Category: deal


  • This content originally appeared on Human Rights Watch and was authored by Human Rights Watch.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • U.S. officials have said they believe air strikes on dozens of Iranian-linked sites in Syria and Iraq late on February 2 in retaliation for the killing of three U.S. troops in northwest Jordan were successful and warned more strikes will follow, as Baghdad expressed anger and concerns persisted of widening conflict in the region.

    U.S. President Biden had warned of imminent action after a drone attack at a U.S. base in Jordan killed three U.S. service members on January 28.

    Washington blamed Iran and its supply of weapons to militia groups in the region.

    Reports said the U.S. strikes had hit seven locations, four in Syria and three in Iraq.

    “Our response began today. It will continue at times and places of our choosing,” U.S. President Joe Biden said in a statement released shortly after the attacks that “our response began today,” adding, “It will continue at times and places of our choosing.”

    “The United States does not seek conflict in the Middle East or anywhere else in the world. But let all those who might seek to do us harm know this: If you harm an American, we will respond,” he added.

    General Yehia Rasool, a spokesman for Iraqi Prime Minister Shia al-Sudani accused the United States of a “violation” of Iraqi sovereignty with potentially “disastrous consequences for the security and stability of Iraq and the region.”

    After a previous U.S. air strike in Baghdad, Sudani asked for the 2,000 or so U.S. troops in Iraq to be withdrawn — a sensitive bilateral topic.

    U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said the United States “did inform the Iraqi government prior to the strikes” but did not provide details. He said the attacks lasted about 30 minutes and included B-1 bombers that had flown from the United States.

    Kirby said defense officials would be able to further assess the strikes’ impact on February 3.

    The U.K.-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor, which has extensive contacts inside Syria, said at least 18 pro-Iran fighters had been killed in a strike near Al-Mayadeen in Syria.

    U.S. Central Command earlier confirmed the strikes, saying its forces “conducted air strikes in Iraq and Syria against Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Quds Force and affiliated militia groups.”

    “U.S. military forces struck more than 85 targets, with numerous aircraft to include long-range bombers flown from United States,” it said, adding that it had struck “command and control operations, centers, intelligence centers, rockets, and missiles, and unmanned aerial vehicle storages, and logistics and munition supply chain facilities of militia groups and their IRGC sponsors who facilitated attacks against U.S. and Coalition forces.”

    Syrian state media said there had been a number of casualties in several sites in Syria’s desert areas along the border with Iraq.

    U.S. officials have said that the deadly January 28 attack in Jordan carried the “footprints” of Tehran-sponsored Kataib Hizballah militia in Iraq and vowed to hold those responsible to account at a time and place of Washington’s choosing, most likely in Syria or Iraq.

    On January 31, Kataib Hizballah extremists in Iraq announced a “suspension” of operations against U.S. forces. The group said the pause was meant to prevent “embarrassing” the Iraqi government and hinted that the drone attack had been linked to the U.S. support of Israel in the war in Gaza.

    Biden has been under pressure from opposition Republicans to take a harder line against Iran following the Jordan attack, but said earlier this week that “I don’t think we need a wider war in the Middle East. That’s not what I’m looking for.”

    Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi has said Tehran “will not start any war, but if anyone wants to bully us, they will receive a strong response.”

    Biden on February 2 witnessed the return to the United States of the remains of the three American soldiers killed in Jordan at a service at the Dover Air Force Base, Delaware.

    The clashes between U.S. forces and Iran-backed militia have come against the background of an intense four-month military campaign in Gaza Strip against the U.S.- and EU-designated terrorist group Hamas after a Hamas attack killed at least 1,200 people in Israel, most of them civilians.

    Iran-backed Huthi rebels in Yemen have also waged attacks on international shipping in the region in what they call an effort to target Israeli vessels and demonstrate support for Palestinians.

    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is traveling to his fifth round of crisis talks in the region from February 3-8, with visits reportedly planned to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar, Israel, and the West Bank in an effort to promote a release of hostages taken by Hamas in its brutal October 7 raids.

    With reporting by AFP, CNN, BBC, and AP


    This content originally appeared on News – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty and was authored by News – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The South Korea government has told Russia that it will not stand idly by if Moscow hands over missile development technology to North Korea, said South Korea’s foreign minister Park Jin. 

