Archive for March, 2022

Little Britain removes blackface character from BBC iPlayer to ‘better reflect changes in the cultural landscape’ – GB News

The comedy series from Matt Lucas and David Walliams was removed from various services including Netflix and BritBox in the wake of Black Lives Matter protests

The BBC has returned Little Britain to iPlayer after its creators made edits to better reflect the changes in the cultural landscape since the show first aired 20 years ago.

The comedy series from Matt Lucas and David Walliams was removed from various services including Netflix and BritBox in the wake of Black Lives Matter protests in 2020.

Matt Lucas and David Walliams. Yui Mok

It had faced criticism because of the use of blackface make-up in some sketches.

A BBC spokesman said: Little Britain has been made available to fans on BBC iPlayer following edits made to the series by Matt and David that better reflect the changes in the cultural landscape over the last 20 years since the show was first made.

Lucas and Walliams have both previously apologised for their use of blackface on the show, which began as a radio programme in 2000 before running as a TV series on the BBC between 2003 and 2007, launching their respective careers.

(From left to right) Russell Brand, David Walliams and Matt Lucas in a special Comic Relief performance of the Little Britain stage show at the Hammersmith Apollo in west London. Ian West

The said in a joint statement on Twitter in June 2020: Once again we want to make it clear that it was wrong; we are very sorry.

In the series, Walliams sported black make-up and a large afro wig to play the overweight black woman Desiree DeVere.

Lucas also used blackface to play Pastor Jesse King, who said he was from the ghetto and spoke in tongues to cure the sick.

In the wake of Black Lives Matter protests prompted by the killing of George Floyd, stars including Ant and Dec and Leigh Francis also apologised for portraying black people on TV.

Lucas previously said he has regrets about Little Britain, describing the comedy as cruel.

Representatives of Lucas and Walliams have been contacted for further comment.

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Little Britain removes blackface character from BBC iPlayer to 'better reflect changes in the cultural landscape' - GB News

Police-reported hate crimes rose dramatically in 2020 in Greater Victoria Vancouver Island Free Daily – vancouverislandfreedaily.com

A new report points to Greater Victoria as an emerging national hotspot for hate crimes.

Among census metropolitan areas (CMAs) with at least 10 hate crimes reported to police, Victoria CMAs 97-per-cent increase in such incidents between 2019 and 2020 ranks third highest in the country, according to figures from the Canadian Centre for Justice and Community Safety released through Statistics Canada.

Only Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo (up 253 per cent) and Peterborough (126 per cent) CMAs had higher increases year over year than Victoria.

Based on population, the B.C. capital regions 8.3 police-reported hate crimes per 100,000 people in 2020 that translates to between 33 and 38 incidents overall ranked it 12th in Canada and was higher than the national average of seven. The near-doubling of incidents reported pushed Victoria CMA up from 20th place on the national list in 2019.

Vancouver CMA recorded B.C.s highest rate with 13.8 cases/100K, and the fourth-highest in Canada. Victorias rate was also higher than Abbotsford-Mission CMA (3.9/100K) and Kelowna CMA (2.3/100K).

The report does not detail why police-reported hate crimes rose in Victoria CMA, but points to two broader categories of potential causes.

The first points to a general disconnect between stated public policies (including official multiculturalism) protecting specific populations and practice. Indigenous peoples and those designated as visible minorities generally report feeling less safe than the rest of the population, in some cases are much more likely to be overrepresented in the justice system, and along with sexual minorities, are more likely to report experiencing discrimination and victimization, it reads.

The second concerns the COVID-19 pandemic.

The (pandemic) further brought to light the varying experiences and perceptions of some of Canadas diverse population, as well as the systemic barriers they face, including varying levels of perceived safety and self-reported victimization. Within this context, the report points to the rise of hate crimes targeting East or Southeast Asian populations, undoubtedly a legacy of false, populist rhetoric that initially framed COVID-19 as a Chinese disease.

Overall, Canadian police reported 2,669 hate-motivated criminal incidents in 2020, the largest number recorded since comparable data became available in 2009.

B.C.s incident report total grew by 198 over 2019, second-most only behind Ontarios 316. But the B.C. increase for 2020 pushed it to top spot among the provinces with a rate of 10.1 police-reported hate crimes per 100,000 population.

Looking at the Canadian numbers more closely, hate crimes motivated by hatred of a race or ethnicity represented 62 per cent of the total a substantial increase over previous years, the report states while religion-related hate crimes dropped to 20 per cent.

RELATED: UVic study shows hate crimes against Asian Canadians increase during pandemic

Crimes motivated by hatred of a sexual orientation accounted for 10 per cent of the total, while those targeting such factors as language, disability, age, and sex or gender comprised seven per cent, similar proportions seen in recent years.

Separating incidents by physicality, the report stated that non-violent hate crimes rose 41 per cent, while violent hate crimes were up 32 per cent.

While the report does not directly reference the Black Lives Matter movement in the United States and elsewhere, including Canada, 2020 was also a high watermark for that movement, drawing broad support, but also encouraging opposition from the fringes.

