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From: The Washington Post <emailgwashingtonpost.com>
To: "Slater, Timothy R. (WF) (FBI)" <trslater@fbi.gov>
Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - [MARKETING] The Daily 202: Victory over pandemic may look like
victory in War on Tenor: Vague
Date: Mon, 29 Nov 2021 16:45:13 +0000
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;:".',FROM The Washington Post
The Daily 202
Presented by Facebook
G:t,By
By Olivier Knox
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with research by Caroline Anders
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Welcome to The Daily 202! Tell your friends to sign up here. On this day in
1952, President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower traveled to Korea, keeping a
campaign promise to visit in person in an attempt to find an end to the
Korean War. The conflict was suspended with an armistice in 1953.
The big idea
Victory over the pandemic could look like victory in the war on
terrorism: Vague
L,](Washington Post illustration; Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post)
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(Washington Post illustration; Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post)
President Biden's definition of victory over the pandemic used to be
fairly simple: Smother the virus, revive the economy, get things back to
normal, or at least something approximating what we used to think of as
normal. But the rise of the delta variant and its omicron successor have
thwarted Biden and raised anew the question of just what counts as
defeating the coronavirus.
The answer carries sweeping ramifications, not least for Democratic
prospects of rescuing their wafer-thin majorities in Congress in the
2022 midterm elections, which would be defined by voter frustration that
the president has fallen short on both fronts if they were held today.
White House officials declined to spell out how Biden now defines
the end of the pandemic, which has claimed nearly 780,000 lives on
U.S. soil. They may be looking back warily at the president's July 4
speech in which he declared "independence from a deadly virus" right as
the delta variant began its deadly surge and Republicans ramped up their
opposition to various tactics for mitigating covid's spread.
AN INSTRUCTIVE COMPARISON
But the administration could, perhaps, draw on lessons from the so-called
"war on terrorism" and a curious stretch of the 2004 presidential race in
which rah-rah-U-S-A-U-S-A sloganeering briefly gave way to a nuanced
understanding of the conditions that would qualify as victory.
In August 2004, President George W. Bush acknowledged in an interview
with NBC's Today Show that he couldn't predict a "definite end" to the war
that began on 9/11. And the commander in chief known the world over for
his black-and-white rhetoric gave a remarkably gray-shaded answer to the
question of whether the United States could ever decisively win.
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"I don't think you can win it," Bush said. "But I think you can create
conditions so that those who use terror as a tool are less acceptable
in parts of the world — let's put it that way."
The Republican's camp quickly backpedaled from that assessment.
In October, it was Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kerry's turn to
take fire for a similarly nuanced assessment, this time delivered to Matt Bai
of the New York Times.
Victory over extremists, the former senator and future secretary of state
told Matt, means getting back to a place "where terrorists are not the
focus of our lives, but they're a nuisance."
"I know we're never going to end prostitution. We're never going to end
illegal gambling," the former prosecutor told the Times. "But we're going to
reduce it, organized crime, to a level where it isn't on the rise. It isn't
threatening people's lives every day, and fundamentally, it's something
that you continue to fight, but it's not threatening the fabric of your
life."
Cue GOP expressions of outrage, Kerry backpedaling, etc. But it's hard to
look back from the perspective of 2021 and not think Kerry and Bush
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were on to something. Terrorism hasn't vanished from the earth. al-
Qaeda, its offshoots, and ISIS are still out there. America still dedicates
billions and billions of dollars to battling extremists.
But the proportion of Americans who list terrorism as their uppermost
concern has — apart from notable spikes after major attacks — fallen
sharply since 9/11. (Gallup found 83 percent of voters in 2020 said
"terrorism and national security" were important, but that number doesn't
differentiate between voters who fear China's rise and those focused on
ISIS.)
At an anecdotal level, when is the last time you consciously thought of the
risk of terrorist attack as you took part in the security theater that is
removing your shoes at the airport?
OMICRON
It's too soon to say how dangerous the omicron variant will be. The
past two years have primed experts for a prepare-for-the-worst strategy
and if the worst doesn't materialize, so much the better.
is]
"Experts cautioned that the flurry of activity to fight omicron may turn out to
be largely unnecessary, as researchers learn in the coming days whether
current vaccines can ward off the variant or successfully limit symptoms,"
my colleagues Dan Diamond, Joel Achenbach, Chico Harlan and Lesley
Wroughton reported this weekend.
And, as my colleagues Annie Linskey and Fenit Nirappil reported today:
"[A]fter nearly 21 months of covid-19 restrictions, there is little appetite in
the country for the kinds of school closures, indoor gathering bans and
restaurant restrictions that defined the early days of the pandemic,
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according to health officials, who say that the political will to push for
unpopular — but effective — mitigation measures is waning."
(An administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, placed
special emphasis on getting the tens of millions of unvaccinated Americans
to get their shots, emphasizing: "We must use the tools we know work and
will save American lives.")
Which gets us back to what constitutes victory over coronavirus, if such a
thing is possible.