    In response to a question from lawmaker Ha Tae-keung during a parliament hearing on Friday, as to whether Seoul discussed the issue of Moscow’s military support for Pyongyang with Russia, Park confirmed it did. 

    Park’s comments came during a question-and-answer session with Ha over communications between the Russian Foreign Ministry and the South Korean embassy in Moscow after last month’s Russia-North Korea summit.

    When Ha asked how Russia briefed South Korea, Park said: “There was a dialogue on various issues to promote friendship and relations between the two countries (North Korea and Russia),” adding, “There were no specifics on military cooperation.”

    Ha also repeatedly inquired if he had asked whether Russia had agreed to hand over the missile technology or weapons North Korea was demanding. Park responded: “We have asked Russia to confirm that as well.”

    Park also said Seoul is paying close attention to the situation through various information sources and has its own understanding of how it is developing, but avoided specifics on the evidence of North Korea’s arms delivery to Russia.

    Park’s remarks came a day after the United States and its allies issued a stern warning against Russia and North Korea as they verified an arms trade deal between the two countries that could bolster Moscow’s aggression towards Ukraine.

    “The United States, Japan, and the Republic of Korea (ROK) strongly condemn the provision of military equipment and munitions by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) to the Russian Federation for use against the government and people of Ukraine,” the joint statement said Thursday, referring to the two Koreas’ formal names.

    China’s repatriation of North Koreans

    Separately, Park also said that he has conveyed his stance over North Korean defectors to Chinese Central Politburo member and Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

    “We conveyed our concerns through diplomatic channels and made it clear that North Korean defectors should not be forcibly repatriated,” Park said in the same hearing. 

    While stressing the importance of relations with China, Park noted that the issue of North Korean defectors is an issue related to international human rights.

    “We need to make efforts to help North Koreans go where they want to go, including to South Korea, so we are actively explaining South Korea’s position to China and urging China to play a constructive role,” he said.

    Earlier this month, Human Rights Watch reported that Chinese authorities had forcibly returned over 500 North Koreans to the reclusive nation. The majority of these North Koreans were civilians and religious leaders attempting to travel to South Korea from China, Radio Free Asia has learned

    Edited by Mike Firn and Elaine Chan.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By Taejun Kang for RFA.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The United States and its allies have verified an arms trade deal between Russia and North Korea that could bolster Moscow’s aggression towards Ukraine, issuing a stern warning that the allies would respond against these “deleterious” actions.

    “The United States, Japan, and the Republic of Korea (ROK) strongly condemn the provision of military equipment and munitions by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) to the Russian Federation for use against the government and people of Ukraine,” the joint statement said Thursday, referring to the two Koreas formal names.

    “Such weapons deliveries, several of which we now confirm have been completed, will significantly increase the human toll of Russia’s war of aggression,” the statement said, adding that North Korea was seeking military assistance from Russia in return to advance its own military capabilities.

    The allies “stand together, resolute in our opposition to arms transfers and related military cooperation between the DPRK and Russia and the deleterious effect such actions have on global security and nonproliferation,” according to the statement. 

    The statement came as North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin met at the symbol of Russian space prowess in Russia’s Far East last month, where they vowed to boost their comprehensive cooperation, spanning from the economy to military. 

    Authorities of both the U.S. and South Korea have been warning publicly that Russia’s weapons technology transfer in exchange for Pyongyang’s conventional ammunition was at the heart of the cooperation. 

    Both Kim and Putin are yet to publicly comment on any ammunition deal, but the Kremlin said last month that it would cooperate with North Korea in “sensitive areas that can’t be disclosed.”  

    Radio Free Asia cited analysis by a private U.S. research organization the Institute for the Study of War as saying that the North could have already provided up to 500,000 pieces of ammunition to Russia, which could be used in its invasion against Ukraine. The joint statement by the allies confirms that there has been illegal trading between the two countries.

    The allies on Thursday also warned both Pyongyang and Moscow that such an action is highly illegal. “We emphasize that arms transfers to or from the DPRK – as well as the transfer to the DPRK of certain items and technical cooperation related to the DPRK’s weapons of mass destruction, ballistic missile, or conventional weapons programs, – would violate multiple U.N. Security Council resolutions,” the statement said.

    Russia itself voted for the U.N. Security Council resolutions that contain these restrictions,” it added.  

    Russia and North Korea have recently beefed up their efforts to establish a “united front” against the U.S. and its regional partners.