The report notes that the number of police-reported crimes motivated by hatred of a race or ethnicity increased 80 per cent, from 884 to 1,594. Much of this increase was the result of more police-reported hate crimes targeting the Black population (+ 318 incidents), East or Southeast Asian population (+202 incidents), the Indigenous population (+44 incidents) and the South Asian population (+38 incidents).

The report states police-reported statistics capture only crimes that come to the attention of police or other authorities and other studies have found that a large number of incidents perceived to be motivated by hate went un-reported for a number of reasons, including but not only a lack of confidence or trust in the police or other social institutions.

RELATED: PHOTOS: Thousands attend rally for Black lives in downtown Victoria

Do you have a story tip? Email: vnc.editorial@blackpress.ca.

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wolfgang.depner@peninsulanewsreview.com

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Police-reported hate crimes rose dramatically in 2020 in Greater Victoria Vancouver Island Free Daily - vancouverislandfreedaily.com

‘They are the Weather Men and Women’: Eric Adams and the Black Church – Gotham Gazette

Eric Adams at church (photo: Erica Sherman/Brooklyn BP's Office)

God told me, Eric, youre going to be Mayor. I am here because of my spirituality, Eric Adams said last month as he announced the creation of the Office of Faith-Based and Community Partnership. Though the office will connect with all faiths, it is being led by Gilford Monrose, pastor of the predominantly Black church, Mt. Zion Church of God 7th Day in Brooklyn, where Adams has lived for decades and was borough president before becoming the citys 110th mayor.

Throughout his winning campaign and into his administration, Adams roots in the Black churches of New York City are evident. In fact, it was support from these congregations and others across the five boroughs that helped pave the path for the Democrat and former two-term Brooklyn Borough President to elevate to Gracie Mansion.

Mayor Adams is only the second Black mayor in the citys history, and the first since David Dinkins, who served from 1990 through 1993. According to recent Census data, more than 24% of New York City residents are Black, and 79% of Black Americans identify as Christian, according to the Pew Research Center. For New York political candidates, Black churchgoers are a key constituency and dependable voting bloc, especially in what are usually low turnout local elections.

While Adams road to the heights of political success was not always a smooth one, Black churches can take some credit for his ascension through the ranks of the NYPD, into state and city government, and win in the tough 2021 mayoral election. Adams did particularly well in the competitive 2021 primary -- where he beat Kathryn Garcia by just 7,197 votes after the final round of ranked-choice voting -- in communities of color, especially predominantly Black areas of the city such as his Central Brooklyn and Southeast Queens bases, the two areas where hes lived virtually all his life, as well as the North Shore on Staten Island and Harlem in Manhattan.

Now, despite the many obstacles of a unique election cycle amid a devastating pandemic, the Black church including Baptist, Methodist, Catholic, and Pentecostal congregations, its leaders and worshippers could have more meaningful influence in the New York City mayors office than perhaps ever before.

In a January visit to The Greater Allen Cathedral of New York in Queens, Adams said, I cannot thank you enough, Allen, for all you have done. Never turned your back on me. Allowed me to become the Mayor of the City of New York.

Adams has been speaking at Black churches and spiritual gathering places for decades, including regular appearances in front of Rev. Al Sharptons National Action Network, perhaps the place in New York City best known for the intersection of politics and faith. Adams stopped by once again for its Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration. Many years up here [speaking], and you did not fight this hard for me to get here and not see things change, said Adams.

But there is one church, and one reverend in particular, that is arguably most integral to Adams life: Reverend Herbert Daughtry and The House of the Lord Pentecostal Church on Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn.

Adams Connection with The Black ChurchNinety-one-year-old Reverend Herbert Daughtry was the National Presiding Minister of The House of the Lord Churches from 1959 to 2019. His father, Alonzo, founded the church. As Reverend Daughtry tells it, his father started out Methodist but broke away and began his own church in Georgia in 1930. The elder Daughtry moved north in 1940, settling in Brooklyn. Some of the church members followed him.

The younger Reverend Daughtry came a year later but the transition wasnt easy. His parents split and his mother moved to Jersey City. My background, Im straight out of the streets, Daughtry said in a recent phone interview. Brooklyn and Jersey City. My credentials also include some involuntary vacation time.

Daughtry said that his first incarceration came as a teenager of about 15-years-old. He remembers walking by a store near Ralph and St. Marks Avenues in Brooklyn with friends, but they didnt touch a thing. The police were across the street watching. Several blocks from the store we were pounced on like we were Al Capone. Taken to the precinct and beaten for nothing. I spent about three weeks in old Raymond Street jail. (The jail was closed in 1963.)

Daughtry would spend time in prison again for armed robbery as well as money laundering. But in 1957, towards the end of his final incarceration at the Lewisburg Penitentiary in Pennsylvania, he remembers, God spoke to me and said write. I wrote 11 pages of what I was called to do. That calling led him to become a revered church leader for the next six decades, work that included becoming a mentor to a future mayor of New York City.

