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Good evening. It's Monday, June 24.
Tonight: Very little attention is paid these days to the war in Ukraine. Remember that? That would be, I suppose, somewhat understandable if the war were static or had become a frozen conflict or were in some retreat or a winding down. But none of that is happening; the opposite is. From the perspective of escalatory risks between the United States and Russia – which just happen to be the nations with the two world's largest nuclear stockpiles – the war in Ukraine is more dangerous today than ever. That's what makes the relative indifference toward it, the silence about it, so mystifying and so dangerous.
Three weeks ago, the Biden administration announced that it was lifting restrictions on the use of U.S.-supplied weapons to strike inside Russia, on Russian soil. Over the weekend, a horrific airstrike launched by Ukraine, which the Russians insist was carried out with U.S. weapons, took place on a beach inside of Crimea, which Russia has governed since the U.S. supported coup in Kiev, in 2014, and whose residents are overwhelmingly Russian with far more allegiance to Moscow than to Kiev. The strike, aimed at a beach popular among area residents, killed at least four people and injured at least 150 more, including many children.
The reaction from the highest levels of the Russian government was as clear as it was ominous. They said they do not hold Ukraine responsible for the attack and the death of those civilians but, instead, they hold the United States government responsible, given that the U.S. military, they say, played the key role in the launching and targeting of the bomb site. Unsurprisingly, the Russians not only blamed the United States but vowed retaliation not against Ukraine but against the U.S. And thus, as we spiral to greater and greater risk of escalatory dangers all over the question of who rules a few provinces in eastern Ukraine, or whether NATO will be permitted to expand right up to the most sensitive part of the Russian border, very few people in the U.S. seem to care much and are barely discussing these grave dangers, even as they escalate. It is worth examining how the main objective of the U.S. and Russia during the Cold War, avoiding direct combat between the two and avoiding the risk of nuclear aggression, whether through intentional choice or miscalculation and misperception, really seems to have almost no weight these days in Western capitals or among American liberals and their neocon allies in the Republican Party.
Then: CNN is hosting the first presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump on Thursday night, in Atlanta. It will be hosted by CNN personalities Jake Tapper and Dana Bash. The Trump campaign, for whatever reasons, decided to hand CNN an unprecedented level of control over how the debate proceeds. Early this morning, a CNN host – someone named Kasie Hunt – invited to her show the Trump campaign's press secretary to talk about that debate. Hunt then proceeded to have a remarkable on-air meltdown that culminated in her cutting off that interview with the Trump campaign's spokesperson. We’ll examine exactly what happened, not only because of how deeply entertaining this was but also because it reveals so much about the character and function of U.S. corporate media.
Finally, the independent journalists Lee Fong and Jack Paulson, working in collaboration with The Guardian, published an investigation today about the extent of Israeli influence operations in the United States.
In the words of the article, the investigation reveals, “a hard line and sometimes covert operation by the Israeli government to strike back that student protests, human rights organizations and other voices of dissent inside the United States.” We'll speak to both of those journalists about their findings and try to understand the full gravity and extent of Israeli influence operations in the United States, including their connection to some very serious laws that abridge the free speech rights of Americans in the name of protecting Israel.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.