"The pandemic will end at different times for different people," Ashish
Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, told The Daily
202. "For most people, it'll end when they wake up one day and
realize 'you know, I haven't thought about covid in weeks.' It'll come to
everyone at a different time, depending on their circumstances."
"That day is coming, and I think that day is coming sometime next year,"
said Jha, who emphasized the world has many more tools to battle covid
now than it did in 2020.
"If we have to tweak our vaccines, we'll tweak our vaccines. If we have to
make other adjustments, we'll make other adjustments. We can now get to
a point where we can manage the virus, rather than have the virus really
dominate our society," he added.
"It's not just going away. It won't just disappear," said Jha. "But we
can manage it."
That sounds familiar.
Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health
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"The pandemic will end at different times for different
people. For most people, it'll end when they wake up
one day and realize `you know, I haven't thought about
covid in weeks."
tw Share this
What's happening now
@Jack steps down as Twitter CEO
:,Twitter's CEO Jack Dorsey is . (Michael Reynolds/Pool via REUTERS)
Twitter's CEO Jack Dorsey is . (Michael Reynolds."Pool via REUTERS)
"The surprise move caused Nasdaq to suspend trading on Twitter's stock,"
Elizabeth Dwoskin and Rachel Lerman report.
• Chief Technology Officer Parag Agrawal will replace him
Former defense secretary Esper sues Pentagon, claiming
portions of memoir are being improperly redacted
"In a federal lawsuit filed Sunday, Esper said he submitted his memoir to
the Defense Department for review and after six months found 'my
unclassified manuscript arbitrarily redacted without clearly being told why,"
John Wagner reports.
Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.) to run for governor of New York
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"Mr. Suozzi, who has most recently focused on federal negotiations over
raising a cap on state and local tax deductions, has positioned himself as a
vocal centrist who is quick to lash what he casts as the excesses of his
party's left wing " the New York Times's Katie Glueck and Nicholas
Fandos report. Read The Early 202's 11 questions with the congressman.
Trump stopped getting intelligence briefings for the last month
of his presidency
"A wealth of new information about the intelligence briefings for Donald
Trump and those around him as a presidential candidate in 2016, as
president-elect in 2016-17, and as president has just hit the CIA's public
website " David Priess explains in a Twitter thread. Priess is chief
operating officer of the Lawfare Institute and a former CIA briefer for the
attorney general and FBI director.
Ghislaine Maxwell appears in court in N.Y. as sex abuse trial set
to begin
"Maxwell appeared in Manhattan federal court on Monday for her trial on
charges that she recruited and groomed underage girls for the late
financier Jeffrey Epstein to abuse, with opening statements set to begin
after jury selection concludes," Reuters's Luc Cohen reports. Cohen
breaks down the trial's major players here.
Lunchtime reads from The Post
L.:Atlanta mayoral candidate Andre Dickens campaigns with his supporters Jenifer Keenan
and Karri Hobson-Pape on Election Day in Atlanta. (Alyssa Pointer/Reuters)
Atlanta mayoral candidate Andre Dickens campaigns with his supporters Jenifer Keenan and Karri
Hobson-Pape on Election Day in Atlanta. (Alyssa Pointer/Reuters)
With eye to Tuesday and next year, Atlanta Democrats worry
about voter turnout
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"Across Atlanta, a city at a political and cultural crossroads, plenty of
residents made the same decision [not to vote]. A year after residents
voted in historic numbers to help 'turn Georgia blue,' fewer than 3 out 10
turned out for the mayor's race, despite the widespread desire for a
leader who can help the city rebound from a year of setbacks " Tim
Craig and Vanessa Williams report.
"The weak turnout on Nov. 2 has worried the mayoral candidates
competing in a runoff campaign, which will be decided Tuesday. And it
surprised political analysts, who say voter fatigue could hinder the
Democratic Party's efforts to oust Gov. Brian P. Kemp (R) and reelect Sen.
Raphael G. Warnock (D) in next year's midterms."
... and beyond
As China menaces Taiwan, island's friends aid its secretive
submarine project
"Taiwan has stealthily recruited expertise and technology from around the
world to build a submarine fleet to serve as a deterrent against a Chinese
invasion. Risking Beijing's ire, defense companies and engineers from
at least seven countries are helping the diplomatically isolated
island," Reuters's Mad Saito Yimou Lee Ju-Min Park Tim Kelly, Andrew
MacAskill Sarah Wu and David Lague report.
The rise of omicron
Syringes with needles are seen in front of a displayed stock graph and words "Omicron
SARS-CoV-2." (Dado Ruvic/Reuters)
Syringes with needles are seen in front of a displayed stock graph and words "Omicron SARS-CoV-2."
Dado Ruvic/Reuters)
EFTA00162772
Omicron coronavirus variant poses `very high' global risk,
WHO warns
"'The likelihood of potential further spread of Omicron at the global
level is high,' the WHO said Sunday in a preliminary technical brief,"
Annabelle Timsit reports.
• Where to watch: The variant was first identified in North America
over the weekend as two cases were documented in Canada.
Omicron was first detected in South Africa, and it has been found in
countries ranging from Australia to Israel, Botswana to Britain.
