From Quincy Institute <[email protected]>
Subject Qi's Week in Review: Yemen ceasefire, USS Roosevelt, retaliating against China & more
Date April 12, 2020 3:59 PM
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** Weekly Round-Up
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4/12/20

Is Yemen’s ceasefire for real?
By Annelle Sheline
The National Interest, 4/10/20

Saudi Arabia has announced a unilateral two-week ceasefire in Yemen. Unfortunately, it is unlikely to succeed; even if the Saudis maintain the ceasefire and eventually withdraw their forces, Yemen’s civil war will continue. The ceasefire does seem to indicate, however, that Saudi Arabia is ready to end its involvement in the war. Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman has needed a way to exit Yemen without admitting defeat, and COVID-19 may provide a sufficient excuse.

READ HERE ([link removed][UNIQID])

The acting Navy secretary stepped down and a ship’s captain was fired. This question remains about the USS Roosevelt.
By Stacie Goddard, William Cameron, and Pierce MacConaghy
Washington Post, 4/11/20



On Tuesday, acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly resigned, attempting to end the uproar over a coronavirus outbreak on the USS Theodore Roosevelt and the dismissal last week of its commander, Navy Capt. Brett Crozier.

But significant questions remain about what led to the crisis — specifically, the decision to proceed with a March 5 “port call” in Vietnam.

READ HERE ([link removed][UNIQID])

Why retribution against China for coronavirus would harm America and the world
By Rachel Esplin Odell
War on the Rocks, 4/9/20

As the human and economic toll of the coronavirus mounts, some U.S. officials are threatening retribution against Beijing for enabling the pandemic. Sens. Tom Cotton and Josh Hawley rolled
outhttps://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-usa-bill/u-s-lawmakers-ready-sanctions-bill-for-foreign-officials-concealing-coronavirus-info-idUSL1N2BQ26Rahttps://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-usa-bill/u-s-lawmakers-ready-sanctions-bill-for-foreign-officials-concealing-coronavirus-info-idUSL1N2BQ26Rbillhttps://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-usa-bill/u-s-lawmakers-ready-sanctions-bill-for-foreign-officials-concealing-coronavirus-info-idUSL1N2BQ26Rlasthttps://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-usa-bill/u-s-lawmakers-ready-sanctions-bill-for-foreign-officials-concealing-coronavirus-info-idUSL1N2BQ26Rweekhttps://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-usa-bill/u-s-lawmakers-ready-sanctions-bill-for-foreign-officials-concealing-coronavirus-info-idUSL1N2BQ26Rauthorizinghttps://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-usa-bill/u-s-lawmakers-ready-sanctions-bill-for-foreign-officials-concealing-coronavirus-info-idUSL1N2BQ26Rsanctions as a way to
“makehttps://www.cotton.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=1342thehttps://www.cotton.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=1342CCPhttps://www.cotton.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=1342pay for contributing to this global emergency” and force China to “foothttps://www.newsweek.com/gop-senator-tells-tucker-carlson-china-should-foot-bill-damage-caused-us-coronavirus-1493358the bill” for the economic fallout. This bill also echoed the type of retaliatory approach endorsedhttps://warontherocks.com/2020/03/china-is-legally-responsible-for-covid-19-damage-and-claims-could-be-in-the-trillions/byhttps://warontherocks.com/2020/03/china-is-legally-responsible-for-covid-19-damage-and-claims-could-be-in-the-trillions/James Kraska in a recent article in War on the Rocks.

READ HERE ([link removed][UNIQID])
The difference between America’s coronavirus response and Norway’s: a conversation with Ann Jones
By James Carden
The Nation, 4/3/20

The appalling response to the coronavirus pandemic on the part of the administration, Congress, corporations, and certain segments of the public should be cause for a serious reconsideration of our priorities as a country.

The current crisis highlights, as little else has, a lack of social cohesion among Americans: Clearly, we are not all in this together. The startling lack of civic solidarity has only been exacerbated by the stunning incompetence of the Trump administration.
READ HERE ([link removed][UNIQID])

[link removed][UNIQID]

Confronting COVID-19 with the wrong tools
By Catherine Lutz
Political leaders keep saying that America is at war with COVID-19. But the military is the wrong tool to control the virus, even if war spending is – in part – what got the U.S. into this health crisis.

As Costs of War Co-Director and Quincy Institute board member Catherine Lutz explains, we need to fundamentally rethink what national security means so it can focus civilian solutions toward very real societal risks many are currently experiencing — ill health and inequality.

WATCH HERE ([link removed][UNIQID])



MORE. MORE. MORE.
* Biden likely to embrace some of Sanders’s foreign-policy ideas, Especially after the pandemic ([link removed][UNIQID]) by Robbie Gramer, Jack Dietsch, and Colum Lynch, Foreign Policy, 4/9/20
* Two Fox News regulars are finalists for Pentagon policy chief ([link removed][UNIQID]) by Daniel Lippman, Lara Seligman, and Bryan Bender, Politico, 4/2/20
* How will COVID-19 change US national security strategy? ([link removed][UNIQID]) by Chris Preble, Responsible Statecraft, 4/8/20
* Renovating ‘the Swamp’ post COVID-19 by reconfiguring budgets and bureaucracy ([link removed][UNIQID]) by Dan Mahanty, Responsible Statecraft, 4/6/20

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