Daughtrys preaching was mixed with activism, a push to save the planet and its people. He was particularly vocal about combating police brutality, due to his personal experience and watching a series of tragedies where police shot and killed several Black children throughout the 1970s. He prioritized working with and inspiring young people through the decades, a list that includes current New York State Attorney General Letitia James, City Council Member Charles Barron, and Mayor Eric Adams.

To some degree, Adams personal history mimics that of Daughtrys. The new, Democratic mayor was also arrested at age 15 and beaten by the cops, in this case at the 103rd precinct in Queens. The police brutality he endured, along with having grown up witnessing other police violence, also influenced Adams future, and how Adams and Daughtrys lives intersected.

Daughtry believes you have to have relationships in the systems you want to change.

According to Adams, who recently recounted the story on Hillary Clintons podcast, Daughtry, met with me and 12 other young menand he came to us and said listen, were fighting from outside. We want you guys to go inside and be advocates for justice and safety.

Daughtry was asking them to become police officers. We needed models of good, solid, respectful, competent policemen who would protect the community, said Daughtry. Many in the Black community resented law enforcement and opposed this plan. According to Daughtry, even Adams initial response was, Youve got to be crazy.

Yet, Adams would follow that guidance and graduate from the police academy in 1984 and eventually rise to become a captain. In 1995, he also helped found the group 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care. Daughtry says that that in itself was a way for Adams to both criticize the police department from the inside while trying to usher in change.

Once Adams was an officer, Daughtry says, It wasnt wise for us to be arm in arm. However, Adams continued to join Daughtry in his activism, demonstrating against police brutality, teaching anti-bias workshops, and working to counter violence in communities. Though Adams wasnt a regular at the church, Daughtry said he was still there often enough, never missing a special event, and providing extra security when needed.

This decades-long mentorship proved invaluable to Adams in his race for mayor. While public safety and Adams decades in the NYPD were key to his electoral success, his law enforcement background complicated things for some voters. According to Daughtry, the Black church community and strong police supporters made up a lot of Adams base.

Where he [Adams] had difficulty was that people remembered he was a police officer. With police baggage, he needed to have someone to say he was a good cop, said the Reverend. Its hard to support a former police officer when your innocent loved one has been killed by the police. But after spending decades fighting police brutality against Black New Yorkers, if they didnt recall Adams activism while in the department, they couldnt question Daughtrys bona fides. He had the credibility to say, Adams is solidly in the community. He fought the battles we fought.

During the 2021 campaign, Adams frequently spoke about Daughtrys influence on him, including encouraging him to join the NYPD.

As mayor, Adams has quickly been faced with the challenges he knew he was stepping into: improving policing, keeping the city safe, and ensuring, as he says it, that safety and justice go hand-in-hand. In his first months as mayor, Adams has had to deal with continued increases in gun violence, including the murder of two police officers in Harlem, outlining and implementing his policing policies, along with his chosen NYPD commissioner, Keechant Sewell. They must ensure that Adams promise of robust policing without overreach is enacted while garnering community support and improving NYPD morale. That community includes leaders and members of the Black church.

Adams acknowledged the importance of the Black church in a brief December interview with Gotham Gazette, saying, I would not be who I am if it wasnt for the Black church, as a police officer and now as the future mayor of the city.

When asked if the church will have a larger seat at the table because of this connection, he said, Without a doubt. I think thats the missing piece. Because they are the weathermen and women. They see inclement weather long before we do. The Black church knew we had a gang problem because they were dealing with the family members. They knew we were having a problem around drug use, opioid abuse. They were watching it. If we have a better connection with the Black church and theyre sitting down and feeding the information we need, we will be more preventive and not reactionary. We have ignored their warning signs and Im not going to do that.

This is exactly what many Black church leaders are hoping for. They are cautiously optimistic that the issues they have been advocating for more action on including affordable housing, more jobs and reducing income inequality, improving educational outcomes, better public safety and health care will be addressed more meaningfully by an Adams administration.

Eric Adams has positioned himself as someone I can support, but at the same time I also have to hold him accountable. Its up to him to demonstrate that he can walk the walk, said Rev. Julian Walls Jr. of Greater Hood Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church in Harlem.

Rev. Charles Curtis of Mt. Olivet Baptist Church in Harlem said he has told fellow supporters of Adams, Dont expect New York City to turn overnight. Be patient with him.

An Unprecedented YearIn last years unusual election cycle, not only were there disruptions caused by the pandemic, for the first time there were multiple top Black candidates, and there was worry that voters would be turned off by ranked-choice voting, which was introduced into the mayoral primary for the first time.

There was also concern among some clergy that the long-term political power of the institution of the church could also be impacted with the rise of movements like Black Lives Matter and the growing political divide between younger Black voters and older, more religious Black voters. Church leaders spent a lot of time this past election cycle trying to navigate these issues to remain a relevant resource to both candidates and parishioners.