    At the summit between Kim and Putin last month, both leaders committed to establishing an “anti-imperialist united front.” Pyongyang has consistently labeled the U.S. and its allies as “imperialists.”

    North Korea’s recent foreign policy maneuvers also suggest a broader strategy in motion. This includes Pyongyang’s alleged support for Hamas during its conflict with U.S.-ally Israel, and strengthening relations with Russia after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. These actions indicate Pyongyang’s intent to form a cohesive stance against Washington.

    Edited by Taejun Kang and Mike Firn.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By Lee Jeong-Ho for RFA.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Hollywood screenwriters’ monthslong strike ended Wednesday after the Writers Guild of America leadership voted unanimously to recommend the tentative three-year contract agreement that the union reached with major studios over the weekend. WGA members will now vote on whether to ratify the deal, which includes higher pay than the studios were originally willing to offer…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • The U.S. orchestrated a secret arms deal to send weapons to Ukraine, helping Pakistan reach the threshold needed for an International Monetary Fund loan to save the country’s economy, according to two sources with knowledge of the arrangement and documents leaked to The Intercept. This week on a special Deconstructed and Intercepted crossover episode, Ryan Grim and Murtaza Hussain discuss their reporting on the behind-the-scenes maneuvering of Pakistani arms sales to the U.S. for the purpose of supplying the Ukrainian military. Grim and Hussain are joined by Arif Rafiq, a non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute and political risk analyst who focuses on Pakistan and the region. They break down the U.S.’s pressure to oust former Prime Minister Imran Khan, the IMF’s role in the country, and Pakistan’s political economy.

    Transcript coming soon.

    Join The Conversation


    This content originally appeared on The Intercept and was authored by Deconstructed.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Since 2022, Rwanda has been very much on the mind of British policy makers, a dark option of retreat from the irritating intrusions of international refugee law. The English Channel has become something of a polemical resource, with those seeking to cross it demonised as undermining Britannia’s sacred sovereignty. Giddy with the dusty advice of More

    The post Cruel Arrangements: The UK-Rwanda Refugee Deal Falters appeared first on CounterPunch.org.


    This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Binoy Kampmark.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The reasons for Prigozhin’s apparent mutiny are not yet clear. But Prigozhin’s statements have explicitly been aimed against Russia’s military leadership and the ministry of defence. According to the Institute for the Study of War, the Wagner Group boss claimed that the Wagner Commanders’ Council made the decision to stop “the evil brought by the military leadership” who neglected and destroyed the lives of tens of thousands of Russian soldiers. This appears to be a direct reference to his claims during the Bakhmut campaign that his units were being deliberately starved of ammunition. More

    The post 24 Hours of Chaos Ends with Belarus-Sponsored Deal to Settle Abortive Wagner Group Insurrection appeared first on CounterPunch.org.


    This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Tracey German.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Three waybooksplit

    A federal appeals court on Tuesday ruled that members of the Sackler family can receive immunity from all current and future civil litigation related to their role in creating and fueling the opioid epidemic. The billionaire Sacklers own Purdue Pharma, maker of the highly addictive opioid OxyContin. The legal shield could lead to a settlement in the range of $6 billion for thousands of plaintiffs, including states, local governments and tribes. Opioid overdoses have killed over 500,000 people in the U.S. over the past two decades, according to the CDC. For more, we speak with Ed Bisch, founder of the group Relatives Against Purdue Pharma, whose 18-year-old son, Eddie, died of an OxyContin-related overdose in 2001. He says drug company executives responsible for the opioid crisis should be prosecuted by the Department of Justice. And in Mexico City, Christopher Glazek is the investigative reporter who was the first to publicly report how the Sackler family had significantly profited from selling OxyContin while fully aware it was directly fueling the opioid epidemic in America. “The Sacklers did what they’ve always done: They struck a deal, they paid a bribe, and they’re getting away with it,” Glazek says of the latest settlement.


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Standard

    After a contentious battle with the Republican House majority, President Biden and Congress have agreed on a bipartisan deal suspending the debt ceiling until January 1, 2025. Among other concessions to Republicans, the deal caps domestic spending below the current rate of inflation, allows for larger increases to the military budget, implements new work requirements for social programs and fast-tracks the approval and construction of the controversial 300-plus-mile-long fracked gas Mountain Valley Pipeline through West Virginia and Virginia. Our guest, California Congressmember Ro Khanna, is among a number of progressive Democrats who voted against the legislation. He calls it a “punch in the gut to climate activists” that “came on the backs of the poor, of students, of the most vulnerable, of women.”


