The Morning Dispatch: Blinken in the Hot Seat

Two congressional committees grill the Secretary of State on the Biden admin’s drawdown in Afghanistan.

Happy Wednesday! We hope you enjoy receiving the free versions of The Morning Dispatch every day. If you like what you’ve been reading and have considered becoming a full member, now is the perfect time to give it a try. For the next week, we are running a 30-day free trial. Sign up now and get 13 months for the price of 12. Your membership includes not just the full version of TMD, but also members-only newsletters Capitolism and Vital Interests and bonus editions of the G-File, the French PressThe Sweep, and Uphill. The offer is risk-free and you can cancel anytime.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • California Gov. Gavin Newsom survived the state’s recall election, the Associated Press projected Tuesday night. As we send this newsletter, “No” on recalling Newsom is outpacing “Yes” 64 percent to 36 percent, with approximately 61 percent of the vote counted.
  • A new book from Bob Woodward and Robert Costa set to be released next week reports that Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley conducted rogue, backchannel diplomacy late last year and early this year because he believed President Donald Trump “had suffered a mental decline after the election.” Milley reportedly told senior military officers that he “had to be involved” in any decision to launch a nuclear weapon, and called his Chinese counterpart, Gen. Li Zuocheng, twice to assure him that the United States would not attack—or that he would warn Li if it was. Fox News’ Jennifer Griffin disputed some of the reporting, saying Milley “did not try to insert himself in the chain of command regarding the launch of nuclear weapons” and that there were 15 people—including a State Department representative—on the video calls with Chinese officials. Sen. Marco Rubio called on President Joe Biden to fire Milley after the allegations, and Trump impeachment witness and former National Security Council staffer Alexander Vindman said Milley should resign if the reporting is accurate.
  • The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Tuesday that the Consumer Price Index increased 0.3 percent in August on a month-over-month basis, and 5.3 percent year-over-year. While still higher than average, August’s 0.3 percent represented a significant slowdown in inflation from June’s 0.9 percent and July’s 0.5 percent.
  • The Department of Justice announced a new department-wide policy Tuesday “explicitly prohibiting” federal law enforcement officers from using chokeholds and carotid restraints “unless deadly force is authorized.”
  • A storm named Nicholas made landfall in Texas as a hurricane yesterday morning before weakening to a tropical storm and moving across Louisiana, where there are now reports of extensive flooding. Over 200,000 customers in Texas were without power as of Tuesday night.
  • Comedian and erstwhile Saturday Night Live “Weekend Update” anchor Norm Macdonald died on Tuesday at the age of 61 following a lengthy—but largely private—battle with cancer.

Blinken Goes Under the Congressional Microscope

(Photo by Bill O’Leary-Pool/Getty Images.)

In two congressional hearings on the Afghanistan withdrawal this week, one before the House Foreign Affairs Committee and one before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Secretary of State Antony Blinken delivered near-identical opening statements before addressing questions. Throughout, he maintained an air of detached composure despite at least four calls by Republicans for his resignation.

While some new information came to light, many questions remain unanswered. How, for example, does the administration plan to evacuate Afghanistan’s remaining U.S. citizens, green card holders, and visa-eligible Afghans out of the country amid reports of Taliban violence? What will American counterterrorism operations look like going forward, and to what extent do those efforts rely on Taliban cooperation? How does the international community plan to extend aid to the country without inadvertently empowering Taliban rule?

And perhaps most crucially to many Americans, who in the administration will answer for the fumbled American departure from Afghanistan—one that resulted in the deaths of 13 U.S. servicemembers and many, many more Afghan civilians?

“Who will be held accountable?” GOP Rep. Ann Wagner of Missouri asked Blinken during her allotted time. “You tell us NATO made us do it, Trump made us do it, the Taliban made it clear. Do you take any responsibility, Secretary Blinken, for this disastrous withdrawal, or do you still want to call it a success?”

Throughout the hearing, Blinken echoed previous administration statements, taking credit for ending a 20-year war in one breath and blaming the Trump administration for any missteps in the next. “We made the right decision in ending America’s longest war. We made the right decision in not sending a third generation of Americans to fight and die in Afghanistan,” he told Wagner. “We did the right thing by our citizens in working feverishly to get every one of them out. We did the right thing by 125,000 Afghans to bring them to safety.”