In a typical election year, candidates for New York City mayor spend many Sunday mornings visiting and speaking in-person at the citys myriad predominantly Black churches, especially in Brooklyn, Queens, and Manhattan. They know thats where many voters are.

But not last year. With the coronavirus pandemic upending traditional religious services, many of which were held online throughout much of 2020 and 2021, opportunities to speak directly to large numbers of African-American voters declined, and they too, didnt get the same exposure to candidates.

If it were not for covid, we would probably welcome the politicians to the church, acknowledge their presence, and thank them for worshiping with us, said the Rev. Elaine Flake, a co-pastor at The Greater Allen AME Cathedral, where her husband, Rev. Floyd Flake, is senior pastor and a former congressman who served in the House of Representatives from 1987 to 1997. Their church is among the top destinations for politicians.

One place where the changing nature of the relationship between the church and candidates could be found was a meeting room in the sprawling basement of Mt. Olivet Baptist Church at 120th Street and Malcolm X Boulevard in Harlem.

There, the mostly Black pastors from the New York Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality, met individually last spring with Democratic mayoral candidates Eric Adams, Maya Wiley, Scott Stringer, and Ray McGuire (all but Stringer are Black).

The Interfaith Commission is led by the Rev. Curtis, a kind, gregarious man who has led Mt. Olivet for over 40 years. He and the other pastors are aware that as leaders they have a voice in New York politics but are dismayed by the inaction of many politicians. Prior to one meeting of the Commission, Curtis explained the need for the church beyond being a place of worship saying, When politicians dont do their job, the church steps in.

Their hope was that the next mayor would in fact do the job well and be a partner to help address issues of social justice and inequality, including affordable housing, one of the major concerns that almost every clergy member interviewed for this article cited as pressing.

Virginia Montague is like a political church whisperer. A former political staffer and avid church-goer who is currently a member at Reverend Walls Jr.s Greater Hood Memorial A.M.E Zion church in Harlem, Montague understands both worlds well. She typically advises candidates on how to make a good impression on the congregation. That includes understanding church protocols and making a donation, she said, adding that both show that a candidate wants a relationship with the church and its congregants.

In previous election cycles, Montague had set candidates up with church appearances at various churches around the city. She said that the reason parishioners are inclined to listen to their pastors personal political recommendations comes down to trust. If Im relying on him for my religious experience, I trust him with that, I may very well ask him about politics too, she said of how many parishioners think.

With many in-person introductions off the table, during the primary there was an increased reliance on Zoom, which was deemed not as effective at reaching congregants by many of the pastors interviewed. Some churches were so focused on just getting people to show up to virtual services that politics took a back seat. Therefore, a pastors personal stance on the election may have been one of the only ways that some voters learned more about the candidates, aside from commercials or mailings.

African-American seniors are very tactile, said Montague. Most of them are not online. They get campaign literature. The pastors are going to present [candidates] very carefully.

In this election cycle, Black church leaders faced a complex calculation when deciding who to support. Although churches, as non-political tax-exempt organizations, cannot officially make endorsements, oftentimes pastors are asked for their personal opinions about candidates. While Curtis, Daughtry, and many other Black church leaders came out in support of Adams, other candidates also either had ties to or good reputations in various Black communities.

For example, Maya Wileys father was a lauded civil rights activist and she followed in his footsteps with her own career. Businessman Ray McGuire had given back to the community through philanthropy. Shaun Donovan, who is white, was praised for his work on affordable housing when he was commissioner of the citys Department of Housing Preservation and Development under former Mayor Bloomberg and then as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the Obama administration. Scott Stringer, the recent city Comptroller and previous Manhattan Borough President, who is white and Jewish, had cultivated strong relationships with Black leaders over his years in public service.

Several Major African-American Candidates in the PrimaryThough the Black vote in New York City is by no means a monolith, Walls Jr. acknowledged that African-Americans will often vote for Black candidates. Its not that were against white people, but we want to make sure that theres representation, particularly when youre a minority group, he said. You have to vote as a bloc, or you wont have any influence.

This year presented a possible wrinkle in that strategy. In the final months leading up to the June primary, three of the eight leading candidates were African-American Adams, Wiley, and McGuire -- and another, Dianne Morales, identifies as Afro-Latina. Walls Jr. wasnt sure how people were going to choose.

When you have this dynamic of three, he said in reference to Adams, McGuire, and Wiley, it makes it a little more difficult. What happens when you split the vote?

Prior to the primary, that concern was shared by Assemblymember Inez Dickens, whose district includes Harlem and who endorsed Adams. The Blacks in this country cannot afford for us to run against one another, she said. Weve got to learn to stick together and fully vote. We need to have one candidate.

Dickens and others worried that, even with ranked-choice voting lessening the impact of a split vote, the voice and interests of the larger Black community could be diluted. She also added that if no Black candidate won, then whoever became mayor would have done so without the full support of the Black community, and therefore could be less motivated to address their concerns.

With Adams victory, her fears did not come to pass. However, Dickens shined a light on the calculations that some Black leaders and voters, and those of most demographic groups, feel they need to make to ensure their voices are heard and their issues are addressed through their votes and government representation.