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Can little Ukraine teach big America how to deal with our oligarch problem? Viktor Medvedchuk was the Rupert Murdoch of Ukraine. He ran a rightwing television network and owned TV stations across the country, while simultaneously being one of the richest men in that nation. He promoted hate and division, tax cuts for the rich More

    The post Can Little Ukraine Teach Big America How to Deal with Our Oligarch Problem? appeared first on CounterPunch.org.


    This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Thom Hartmann.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Seg2 student debt

    Advocates for student debt relief are raising the alarm over a controversial part of the bipartisan deal to raise the U.S. debt ceiling that would end the freeze on student loan repayments by the end of August. The moratorium has been in place since 2020. Meanwhile, the fate of the Biden administration’s plan to forgive up to $20,000 in student debt for borrowers is going to be decided by the Supreme Court, where it is likely to face skepticism from the conservative majority. “This is President Biden turning his back on student debtors,” says Braxton Brewington, press secretary of the Debt Collective.


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Seg1 mvp protest

    As lawmakers push through the bipartisan deal to raise the debt limit, it is being called a “dirty debt ceiling deal” by opponents because it includes language meant to speed completion of the Mountain Valley Pipeline. The controversial $6.6 billion pipeline would go through Virginia and West Virginia and carry 2 billion cubic feet of fracked gas across more than a thousand streams and wetlands in Appalachia. Over 750 frontline communities and environmental justice organizations oppose its construction, but the project has long had the backing of powerful West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin, the biggest recipient of fossil fuel money in Congress. “They can’t build this pipeline and follow the law,” says Maury Johnson, a West Virginian who lives in the path of the massive pipeline and says approval of the deal would show corporations they can simply “throw a bunch of money to politicians” in order to overcome environmental concerns and local opposition from residents.


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Photograph Source: The White House – Public Domain

    Over the weekend, US House of Representatives speaker McCarthy and president Biden announced a tentative agreement on raising the debt ceiling. The deal—almost certain to pass Congress later this week—represents a typical Neoliberal fiscal policy deal.

    Ever since neoliberal capitalism policies were introduced under president Carter in the late 1970s, and subsequently expanded dramatically under Reagan, Neoliberal fiscal policy has been characterized by accelerating Pentagon & war spending; simultaneous cutting of business-investor taxes; acceptance of consequent escalating budget deficits—and in turn US national debt levels; and the use deficit/debt to cap and reduce social program spending.

    That Neoliberal fiscal policy mix of tax-spending-deficit policies mix clearly defines the recent McCarthy-Biden deal.

    In the roughly two year agreement, extending from the present to the end of February 2025, Pentagon spending will rise by 11% in the 2024 fiscal year which begins October 1, 2023. That 11% is estimated at $885 billion. A further increase in Pentagon spending will certainly take place the following fiscal year, commencing October 1, 2024, but the deal doesn’t say how much further rise in Pentagon spending is projected for that second year.

    Pentagon vs. Defense Spending

    It’s important to understand that the $885 billion in Pentagon spending is not exactly the same as US defense spending. Around $200 billion more in defense related spending occurs in US government departments in addition to the Pentagon.

    For example: all the oil costs for the US military (the largest single consumer of fossil fuels in the world) comes out of the Energy Dept. budget. Veterans benefits spending for past wars comes out of that dept. Then there’s CIA’s spending on mercenary and its own field forces. So too for the  State Dept. which finances similar covert military activities. Part of Homeland Security costs can be considered defense. And then there’s the so-called ‘black budget’ of secret US military weapons development that never even gets reported in publications of the US budget or by the US press. That’s been estimated around $75 billion a year. So actual, total annual US Defense spending—in contrast to Pentagon spending alone—is probably around $1.1 trillion a year.

    Taxation & the National Debt

    Economists estimate that tax revenues, or lack thereof, are responsible for about 60% of deficits and therefore the debt (which is just the accumulation of annual deficits).  Tax revenues are reduced as result of tax cutting and/or reduced revenues as a result of slow economic growth when recessions occur—or when post-recession recoveries are weak.

