Biden expects to take NFL up on offer to use stadiums as vaccination sites

President Biden said he expects to take the NFL up on an offer to use its 32 stadiums as mass vaccination sites during an interview that aired Sunday. 

The president told CBS’s Norah O’Donnell in the interview that aired in party ahead of the Super Bowl that he received a call from NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, in which the commissioner offered the league’s 32 stadiums as potential vaccination sites.

When asked if the Biden administration will take Goodell up on the offer, Biden responded, “Absolutely, we will,” before adding, “let me put it this way I’m gonna tell my team they’re available and I believe we’ll use them.”

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Biden’s public schedule for Monday indicates that he and Vice President Harris will virtually tour the vaccination site at State Farm Stadium in Arizona, which typically hosts the Arizona Cardinals.

Six other stadiums belonging to the Carolina Panthers, Atlanta Falcons, Baltimore Ravens, Houston Texans, Miami Dolphins and New England Patriots are also already being used as vaccination sites, ESPN reported.

During his CBS interview, the president said as he entered office last month “one of the disappointments” was “the circumstances related to how the administration was handling COVID was even more dire than we thought.”

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“So that’s why we’ve ramped up everywhere we can,” he said. 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved two COVID-19 vaccines for emergency use, allowing more than 31.5 million to receive one or more doses of the vaccine and more than 9.1 million to receive two doses, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data

Parts of the interview aired ahead of the Super Bowl kickoff, in which the Kansas City Chiefs faced the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

US plans to revoke terrorist designation for Houthi rebels

The State Department plans to revoke the Trump administration’s decision to label the Houthi movement in Yemen a terrorist organization in an attempt to ease the humanitarian crisis in the country. 

A State Department spokesperson confirmed the reversal of former Secretary of State Mike PompeoMike PompeoUS plans to revoke terrorist designation for Houthi rebels Pompeo rebukes Biden’s new foreign policy New Uighur abuse claims spark call for UN investigation MORE’s eleventh-hour move, which critics warned could block aid from being delivered to areas under Houthi control as starvation and shortages of medicine ravage Yemen. 

“[Secretary of State Antony] Blinken has been clear about undertaking an expeditious review of the designations of Ansarallah given the profound implications for the people of Yemen, home to the world’s worst humanitarian catastrophe. After a comprehensive review, we can confirm that the Secretary intends to revoke the Foreign Terrorist Organization and Specially Designated Global Terrorist designations of Ansarallah,” the spokesperson said, using another term for the Houthis. 

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“We have formally notified Congress of the Secretary’s intent to revoke these designations and will share more details in the coming days,” the spokesperson added. “Our action is due entirely to the humanitarian consequences of this last-minute designation from the prior administration, which the United Nations and humanitarian organizations have since made clear would accelerate the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.”

Pompeo had slapped the terrorist designation on the Houthis on Jan. 19, the last full day of the Trump administration, waving aside warnings that the move could restrict movement of humanitarian aid to key parts of Yemen.

The United Nations has said the civil war in Yemen between the Houthis and a Gulf coalition spearheaded by Saudi Arabia has produced the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, leaving 80 percent of Yemenis in need. Yemen’s Houthis have ties to Iran, while the U.S. has supported its ally Riyadh in the war.

President Biden said Thursday that the U.S. will end support for offensive operations in the conflict. Saudi airstrikes are blamed for widespread civilian casualties.

The State Department spokesperson said the move “has nothing to do with our view of the Houthis and their reprehensible conduct, including attacks against civilians and the kidnapping of American citizens.”

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“We are committed to helping Saudi Arabia defend its territory against further such attacks,” the person said.

Biden also maintained this week that the U.S. would continue defending Saudi Arabia against attacks.

“Saudi Arabia faces missile attacks, [drone] strikes and other threats from Iranian supplied forces in multiple countries,” he said. “We’re going to continue to support and help Saudi Arabia defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity and its people.”

Blinken had opened a review into the designation in late January after the new administration faced a pressure campaign to reverse Pompeo’s move.

“This is coming at the absolute most difficult time when over 16 million Yemeni women, children and men are living in severe and worsening food insecurity,” Michelle Nunn, CEO of CARE USA, an international nongovernmental organization focusing on combating global poverty and world hunger, told The Hill.

“This particular designation is tantamount to a cease-and-desist order for the humanitarian response in northern Yemen and its impacts will lead to more despair and lives lost across the whole of the country,” Nunn added.