Impact of a New Generation of VotersIf the church is behind something, it will succeed, said Curtis, when asked if the churchs influence is waning.

But theres a new generation of voters, and movements that have risen and are changing the way people participate in politics. I still think people go to church, but it does usually skew a little older, said New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams in an interview. Elected officials are going to have to do a good job of engaging people where they are. Whether its online or the Black church.

Hawk Newsome is an outspoken activist and a church-goer who attends Convent Avenue Baptist Church in Harlem. In December, he and then-Mayor-elect Adams exchanged charged language with regard to Adams plans for policing in the city and Newsomes warning of potential rioting if Adams brought back the NYPDs anti-gun unit. (In mid-March, Adams introduced Neighborhood Safety Teams, a revamped version of those anti-gun units. Newsome, a co-founder of a local chapter of Black Lives Matter, is not officially connected to the national organization nor an official spokesperson for the Black Lives Matter movement.)

Newsome says that to some activists, the church is too concerned with respectability politics or courting political influence by being, in some cases, too deferential to or patient with politicians. While Newsome doesnt believe that Black Lives Matter is taking the place of the church, he does think the church hasnt stayed with the times. The church has failed to be active in this movement, in this fight for social justice in a way young people approve of, he said, though he did not outline what he thought church leaders should be doing.

Newsome believes the Black church plays a role in every election and acknowledged the groundswell of support Eric Adams received from Black clergy as part of the reason he won. Newsome had endorsed Wiley, who ran on a progressive platform, in the primary.

The church will remain a force into the future, according to Newsome, because Black Lives Matter could never give the feeling that the church gives. We give people a sense of fight, urgency. The church gives people hope.

Associate Pastor at Mt. Olivet, Rev. Dr. Wendy Kelly-Carter, knows that young people are spiritual and recognizes that for the church to have influence with parishioners long-term, it will have to acknowledge the beliefs of and include young people in leadership roles. She said of the younger generation, they have a lot to offer. And they have different ways of doing things. Certainly, they are more educated. Theyre upwardly mobile, not as traditional, a little bit more liberal on issues, like LGBTQ issues and abortion, that normally the Black church is not in agreement with.

Kelly-Carter believes that for the church to appeal to and influence younger people, itll have to adjust and change its outreach. Regarding Black Lives Matter, she said, Watching them you can see how young people think. They want things now, theyre not waiting. Whereas we took years to get things done. And instead of just passing out tracts (tri-fold papers with messages of God) on the street, Kelly-Carter said the church will have to meet the younger generation where they are: on social media.

Christopher Barrett, a 38-year old member of Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, explained the dynamic at play when it comes to reaching different generations. The older folks get a lot of their news from the church, from the pastor, he said. The younger generation gets a lot of their news from social media, from their friends, through other platforms, and being activists.

Jerry Skurnik, a longtime political consultant, said that the primary election in particular revealed a gap between younger and older Black voters. He noted that Wiley did a lot better with younger Black voters based on the polls before the primary. While Adams did better with older Black voters, and there are more of them. Based on the final results, he said, it is clear that the larger voting bloc of older Black voters helped drive Adams win.

One of the challenges Black churches, and in fact most churches, face is how to maintain or grow their congregations when so many of the participants are older. They need to appeal to younger Black people to join the church, said Skurnik, echoing Kelly-Carter. If they want politicians to pay attention to them, they need to maintain or grow the parishioners they have. They need to replace the people who will age out.

Demanding Democrats Deliver More In a city where Democrats outnumber Republicans seven to one, its not surprising that Adams won the general election against Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa and others on the ballot. But it begs the question of whether a Republican can win a citywide election anymore.

Ted Ghorra, Chair of the Brooklyn Republican Party, is quick to point out that, These things dont trend overnight. But if you look at a number of communities, whether its the Asian community, the African-American community, the Latino community, the Jewish communityif you look at many parts of the city, we are doing much better in being competitive and winning where just a few years ago, many races were seen as a unwinnable. Because many of those communities relate to the messaging of truly endorsing small businesses and lower costs of living. With the right messaging and a continued effort, well continue to work hard, grow and do better.

Several pastors acknowledged that the Democratic Party has not always delivered for Black voters as much as it should. Pastor Dedrick Blue of the North Bronx Seventh Day Adventist Church, and a member of the New York Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality, said Democrats have done better than Republicans, but not enough.

Blue wants Black voters support to be earned. He also understands the importance of those voters showing up to the polls. We did know in the general election [Adams] would probably win, Blue said. But the pastors that I know were saying to their congregations, Lets not take the election for granted. Because if he is going to be elected, its better that he go in with a mandate, and a clear and decisive victory. Moving forward, even in New York, the Black pastors are getting fired up more and more about registration and turnout.