    The McCarthy-Biden deal prohibits raising business-investor taxes the next two years. Businesses and investors will thus be assured that their Trump era $4.5 trillion in tax cuts, December 2018-28, will continue. Estimates of the cost of the lost tax revenues caused by the 2018 Trump tax cuts, from 2023 through 2028, will be about $2.7 trillion thus contributing significantly to a further rise in the national debt by 2025.

    A Short History of US Debt Trajectory 1980-2025

    That the McCarthy-Biden deal has nothing to do with the national debt is obvious from the fact two more years of US deficits, and thus the national debt, are expected to continue to rise by $4 trillion—up from the current $31.4 trillion level. US government debt levels will therefore exceed $35 trillion by the time the next ‘debt ceiling negotiations’ occur. However, neoliberal capitalism is not concerned about rising debt levels per se. (Which means it is not at all traditional ‘liberalism’ in the historical sense of that term).

    During the era of US neoliberal capitalism, which extends from 1978-79 to the present, US national debt has accelerated. When Reagan took office in 1981 it was less than $1 trillion. By 2001 it had risen to approximately $6 trillion. Starting 2001 the national debt accelerated sharply under George W. Bush, as Mideast war spending escalated and Bush era taxes were cut by $3.8 trillion simultaneously.

    The US national debt further accelerated under Obama. When the latter assumed office in January 2009, the national debt was around $10 trillion. Obama then cut taxes and introduced spending totaling around $787 billion in his 2009 fiscal stimulus program. He subsequently then extended the Bush tax cuts another two years in December 2010, to 2012, when they were to expire in December 2010 after their initial 10 year period. That two year extension cost another $803 billion. Then, outdoing himself, starting in 2013 Obama once again extended the Bush era tax cuts, permanently this time, at an estimated additional lost tax revenue cost of $5 trillion.

    Obama thus cut taxes, composed about 80% of cuts for businesses and investors, more than $6 trillion.  The tax cuts, the slow economic recovery from the great recession that also reduced US tax revenues, and the $787 billion (plus another $50 billion or so for ‘cash for clunkers autos’ and first time home buyers assistance) spending in his 2009-10 fiscal stimulus programs, resulted in the US debt rising to about $18 trillion when Obama left office in January 2017.

    Then came Trump’s $4.5 trillion additional tax cuts passed in December 2017, followed by year one (2020) of the Covid economic shutdowns and spending all of which pushed the national debt level to about $22 trillion when Trump left office.

    The collapse of the economy in 2020-21 driving down tax revenues, the further tax cuts in 2020 through 2022, the continuing of Trump’s 2018 tax cuts, the bailing out of businesses in the various Covid economic stimulus bills of 2020-21, the roughly $3 trillion spent on households’ assistance during Covid, the mere 1% GDP growth in 2022 (December 2021 to December 2022) that depressed tax revenues, the funding of the Ukraine war ($200 billion in 2022-23), and Biden’s roughly $1.65 trillion spending on three business investment stimulus bills of 2022 (Infrastructure, Semiconductor & Manufacturing subsidy, and the energy industry misnamed ‘Inflation Reduction Acts), and the steady rise in interest on the debt from less than $300 billion in 2019 to estimated $600 billion in 2023—all converged to accelerate the national debt to its $31.4 trillion current level.

    It is perhaps not coincidental that the tentative debt ceiling agreement (the 79ths in US history by the way, extends only to 2025. That’s when the $4.5 trillion Trump tax cuts of 2018 come up for a vote in Congress on whether to make them permanent instead of expiring in 2028. So we can expect another even more contentious debt ceiling crisis déjà vu in about two years.

    The McCarthy-Biden Social Program Spending Cuts

    As with all neoliberal fiscal policy measures, the deal’s 11%+ Pentagon-Defense spending increase—combined with the absence of any tax hikes in the deal—has meant cuts to social program spending.

    The main cut in discretionary social programs is the agreement to freeze all 2024 fiscal year spending at 2023 levels, and in 2025 to allow a mere 1% increase in such spending.

    On Monday, May 30 House Speaker McCarthy publicly bragged, when measured in dollar terms, the deal results in $2.1 trillion in social program spending reduction. Biden says it’s ‘only’ $1 trillion. The New York Times estimates the two year deal amounts to a cut in total discretionary spending—defense and non-defense—is 18%. However, since the Pentagon gets a 11% (plus more in 2025) increase, the net discretionary non-defense spending cuts are likely in the 20%-25% range.