Biden faces familiar dilemma in Afghanistan

President Biden is facing a dilemma that also confounded both of his immediate predecessors: to stay or to go in Afghanistan.

Biden inherited a May deadline from the Trump administration to withdraw all U.S. troops from Afghanistan. Experts are warning that doing so could have dire consequences for Afghan and U.S. security, but Biden also faces domestic political pressures from those who say it is far past time to end America’s longest war.

During the presidential campaign, Biden promised to end so-called forever wars, but also said he would leave a small number of special forces in countries such as Afghanistan to conduct counterterrorism missions.

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Since taking office, the Biden administration has said only that Afghanistan is one of the many policies it is reviewing in its early days. But the administration could be forced to make a decision sooner rather than later with a key NATO meeting in two weeks.

“As an administration, we have to decide, and we are reviewing, what we’re doing in Afghanistan,” Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said at a Friday briefing. “We’re reviewing the Doha agreement. We’re reviewing the compliance with the Doha agreement. We have recommitted ourselves to a political solution. We don’t believe there’s a military solution. And that process of review is ongoing.”

Kirby also noted the mid-February NATO defense ministerial that Defense Secretary Lloyd AustinLloyd AustinSenate panel advances Biden’s pick for Pentagon No. 2 position Overnight Defense: Biden announces end to US support for offensive operations in Yemen | Pentagon orders mask-wearing indoors and out | Military COVID deaths mounting Pentagon mandates masks for all personnel working indoors and outdoors MORE will participate in, saying “obviously” Afghanistan “will be a key topic of discussion inside that venue, as well.”

U.S. forces have been in Afghanistan since they invaded in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

After inheriting the war from former President George W. Bush, former President Obama at first surged thousands of more troops into a war he felt was neglected after the Iraq War started. But Obama then declared an end to combat operations in 2014 with hopes to withdraw by the end of his presidency.

Ultimately, though, Obama reversed plans to withdraw on the advice of his military advisers, leaving office with about 8,000 troops in Afghanistan.

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Former President TrumpDonald TrumpTwitter permanently suspends Gateway Pundit founder’s account Wyoming Republican Party censures Cheney over Trump impeachment vote Trump access to intelligence briefings will be determined by officials, White House says: report MORE railed against foreign entanglements as part of his “America First” agenda. But he, too, at first sent thousands more troops back to Afghanistan.

But Trump also initiated direct talks with the Taliban, resulting in an agreement that was signed in Doha, Qatar, last year that dictates a full U.S. military withdrawal by May if the insurgents uphold certain commitments.

U.S. military officials repeatedly said the Taliban was not upholding its commitments. But Trump continued to draw down anyway, leaving office with about 2,500 troops there — the lowest level since 2001, but still short of his desire for a complete withdrawal.

Under the agreement, the Taliban is supposed to deny safe haven to terrorist groups intent on attacking the West, including al Qaeda. U.S. officials also expect the Taliban to reduce attacks on Afghan forces and participate in good-faith peace talks with the Afghan government.

The Taliban has yet to break with al Qaeda, according to U.S. military officials. And far from reducing violence, the Taliban has stepped up its attacks on Afghan forces.

From October to December, enemy-initiated attacks in Afghanistan were higher than during the same period in 2019, according to a Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction report released Monday. Among the trends in the Taliban’s violence at the end of 2020 was “an uptick in targeted assassinations of Afghan government officials, civil-society leaders and journalists,” according to the report.

In particular, the number of attacks in Kabul was “much higher” than the previous year, U.S. Forces Afghanistan told the inspector general. The increase includes attacks from both the Taliban and Afghanistan’s ISIS affiliate.

Meanwhile, intra-Afghan talks have been halting, at best. The start of the talks was delayed six months amid a political dispute in Kabul and hesitation from the Afghan government at a prisoner swap. Even after the two sides first sat down in September, it took until December to agree on just the procedures for the negotiations.

With the Taliban having yet to live up to its commitments, a bipartisan panel commissioned by Congress recommended this past week Biden indefinitely delay the May withdrawal. While a delay does risk the Taliban increasing violence further, the Afghanistan Study Group warned the country “is highly likely to fall into chaos” if the administration pushes forward with a “calculated” withdrawal or “create the sort of threats that imperil U.S. security” if it decides on a quick withdrawal.

Retired Gen. Joseph Dunford, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and a co-chair of the panel, said he is hoping the Biden administration’s eventual decision will “move beyond the narrative of what’s been characterized as a forever war.”

