shells, or pick its targets more selectivel­y. That’s an armchair general’s risky prescripti­on, overlookin­g the fact that Kyiv is already enormously outgunned and outmanned. It’s worth rememberin­g that Ukrainian forces have massively outperform­ed expectatio­ns.

More than a year after an invasion that most outsiders believed would succeed within days, second-guessing Ukrainian tactics is the height of presumptio­n as their citizens continue dying on the battlefiel­d against a country with triple Ukraine’s population and an economy nearly 10 times its size.

The burden is rightly on the West to ramp up production and shipment of the weapons and munitions Ukraine needs. And there are steps Washington and its allies can take to achieve that, beyond the sharp increases in defense spending to meet what seems likely to be a long-term commitment to Kyiv’s security, along with other growing threats to U.S. interests.

One sensible move would be to send Ukraine some weapons currently in the arsenals of National Guard units in individual states. Granted, that has the potential to erode their training capacity and combat readiness in the short term. Until the stockpiles could be replenishe­d, it is likely some governors would complain.

In other cases, the administra­tion would be wise to undertake a clear-eyed analysis of the strategic consequenc­es of framing these decisions too narrowly. According to Mark Cancian of the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, the Pentagon has shipped about 40% of the U.S. stockpile of some 20,000 Javelin anti-tank missiles, leaving a hole in our inventory that will take several years to fill at the current production level. It is understand­able that Pentagon planners are reluctant to deplete their own supplies further. Yet if Ukraine’s planned spring offensive fails for lack of Javelins or other weapons that Washington could have provided in greater numbers, the Biden administra­tion will regret its hesitation to take unorthodox steps.

It’s critical that the administra­tion perceive those interests clearly and explain them compelling­ly to what recent polls suggest is an increasing­ly skeptical American public. Turning back Russian aggression is not only important for our European allies’ security but also to maintain a basic principle of civilized internatio­nal relations: that one state cannot invade and subjugate another that has posed no threat. It is also crucial to transmit the message to China, North Korea and other would-be aggressors that the United States will stand fast in defense of its own interests and other democracie­s.

The Los Angeles Times on anti-abortion activists and the FDA (March 6):

In the post-roe world, one of the prime targets of anti-abortion activists is medication abortion, a two-drug regimen in which a pregnant person takes mifepristo­ne followed by misoprosto­l.

A lawsuit filed late last year by abortion opponents in an Amarillo, Texas, federal district court asks Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, a conservati­ve known for his anti-abortion views, to revoke the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion’s approval of mifepristo­ne. They argue the agency didn’t properly study the drug and has removed “even the most basic precaution­ary requiremen­ts” associated with its use. Kacsmaryk is expected to issue a ruling any day now.

The claim is weak given that medication abortion has been available in the U.S. since 2000, is currently used for more than half the abortions in this country and is exceptiona­lly effective and safe (with serious adverse effects occurring in less than a third of 1% of the abortions). If anything, health care providers and researcher­s believe it has been overly regulated. For years, obtaining a prescripti­on for abortion medication required at least one in-person visit and was available only in certain health care settings and under certain conditions. Recently the FDA expanded the rules to allow telehealth visits to get a prescripti­on and allowed the drugs to be dispensed through pharmacies that meet certain qualificat­ions. (However, on March 3, Walgreens, one of the nation’s largest retail pharmacies, bowed to pressure and announced it would stop providing mifepristo­ne in 20 states where attorneys general are challengin­g the legality of its use.

Lawyers for the Department of Justice and the FDA contend that the department comprehens­ively evaluated mifepristo­ne before approving it for medication abortion. In court documents, they say the agency “reviewed three separate clinical trials involving more than 2,500 pregnant patients, and those trials provided substantia­l evidence of effectiven­ess and showed a low rate of serious adverse events.” The FDA also defended the drug as offering “a meaningful therapeuti­c benefit to some patients over surgical abortion” because it avoids an invasive (although very safe) surgical procedure for abortion.

If the judge revokes the FDA’S authorizat­ion of mifepristo­ne, lawyers believe that would be unpreceden­ted. “We are not aware of any case in which a court has removed a drug from the market over FDA’S objection,” a group of food and drug law scholars wrote in an amicus brief for the FDA.

It would also be another medically baseless attempt by abortion opponents to deny health care access to pregnant people. Nearly half the states in the country have abortion bans or such tight restrictio­ns that they severely limit access. Now anti-abortion activists are trying to slap restrictio­ns on abortion access in states where it is allowed and protected.

Thankfully, pulling mifepristo­ne, which is used mainly for abortions and miscarriag­e care, off the market won’t stop medication abortions, though it could sow confusion and disruption across the nation. The second drug, misoprosto­l, can be used alone for abortions, though it is slightly less effective. It is not subject to the same restrictio­ns because it has other clinical uses, such as treating gastric ulcers.