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'They are the Weather Men and Women': Eric Adams and the Black Church - Gotham Gazette

How Putin’s Bid to Copy Bush’s Iraq War Playbook Ends in ‘Shock and Awful’ – Newsweek

Thursday, March 17 marks the three-week anniversary of Russian President Vladimir Putin's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. Over this time, Russia has lost more than 12,000 troops and is struggling to capture major cities.

Despite boasting the world's second most powerful military, according to Statista, trailing only the United States, Russia's attempt at a 'shock and awe'-style campaign has been a far cry from the U.S.-led shock and awe invasion of Iraq in 2003 that saw Saddam Hussein's totalitarian regime largely unseated in just three weeks, with U.S. casualties less than 200.

American forces, joined by Australian, Polish, and British troops deployed over 177,000 soldiers into Iraq, with the initial air assault commencing on Wednesday, March 19. The rapid assault and superior fire power overwhelmed Iraqi forces, and by Wednesday, April 9, U.S. troops were pictured pulling down a bronze statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad's Firdos Square, symbolizing the end of his rule.

"The only shock and awe in Ukraine is that of the Russian generals who were stopped cold," Mark R. Jacobson, a military history expert, assistant dean of Syracuse University's Maxwell School and former Pentagon advisor, told Newsweek.

"They may have wanted [Iraq-style shock and awe]," he added, "but the lack of planning and preparation and the failure to anticipate what could go wrong is one huge contrast."

Putin's failure to predict the level of opposition and subsequent resistance that his forces would face from the Ukrainians led him to start a war that his forces were not prepared to handle from the start. Seeking to launch a campaign of shock and awe, this miscalculation left Russia unable to achieve the swift, decisive win it sought and expected, putting its forces in a situation where a conventional military victory may be unattainable.

Despite intelligence being one of Russia's greatest strengths, Jacobson said the early results of this war indicate major errors. He said that looking from the outside it appears that Russian assessments of Ukrainian resistance were either incorrectly gathered or potentially never given to Putin, while it also possible that he ignored reports altogether.

Jacobson said it appears Putin was firm in his belief that "Russians and Ukrainians were one people," and that upon invading the country his soldiers would be welcomed by the Ukrainian people, who would accept the "unity" of the two countries. If correct, that mentality could be a a key reason for Russia's failings.

Jacobson said that type of decision-making in autocratic systems is nothing new.

"We've seen this before, with certain types of personalities," Jacobson told Newsweek. "Their refusal to believe anything that conflicted with their worldview, that is really the DNA of strategic failures by leaders."

Jacobson said that the decision to proceed into war despite conflicting intelligence is one to which Mark Twain's famous quote applies, that "history doesn't repeat itself, but It often rhymes." But he added that in this case the rhyme is "imperfect."

Before proceeding into something as consequential as war, Jacobson said it is in the best interest of an open-minded leader to consider alternative intelligence that does not support the decision. With the Iraq war, one of the key reasons for the invasion was intelligence that Hussein had developed an advanced chemical weapons program the famed "weapons of mass destruction."

Two reports released by the United States Senate, one a year after the war and the other four years after, determined that the Bush administration misrepresented the intelligence and the threat from Iraq, and that the White House's concerns "regarding Iraq's chemical weapons production capability and activities did not reflect the intelligence community's uncertainties."

Jacobson said the policy makers had made up their mind to invade before they consulted intelligence.

"The policymakers had a predetermined answer, no matter what we were going in, they were looking for intelligence to justify a policy decision that had already been made." Jacobson told Newsweek.

Yet, while some of the U.S. intelligence regarding reasons for the invasion may have been inaccurate, the nation's military strategy was not hampered by that oversight. Colorado Democratic Representative Jason Crow, who won a Bronze Star for his service as an Army Ranger during the Battle of Samawah, told Newsweek that he and his peers went into battle "knowing what we were doing," something he says does not seem evident with the Russians.

Crow notes that many Russian troops did not know they were heading into a war, and instead thought they were going into training, having been duped by the Kremlin. Putin has sent waves of Russian ground forces at the Ukrainians, but operating under an ill-advised strategy, their sizable army has proven less effective than many originally expected.

"This is not a situation where you have armies that are on paper that just marched off of the paper and onto the battlefield," Crow told Newsweek. "These are real people."

"Whether or not those people are prepared for it mentally, whether they're ready for it, whether they're focused, whether they're well-led, really is a substantial factor in battle," he added.

Crow said that being taken by surprise likely unnerved and demoralized the Russian troops, and added that Russia's poorly executed logistics made the situation even worse. Russia's supply convoys have suffered mechanical issues, obstructing its supply chains. Crow says the lack of food, water, gas and other essential supplies are all significant factors impacting the Russian army.

Beyond Russia's apparent lack of care for its armed forces, Crow points to its inability to effectively execute combined arms operations as one of its most significant failings. Russia has struggled to dominate the Ukrainian airspace, and has also suffered naval losses. Crow says efficient combined arms operations were key to the success of the U.S. attack on Iraq in 2003, and could very well be a primary reason for Russia's struggles in Ukraine.