Worth Your Time

  • Deep down, we probably all realize that the amount of time we spend on social media can’t be good for our mental health. As it turns out, Facebook and Instagram have known for years that it isn’t. “We make body image issues worse for one in three teen girls,” a 2019 research report—uncovered by the Wall Street Journal’s Georgia Wells, Jeff Horwitz, and Deepa Seetharaman—found. “Teens blame Instagram for increases in the rate of anxiety and depression,” another slide read. “This reaction was unprompted and consistent across all groups.” These studies have been reviewed by top executives at the company, but Facebook has kept them hidden—and neglected to share them when asked directly by Congress. ​​ “If you believe that R.J. Reynolds should have been more truthful about the link between smoking and lung cancer, then you should probably believe that Facebook should be more upfront about links to depression among teen girls,” one psychology researcher said.
  • Colleges and universities in the United States today enroll approximately three women for every two men. “This is the largest female-male gender gap in the history of higher education, and it’s getting wider,” Derek Thompson points out in The Atlantic, noting that men have accounted for more than 70 percent of the higher education enrollment decline of the past five years. What’s happening? “The sociologist Kathryn Edin has written that men without college degrees in deindustrialized America have been adrift for decades,” Thompson writes. “They face the simultaneous shocks of lost jobs, disintegrating nuclear families, and rising deaths of despair in their communities. As 20th-century institutions have crumbled around them, these men have withdrawn from organized religion. Their marriage rates have fallen in lockstep with their church attendance. Far from the ordered progression of the mid-century American archetype—marriage, career, house and yard—men without college degrees are more likely to live what Edin and other researchers call ‘haphazard’ lives, detached from family, faith, and work.”
  • The Washington Post published an adapted excerpt from George Will’s new book on happiness yesterday, and it is worth your time. “It has been well said that the United States is the only nation founded on a good idea, the proposition that people should be free to pursue happiness as they define it,” he writes. “In recent years, however, happiness has been elusive for this dyspeptic nation, in which too many people think and act as tribes and define their happiness as some other tribe’s unhappiness. As a quintessentially American voice, that of Robert Frost, said, ‘The best way out is always through.’ Perhaps the information, the reasoning, and, I hope, the occasional amusements in newspaper columns can help readers think through, and thereby diminish, our current discontents. They will diminish if, but only if Americans adhere to two categorical imperatives: They should behave as intelligently as they can, and should be as cheerful as is reasonable.”
  • Given Norm Macdonald’s passing yesterday, take five minutes to watch—or rewatch—his famous moth joke. It’s everything that made him so hilarious and unique wrapped into one bit. Rest in peace.

Presented Without Comment

Also Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • David’s latest French Press (🔒) takes a look at the massive problem facing “virtually every industrialized, moderately wealthy country” in the world: declining birth rates. “The bottom line is that as our world gets more prosperous, and as even the least developed countries grow more economically advanced, families respond by having fewer babies,” he writes. “That’s not so much of an issue when they still have enough babies to sustain populations and thus sustain economies. It’s even potentially manageable if a nation is a desirable enough destination that it can attract enough immigrants to grow its population and its economy. But there is a point at which a declining birth rate means national decline in arguably the most tangible way possible.”
  • In The Sweep this week, Sarah touches on state house special elections, Chris Christie’s inevitable 2024 presidential campaign, school board squabbles, the Democratic Party’s ideological split, and more. Then, Chris Stirewalt stops by to share his thoughts on the California recall election.
  • Yesterday’s Uphill dove into how Democrats plan to pay for their massive new spending bill (hint: lots of tax hikes) and the annual National Defense Authorization Act’s markup process.
  • Accomplished attorney Shannen Coffin joins Jonah on today’s Remnant to discuss the constitutionality of Biden’s vaccine mandate, the dysfunctional state of the federal government, and the future of the conservative legal movement.
  • Poland is doing battle with EU leadership right now over the supremacy of EU law over Polish law. It could trigger a judicial chain reaction that touches at the heart of the European Union. Bill Wirtz explains in a piece for the site.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).