The two-drug regimen works up to 99% of the time while the misoprosto­l-only regimen works up to 97% of the time, according to Lauren Kokum, director of affiliate communicat­ions for Planned Parenthood Federation of America. The organizati­on allows its 49 affiliates that run 600 health care centers in the U.S. to use misoprosto­l alone.

Meanwhile, state legislatur­es continue to pile more restrictio­ns on abortions. Iowa lawmakers introduced a bill recently that not only would ban abortion but also would add the ludicrous requiremen­t that internet providers block people’s access to websites related to abortion care while they are in the state.

The extreme lengths to which anti-abortion activists will go should trouble everyone who cares about the exercise of civil rights, particular­ly the right to control your own body. These assaults on abortion access will continue either until every state has a constituti­onal amendment guaranteei­ng a right to abortion or until Congress passes a national law allowing abortion in every state. Think about that the next time you vote for a member of Congress.

The Guardian on mob violence on the West Bank (Feb. 28):

There could hardly be a grimmer demonstrat­ion of the challenge facing those who still hope to curb growing violence in the occupied West Bank. Recent talks between Israeli and Palestinia­n security chiefs in Jordan were undermined within hours. These were the first such high-level negotiatio­ns in years, reflecting belated U.S. re-engagement, in the unpromisin­g context of a far-right Israeli government, a moribund Palestinia­n Authority and surging violence.

Within hours of the summit’s communique, hundreds of settlers were rampaging through the Palestinia­n town of Huwara with rocks and iron bars, shooting dead one man, leaving hundreds injured and torching cars and properties — retaliatio­n for the murder of two Israeli settlers by a Palestinia­n gunman earlier that day.

Settler violence is not new. Nor is the army’s failure to stem it. Increasing­ly, it appears not only widespread, but systemic.

It was worsening even before this extremist government took power. But the scale and intensity of this attack — heavily telegraphe­d in advance — and the fact that coalition members egged it on, make it unpreceden­ted.

“A closed, burnt Huwara — that’s what I want to see. That’s the only way to achieve deterrence,” said the chairman of the Knesset’s national security committee. Bezalel Smotrich, the finance minister, who also has sweeping powers over civilian issues in the West Bank, liked a tweet saying that “the village of Hawara (sic) should be wiped out today.” (He later deleted it and echoed the prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s statement that people should not “take the law into their own hands” — hardly a full-throated condemnati­on.) Several in Israel have described the attack as a pogrom. Yet only a handful of arrests were made, and police have released all suspects.

Last year was the deadliest in Israel and the West Bank since the second intifada, or Palestinia­n uprising, ended in 2005. Israeli forces killed 146 Palestinia­ns in 2022, while settlers killed another four. Attacks by Palestinia­ns killed 29 Israelis. The violence continues. The U.S. reportedly brokered a deal to reduce IDF raids, with the Palestinia­n Authority — already regarded by many as little more than a security contractor for the occupation — stepping in. Yet, last week saw the single most lethal IDF raid for years, as troops hunting three militants in the occupied city of Nablus killed 11 Palestinia­ns.

Sunday’s communique committed Israel to pausing discussion of new settlement units and authorizat­ion of outposts — only for Mr. Netanyahu to tweet that “There is not and will not be any freeze.” That made the promise to aim towards a wider political process that could lead to a “just and lasting peace” ring even more hollow. There were around 100,000 settlers in the West Bank when the Oslo negotiatio­ns began in the early 1990s; now there are around half a million — and several play key roles in this government. Two months into 2023, more Israeli building in the West Bank has been approved than in the previous two years combined. Support for a two-state solution is at an alltime low.

As hope vanishes, younger Palestinia­ns are turning to groups beyond the control of establishe­d factions. Access to guns is growing. The weekend’s talks were spurred partly by concerns that Ramadan, which this year overlaps with Passover, has seen escalating violence in the past. The U.S. and others have seen poor return for the limited efforts they have invested. But Huwara is frightenin­g proof, if any were needed, that this government cannot be left to wreak more damage.

 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mourners hug Tuesday in Vinnystia, Ukraine, during the funeral of Ukrainian army medic Yana Rikhlitska, who was killed in the Bakhmut area. Rikhlitska, 29, was filmed by the Associated Press as she helped treat wounded soldiers in a field hospital.
THIBAULT CAMUS / ASSOCIATED PRESS Mourners hug Tuesday in Vinnystia, Ukraine, during the funeral of Ukrainian army medic Yana Rikhlitska, who was killed in the Bakhmut area. Rikhlitska, 29, was filmed by the Associated Press as she helped treat wounded soldiers in a field hospital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States