    Total available funds for discretionary social program spending—like education, transport, health, etc.—in the 2024 fiscal year is capped at $704 billion. But it’s really only $583 billion after $121 billion spending on Veterans is taken out of the $704 billion total non-defense. The US considers Vet spending as spending on social programs but it should be considered Defense spending.

    The $583 billion for discretionary non-defense spending contrasts with the $886 billion for the Pentagon alone. Or $1 trillion for Pentagon and Vets. (And still more for other ‘defense’ costs distributed in other departments of the US government).

    In other terms of the deal involving discretionary social program/non-defense spending:

    An estimated $30 billion in unspent Covid funds is cut. That’s another de facto $30 billion taken out of the economy.

    In environment policy, fossil fuel companies are now able to expedite reviews and obtain licenses quicker. And West Virginia Senator, Joe Manchin, gets billions in funding for his gas pipeline in his state.

    Republicans get an initial ‘bite of the apple’, as they say, in work requirements for single adults as a precondition for receiving food stamp benefits. The prior age rule for work requirement was raised from 50 to 54, with exemptions for veterans and the disabled.  McCarthy did not get his additional work requirement rule for recipients of Medicaid.

    Biden gets to keep his $60 of his $80 billion to hire IRS agents. $20B is redirected to other spending. That means only 7200 more agents will be hired during the deal’s two years. The research arm of Congress, the Congressional Budget Office, has estimated if more agents were not hired then continuing tax avoidance and tax fraud would reduce tax revenues by $204 billion.  (The CBO has also estimated that failure to raise taxes by ending Trump’s 2018-28 $4.5T tax cuts for business and investors results in a loss of $2.7 trillion in US government tax revenues).

    Biden compromised with McCarthy as well on the subject of student loan forgiveness. In addition to preventing any student loan forgiveness, McCarthy wanted immediate restoration of student loan payments plus retroactive back interest added to loans during the Covid period moratorium. In exchange for McCarthy dropping these draconian proposals, Biden agreed to resume student loan payments this August 2023.

    Deficits and Debt Continue

    Previously it was noted that Neoliberal fiscal policy is fundamentally unconcerned with annual deficits and a rising national debt. That’s no less true in the current debt ceiling deal.

    McCarthy may brag that the agreement amounts to a $2.1 trillion reduction in non-defense spending over two years due to the freeze and 1% caps.  But the truth is that the annual deficits will continue to rise in the $1.5T to $2T per year range. Independent estimates are the US debt will continue to rise by $4 trillion by the end of the deal. That’s more than $35 trillion by the end of fiscal year 2025.  Interest on that debt that year will rise to approximately $600 billion, up from less than $3 trillion in 2019.

    The causes are obvious: No rescinding of Trump’s 2018 tax cuts (which the CBO estimates will add $2.7 trillion to the debt). Continued below historic average US GDP growth which reduces tax revenues as well. Third, an ever-rising Pentagon and Defense spending trajectory, as the US funds the Ukraine war while preparing for another, even bigger one in west Asia with China before the end of the decade.

    Debt Ceiling As Political Theater

    The US has raised the debt ceiling 78 times before the current negotiation. This writer has argued the recent negotiations are just a ‘debt ceiling dance’ and predicted it too will be raised, a 79th time. And it has.

    It’s virtually certain the deal will be approved by both the US House and Senate and signed by Biden by next weekend at the latest.  McCarthy’s margin in the House was a mere 217-215 vote in support of his initial proposals. By agreeing to a two year non-defense spending freeze and 1% caps—or in other words a $2.1 trillion and 18% discretionary spending cut—Biden clearly gave in far more than he needed to. One would have to conclude McCarthy and the Republicans came out ahead in the negotiations.

    The House will vote on the deal on Wednesday, June 1, 2023 and will likely pass it. The Senate will take a little longer but will pass it as well by the weekend. Biden will sign by the weekend. Thereafter, both sides will ‘spin’ the deal and exaggerate their claims. They’ll both hide behind a claim that the economic sky would have fallen in had they not agreed. A dubious claim at best.

    Then the real negotiations will begin. For the political theater surrounding the debt ceiling negotiations was in fact an attempt to renegotiate the Biden 2024 budget that commences next October 1, 2023. McCarthy simply used the debt ceiling issue to cut programs early. And he’ll come back for a second ‘bite of the apple’ at the end of this summer.