• Border closing deja vu:
a "The United States, Canada, Britain, the European Union and
others have moved in recent days to restrict travel from at least
seven countries in southern Africa," Timsit reports.
o "Japan announced it would bar entry of all foreign visitors, while
new cases of the variant identified days ago by researchers in
South Africa appeared in places such as Hong Kong and
Australia. New cases in Portugal and Scotland might already
point toward local spread of the variant outside of southern
Africa," the Associated Press's Raf Cased and Mari Yamaguchi
report.
• Tempering fears: "What's known so far absolutely warrants
attention—not panic. Viruses mutate; they always do. Not all
variants of concern turn out to be, well, all that concerning; many end
up being mere blips in the pandemic timeline " the Atlantic's
Katherine J. Wu explains.
You can read The Post's FAQ on what you need to know about omicron
here, and follow our live coverage of the covid-19 pandemic here.
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The Biden agenda
Biden's response to Omicron: Boosters
u,:,President Biden walks to his limousine after answering reporters question upon arrival at
Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on Sunday. (Mandel Mgan/AFP via Getty Images)
President Biden walks to his limousine after answering reporters question upon arrival at Andrews Air
Force Base in Maryland on Sunday. (Mandel Mgan/AFP via Getty Images)
Biden pushes shots, not more restrictions as variant spreads
"Biden will urge Americans to get vaccinated and receive a booster shot as
he seeks to quell concerns Monday over the new COVID-19 variant
omicron, but won't immediately push for more restrictions to stop its
spread, his chief medical adviser said," the AP's Zeke Miller reports.
Dems want Biden to start swinging at Republicans. Allies aren't
sure he can.
"It has long been a point of tension within the president's orbit as to how
negative to go. A number of senior advisers in the West Wing, including
chief of staff Ron Klain, have at times urged Biden to embrace more
partisan political combat and call out Republicans when needed, according
to three aides not authorized to publicly discuss private conversations,"
Politico's Laura Barron-Lopez Christopher Cadelago and Jonathan
Lemire report.
"But Biden has largely shied away from leveling broadsides at Republicans
on Capitol Hill, though he's been less sparing with his predecessor and
GOP governors who've stood in the way of federal aid to combat the
pandemic. Long-time Biden observers and confidants aren't sure that
the attack dog role suits him, or that he will commit to it."
As China speeds up nuclear arms race, the U.S. wants to talk
EFTA00162774
"For the first time, the United States is trying to nudge China's leadership
into a conversation about its nuclear capability. U.S. officials, describing
the American strategy, say Mr. Biden and his top aides plan to move
slowly — focusing the talks first on avoiding accidental conflict, then on
each nation's nuclear strategy and the related instability that could come
from attacks in cyberspace and outer space," the NYT's David E. Sanger
and William J. Broad report.
Supreme Court justices on abortion and
Roe v. Wade, visualized
"The Supreme Court on Dec. 1 will consider the most serious challenge in
decades to its 1973 decision" that there is a constitutional right to abortion.
"All nine of the justices declined during their confirmation hearings to opine
on whether Roe v. Wade was properly decided, but past court rulings,
public appearances and other public comments give insight into their
thinking on abortion and court precedents." Read more on what they have
said about it.
Hot on the left
The forgotten pandemic roars back to life
"The real danger from COVID exists far from American shores. Compared
to the rest of the world, the U.S. is delivering more vaccines, and planning
to build manufacturing capacity to go even further. But Biden has put little
into building research and detection capacity, to prevent a worldwide
mutation. And after agreeing to seek a global waiver of vaccine intellectual
property to spur more production of the vital medications in April, Biden
EFTA00162775
has barely talked about it, and certainly not pushed the Europeans
(primarily Germany) who are resistant. In his statement on Omicron, Biden
reiterated his support for instituting the waiver at an upcoming World Trade
Organization ministerial, but that meeting was postponed because of
omicron, in a darkly ironic exemplification of global inaction " the
American Prospect's Executive Editor David Dayen writes.
Hot on the right
`They're all begging me': Trump's 2024 veep tryouts get
underway
"[Trump has] name-dropped Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as one possible
running mate. Veepstakes speculation rose among insiders who saw him
interact recently with South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and former Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo at his Mar-a-Lago club," Politico's Marc Caputo
reports.
"'They're all begging me. They all come here," Trump boasted to one
adviser, who shared the account anonymously with Politico."
Today in Washington
Biden will meet with CEOs at 2 p.m. to discuss the holiday shopping
season and his administration's work to address supply chain issues.
The president will then deliver remarks about "his Administration's work to
strengthen the nation's supply chains, lower everyday costs for families,
and ensure that shelves are well-stocked this holiday season" at 3:45 p.m.
EFTA00162776
In closing
The Daily Mail's Emily Goodin takes us on a tour of the White House's
Christmas decor.
author head shot
Thanks for reading. See you tomorrow.
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| Filename | EFTA00162765.pdf |
| File Size | 779.6 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 18,255 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T11:01:23.351482 |