“The fact of the matter is we’ve got 2,500 Americans on the ground right now, and the strategy is by, with and through the Afghan National Defense Security Forces. So I think that’s an important part of the message in getting bipartisan support,” he told reporters. “We’re already down to 2,500, so we made it clear to everybody that our patience is not infinite.”

But Biden will also have to contend with members of his own party who say it is time to leave Afghanistan.

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Rep. Ro KhannaRohit (Ro) KhannaOvernight Defense: Biden announces end to US support for offensive operations in Yemen | Pentagon orders mask-wearing indoors and out | Military COVID deaths mounting Biden announces end to US support for offensive operations in Yemen Democrats offer bill to provide tax relief to unemployment recipients MORE (D-Calif.) scoffed at the Afghanistan Study Group report, saying “the big names in American foreign policy have made some of the biggest mistakes of the last 20 years.”

“President Biden needs to spend less time listening to the fancy names who came out with this report, and he needs to go to places like Scranton, and listen to what people there are saying,” Khanna said in an interview. “I trust President Biden’s judgment. If he listens to people that he grew up with, that he campaigned with, that trust him, I think he will make the right judgment, as opposed to listening to the people who got us into this mess.”

Khanna advocated for withdrawing from Afghanistan with a warning to the Taliban that the United States will come back with “overwhelming” force if there is a threat to the homeland, arguing that would be a “very powerful” deterrent. Diplomacy toward an agreement between the Taliban and Afghan government should also continue, he added.

“There is no perfect solution in safeguarding peace and human rights in Afghanistan,” he said. “We have to get out and do the best we can to stand up for human rights through diplomacy, understanding that it’s not going to be perfect.”

After the release of the Afghanistan Study Group report, the State Department reiterated that a review of the U.S.-Taliban agreement is ongoing, adding that it is “deeply appreciative” of the panel’s “thoughtful work” and looks “forward to closely examining the recommendations contained in the comprehensive report.”

The Pentagon did not comment directly on the report, but likewise reiterated a review of the agreement is ongoing.

In the Pentagon’s first briefing of the Biden administration in January, Kirby also said the Taliban has “not met their commitments,” adding that “without them meeting their commitments to renounce terrorism and to stop the violent attacks on the Afghan National Security Forces, and by dint of that the Afghan people, it’s very hard to see a specific way forward for the negotiated settlement.”

On Friday, Austin spoke with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani. Kirby would not say whether the two discussed the May deadline, but said they spoke about “the importance of the peace process, and they talked about the importance of this being Afghan-led. They talked about the enduring commitment that we have to Afghanistan writ large.”

Press Release On Hulk Hogan's Latest Venture, More

The following press release was issued earlier this afternoon:

Digital Music Group, Inc. (NASDAQ:DMGI) , a content owner and global leader in the digital distribution of independently owned music and video catalogs, announced today an exclusive digital distribution agreement with wrestling legend and star of the hit series on VH1 Hogan Knows Best, Hulk Hogan. Under the terms of the agreement, DMGI will distribute newly-created audio and video ringers from the wrestling superstar to mobile and digital distribution channels worldwide.

“Hulk Hogan is wrestling’s biggest superstar and a true American icon and we’re very happy to be working with him to create new audio and video ringers,” said Mitchell Koulouris, Chief Executive Officer of DMGI. “Hulk is another example of a top-tier artist choosing DMGI as their digital partner. We’re very excited to be partnering with Hulk to bring his content to his legions of fans around the world.”

“I’m thrilled to be working with DMGI as my new digital distribution partner,” said Hogan. “My fans have been asking me to make more of my content available via digital and mobile channels and DMGI was the clear choice for me. They’re a great company with an excellent video distribution network.”

DMGI will be releasing these exclusive, never-before-seen Hulk Hogan audio and video ringers through its extensive video and mobile distribution channel. The first of these exclusive Hulk Hogan ringers will be released in fall 2007.

Entering its fourth season on July 22, Hogan Knows Best is one of the top-rated shows on VH1. One of the greatest, most popular, and charismatic wrestlers of all time, Hogan virtually single-handedly took the world of professional wrestling from cult following into the mainstream of American entertainment. Hogan made his pro debut in 1978 and later in the early 1980’s was cast as Thunderlips in the hit movie Rocky III, which propelled him into the international spotlight. He then entered the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in 1983. Hogan won the WWF title numerous times, and was credited with dealing Andre the Giant his first loss in pro wrestling. After leaving the WWF he made his comeback with World Championship Wrestling (WCW), the WWF’s bitter rival.

Latest Details On Hulk Hogan’s Return To WWE >>