    And if Biden’s negotiating performance during the debt ceiling negotiations is any indicator, he’ll get even more concessions from Biden


    This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Jack Rasmus.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Photograph Source: The White House – Public Domain

    Over the weekend, US House of Representatives speaker McCarthy and president Biden announced a tentative agreement on raising the debt ceiling. The deal—almost certain to pass Congress later this week—represents a typical Neoliberal fiscal policy deal.

    Ever since neoliberal capitalism policies were introduced under president Carter in the late 1970s, and subsequently expanded dramatically under Reagan, Neoliberal fiscal policy has been characterized by accelerating Pentagon & war spending; simultaneous cutting of business-investor taxes; acceptance of consequent escalating budget deficits—and in turn US national debt levels; and the use deficit/debt to cap and reduce social program spending.

    That Neoliberal fiscal policy mix of tax-spending-deficit policies mix clearly defines the recent McCarthy-Biden deal.

    In the roughly two year agreement, extending from the present to the end of February 2025, Pentagon spending will rise by 11% in the 2024 fiscal year which begins October 1, 2023. That 11% is estimated at $885 billion. A further increase in Pentagon spending will certainly take place the following fiscal year, commencing October 1, 2024, but the deal doesn’t say how much further rise in Pentagon spending is projected for that second year.

    Pentagon vs. Defense Spending

    It’s important to understand that the $885 billion in Pentagon spending is not exactly the same as US defense spending. Around $200 billion more in defense related spending occurs in US government departments in addition to the Pentagon.

    For example: all the oil costs for the US military (the largest single consumer of fossil fuels in the world) comes out of the Energy Dept. budget. Veterans benefits spending for past wars comes out of that dept. Then there’s CIA’s spending on mercenary and its own field forces. So too for the  State Dept. which finances similar covert military activities. Part of Homeland Security costs can be considered defense. And then there’s the so-called ‘black budget’ of secret US military weapons development that never even gets reported in publications of the US budget or by the US press. That’s been estimated around $75 billion a year. So actual, total annual US Defense spending—in contrast to Pentagon spending alone—is probably around $1.1 trillion a year.

    Taxation & the National Debt

    Economists estimate that tax revenues, or lack thereof, are responsible for about 60% of deficits and therefore the debt (which is just the accumulation of annual deficits).  Tax revenues are reduced as result of tax cutting and/or reduced revenues as a result of slow economic growth when recessions occur—or when post-recession recoveries are weak.

    The McCarthy-Biden deal prohibits raising business-investor taxes the next two years. Businesses and investors will thus be assured that their Trump era $4.5 trillion in tax cuts, December 2018-28, will continue. Estimates of the cost of the lost tax revenues caused by the 2018 Trump tax cuts, from 2023 through 2028, will be about $2.7 trillion thus contributing significantly to a further rise in the national debt by 2025.

    A Short History of US Debt Trajectory 1980-2025

    That the McCarthy-Biden deal has nothing to do with the national debt is obvious from the fact two more years of US deficits, and thus the national debt, are expected to continue to rise by $4 trillion—up from the current $31.4 trillion level. US government debt levels will therefore exceed $35 trillion by the time the next ‘debt ceiling negotiations’ occur. However, neoliberal capitalism is not concerned about rising debt levels per se. (Which means it is not at all traditional ‘liberalism’ in the historical sense of that term).

    During the era of US neoliberal capitalism, which extends from 1978-79 to the present, US national debt has accelerated. When Reagan took office in 1981 it was less than $1 trillion. By 2001 it had risen to approximately $6 trillion. Starting 2001 the national debt accelerated sharply under George W. Bush, as Mideast war spending escalated and Bush era taxes were cut by $3.8 trillion simultaneously.

    The US national debt further accelerated under Obama. When the latter assumed office in January 2009, the national debt was around $10 trillion. Obama then cut taxes and introduced spending totaling around $787 billion in his 2009 fiscal stimulus program. He subsequently then extended the Bush tax cuts another two years in December 2010, to 2012, when they were to expire in December 2010 after their initial 10 year period. That two year extension cost another $803 billion. Then, outdoing himself, starting in 2013 Obama once again extended the Bush era tax cuts, permanently this time, at an estimated additional lost tax revenue cost of $5 trillion.