"The Russians are continuing to fail to achieve air superiority," Crow said, "and that's extremely important in operations like this."

"Ukrainians continue to contest the skies," he added, "and make it very hard on the Russian Air Force and Russian supply convoys which are harassed by drones and the Ukrainian Air Force."

Peter Mansoor, a retired Army colonel who served as the executive officer to General David Petraeus during the Iraq War and now serves as a military history expert with The Ohio State University, agreed with Crow's assessment.

In Iraq, the American-led forces were able to attain air supremacy relatively fast, Mansoor said. He said because air supremacy is essential to combined arms operations, Russia has not been able to achieve the shock and awe capabilities America exhibited in 2003. Without this ability, Russia cannot disrupt enemy formations and combat offensive strikes of the type encountered by the U.S. in Iraq.

"It was airpower that was the key to [shock and awe]," Mansoor told Newsweek. "Air power was used to destroy Iraqi armored reserves and to pave the way for the advance of coalition ground forces."

Mansoor said America's air operations allowed it to more successfully achieve its goals in 2003. Air supremacy allowed U.S.-led forces to use guided munitions that put the coalition in a position where it was able to target the enemy in a specific fashion, resulting in less damage to the civilian infrastructure. Because of this, America was not forced to destroy entire city blocks, Mansoor said.

For a force aiming to occupy and install new leaders to power, this is a model strategy. Mansoor said. Civilian infrastructure is needed in a postwar period to support reconstruction of a country. Further, in Iraq, aside from Iraqi Republican Guard, which reported directly to Hussein, Mansoor said American forces were met with limited resistance, and even had Iraqis fighting alongside them. He suspects that only about 20% of the Iraqi population supported the Hussein regime.

Inflicting limited damage upon invasion while taking measures to avoid civilian casualties give greater credibility and support to the invading force. Russia's failure to take these precautions could put any prospect of a victory it may have left firmly out of reach.

Because Putin's army has not followed the American strategy of carrying out precision strikes made possible by attaining air dominance, Russian forces have turned to one of their primary strengths heavy artillery. Russia has looked to exert military dominance by carrying out heavy shelling and the leveling of civilian infrastructure, inflicting major damage and resulting in significant civilian deaths.

"Putin and the Russian military do not seem to be concerned with what's left once they have achieved their objectives," Mansoor told Newsweek, "and they have begun the destruction of Ukrainian cities in order to achieve their goals of taking over the country."

"They do not seem to be concerned about having a functional nation once that's over," he added. "Everything is being sacrificed in the cause of what they conceive to be victory."

Ukrainians have fought hard for their democracy, and President Volodymyr Zelensky has overwhelming national support, a stark contrast to the support Hussein saw in 2003. So, even if Russia can pound Ukraine into submission, it is unlikely that its people would rally around a puppet government put in place by Putin, meaning the fighting is likely to continue even if his objectives are achieved.

Putin's army has already suffered heavy casualties, and has seen hundreds of its tanks destroyed. While most Russians remain unopposed to the war, thousands have nonetheless carried out anti-war protests, and a protestor even interrupted a state-run news program holding a sign that read, "don't believe the propaganda."

As cracks in Putin's attempt at a unified faade appear and his forces continue to struggle against Ukrainian opposition, Pavel Baev, an expert in Russian conflict management and a nonresident senior fellow in the Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institution, said a Russian win is starting to look unimaginable.

"I cannot see any way to victory for Russia in this war," Baev told Newsweek. "Every day of stalled offensive brings Ukraine closer to the point where the invasion would collapse because of the lack of stamina and resources in Russia for a large-scale conventional war."

That puts Russia's autocratic leader in a precarious situation.

"Putin's regime cannot survive a defeat," he added, "but what form its meltdown or breakdown will take is impossible to foresee. But the prospect of a violent chaos is clear and scary."

America and its allies faced international condemnation when they chose to invade Iraq. France, Germany, China, India, Saudi Arabia, Russia and others all opposed the effort. However, this opposition stopped far short of the heavy sanctions that have been levied against Russia.

While a report by the Council on Foreign Relations indicates the 2003 invasion had mixed effects on the U.S. economy, Russia was immediately rocked with sanctions after its invasion of Ukraine, with some financial observers predicting that the country could default on its debt in a matter of weeks.

Russia is not even among the top-10 world economies, according to World Population Review, ranking 12 on the global list. It has long relied on its military dominance to project an image of strength, and with that dominance now in question, Baev said Putin's autocratic rule faces a new level of existential risk.

"Putin's regime has mutated into a dictatorship starkly incompatible with democratic values, re-emphasized by the Biden administration," Baev told Newsweek.

"This conflict is fundamental," he added, "because the threat from every democratic progress [in the region] to the survival of Putin's grasp on power is existential."

While the U.S. occupation of Iraq after the invasion has undermined the Bush administration's legacy, at the time of invasion, a Gallup poll found some 72% of Americans supported the war. President George W. Bush's approval rating jumped from 58% to 71% when American forces entered Iraq, Gallup reported, and it stayed near that level over the course of the three-week invasion. Bush ultimately road this wave of approval to re-election in 2004.

On February 25, the day after Russia invaded Ukraine, FiveThirtyEight reported President Joe Biden's approval rating at 40%. In just three weeks, amid offering significant support to the Ukrainians, that rating has climbed to 43%.

With public support for Ukraine continuing to mount in the U.S., a key similarity between the invasion of Iraq and the invasion of Ukraine could ultimately be the advancement of America's foreign interests.

While Bush's efforts in Iraq would result in governmental instability and the rise of ISIS, the initial invasion nonetheless succeeded in driving Hussain from power, and Iraq developed a de jure democracy, albeit one that is afflicted with widespread corruption and faces significant security threats.

Putin's invasion has seen the Ukrainian people rally around their democratic values, pushing much of the country closer to the European Union and further from Russian influence. It has also resulted in Europe increasing its defense spending, with Germany committing 100 billion euros to its armed forces, and Sweden raising its defense budget to equal 2% of its GDP.

For the U.S., a fortified Europe and a weakened Russia means a greater ability to divert its attention and resources to other pressing international matters, like the expansion of China.

With reports of cease-fire negotiations making some progress, the prospects for Ukraine surviving as a democracy seem somewhat brighter than many thought possible three weeks ago, when Putin's tanks rolled across its borders. Yet until some deal is struck, the threat remains imminent.

While Ukraine's forces have continued to stave off Putin's army, the size of Russia's military means that it will continue to be a major threat. Ukraine remains in harm's way, and Putin appears intent on having the war end on his terms.

As the conflict continues, Crow says the United States must continue to provide as much support as it can. He said that support should be aimed to combat Russia's ongoing weak spot, the area that has not allowed it to carry out the shock and awe seen in the 2003 U.S. attack on Iraq air assault operations.

"I've been pushing the administration to either provide fighter jets and/or increase the sophistication of the air defense weapons," Crow told Newsweek. "They need better air defense equipment missiles to help take down Russian aircraft and continue to contest airspace over Ukraine."

"The bottom line is Ukraine is not invading its neighbor they are not the aggressor, they are the defender," he added. "So, the weapons that we are providing are being used for defensive purposes, whether that's a javelin, a stinger, a machine gun, or a fighter jet."

Shea Donovan created the timeline graphics used in this article.

Correction: March 18, 2022 @ 12:02 p.m. The original version of this story listed French troops as participating in the initial U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. The story has been corrected to show that those were British troops. We regret the error.

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How Putin's Bid to Copy Bush's Iraq War Playbook Ends in 'Shock and Awful' - Newsweek

High-level delegation of WHO visits Iraq to boost health system [EN/AR] – Iraq – ReliefWeb

Baghdad, Iraq, 16 March 2022 A High-level delegation from the World Health Organization (WHO) concluded a 5-day visit to Baghdad and Erbil to finalize Iraq's Universal Health and Preparedness Review (UHPR) process.

The UHPR is a governmental review mechanism led by the WHO Member States, in which countries voluntarily agree to a regular and transparent peer-to-peer review of their national preparedness capacities, as well as the performance of their health system in response to the different hazards and risks affecting public health.

This initiative aims to bring together the relevant stakeholders in the country in a spirit of solidarity and mutual trust to promote more effective national coordination and international cooperation, to strengthen health security in the country.

"This is my first visit to Iraq since the COVID-19 pandemic. I truly congratulate Iraq for all the efforts made to scale up the preparedness and response to COVID-19 and look forward to a further investment aimed at strengthening the national health system," said Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, WHO Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean.

"I've seen the progress made towards enhancing health systems in Iraq. I left Baghdad with full confidence in the ability of the political leadership and health professionals to face all difficulties and advance the health system in the country," he added.

The high-level delegation, led by Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, met with HE Prime Minister Mostafa Al-Kadhimi and other high-level officials, including Iraq's Minister of Health HE Dr Hani Mousa Al Iqabi. The two sides discussed the performance of the Iraqi health system in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and reviewed the strengths of the response and the areas needing further improvements, both in terms of the health system's development and in the health security areas pertaining to preparedness and response to emergencies and outbreaks.

"WHO is proud of its contribution so far. It is completely ready to further enhance collaboration with the government and the people of Iraq at all levels to ensure the best attainable health outcomes for everyone in Iraq and beyond," said Dr Ahmed Zouiten, WHO Representative and Head of Mission in Iraq.

"This mission is of critical importance as Iraq is one of five countries prioritized to undertake the UHPR globally. Iraq will be sharing the lessons learned with all WHO Member States and paving the way for improving the performance of its health system and strengthening the preparedness and response capacities to tackle different public health hazards," Dr Zouiten added.

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For more information, please contact:

Ajyal Sultany, WHO Communications Officer, sultanya@who.int

Sadeq Al-Wesabi, WHO Communications Officer, hasansa@who.int

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High-level delegation of WHO visits Iraq to boost health system [EN/AR] - Iraq - ReliefWeb