    Obama thus cut taxes, composed about 80% of cuts for businesses and investors, more than $6 trillion.  The tax cuts, the slow economic recovery from the great recession that also reduced US tax revenues, and the $787 billion (plus another $50 billion or so for ‘cash for clunkers autos’ and first time home buyers assistance) spending in his 2009-10 fiscal stimulus programs, resulted in the US debt rising to about $18 trillion when Obama left office in January 2017.

    Then came Trump’s $4.5 trillion additional tax cuts passed in December 2017, followed by year one (2020) of the Covid economic shutdowns and spending all of which pushed the national debt level to about $22 trillion when Trump left office.

    The collapse of the economy in 2020-21 driving down tax revenues, the further tax cuts in 2020 through 2022, the continuing of Trump’s 2018 tax cuts, the bailing out of businesses in the various Covid economic stimulus bills of 2020-21, the roughly $3 trillion spent on households’ assistance during Covid, the mere 1% GDP growth in 2022 (December 2021 to December 2022) that depressed tax revenues, the funding of the Ukraine war ($200 billion in 2022-23), and Biden’s roughly $1.65 trillion spending on three business investment stimulus bills of 2022 (Infrastructure, Semiconductor & Manufacturing subsidy, and the energy industry misnamed ‘Inflation Reduction Acts), and the steady rise in interest on the debt from less than $300 billion in 2019 to estimated $600 billion in 2023—all converged to accelerate the national debt to its $31.4 trillion current level.

    It is perhaps not coincidental that the tentative debt ceiling agreement (the 79ths in US history by the way, extends only to 2025. That’s when the $4.5 trillion Trump tax cuts of 2018 come up for a vote in Congress on whether to make them permanent instead of expiring in 2028. So we can expect another even more contentious debt ceiling crisis déjà vu in about two years.

    The McCarthy-Biden Social Program Spending Cuts

    As with all neoliberal fiscal policy measures, the deal’s 11%+ Pentagon-Defense spending increase—combined with the absence of any tax hikes in the deal—has meant cuts to social program spending.

    The main cut in discretionary social programs is the agreement to freeze all 2024 fiscal year spending at 2023 levels, and in 2025 to allow a mere 1% increase in such spending.

    On Monday, May 30 House Speaker McCarthy publicly bragged, when measured in dollar terms, the deal results in $2.1 trillion in social program spending reduction. Biden says it’s ‘only’ $1 trillion. The New York Times estimates the two year deal amounts to a cut in total discretionary spending—defense and non-defense—is 18%. However, since the Pentagon gets a 11% (plus more in 2025) increase, the net discretionary non-defense spending cuts are likely in the 20%-25% range.

    Total available funds for discretionary social program spending—like education, transport, health, etc.—in the 2024 fiscal year is capped at $704 billion. But it’s really only $583 billion after $121 billion spending on Veterans is taken out of the $704 billion total non-defense. The US considers Vet spending as spending on social programs but it should be considered Defense spending.

    The $583 billion for discretionary non-defense spending contrasts with the $886 billion for the Pentagon alone. Or $1 trillion for Pentagon and Vets. (And still more for other ‘defense’ costs distributed in other departments of the US government).

    In other terms of the deal involving discretionary social program/non-defense spending:

    An estimated $30 billion in unspent Covid funds is cut. That’s another de facto $30 billion taken out of the economy.

    In environment policy, fossil fuel companies are now able to expedite reviews and obtain licenses quicker. And West Virginia Senator, Joe Manchin, gets billions in funding for his gas pipeline in his state.

    Republicans get an initial ‘bite of the apple’, as they say, in work requirements for single adults as a precondition for receiving food stamp benefits. The prior age rule for work requirement was raised from 50 to 54, with exemptions for veterans and the disabled.  McCarthy did not get his additional work requirement rule for recipients of Medicaid.

    Biden gets to keep his $60 of his $80 billion to hire IRS agents. $20B is redirected to other spending. That means only 7200 more agents will be hired during the deal’s two years. The research arm of Congress, the Congressional Budget Office, has estimated if more agents were not hired then continuing tax avoidance and tax fraud would reduce tax revenues by $204 billion.  (The CBO has also estimated that failure to raise taxes by ending Trump’s 2018-28 $4.5T tax cuts for business and investors results in a loss of $2.7 trillion in US government tax revenues).

    Biden compromised with McCarthy as well on the subject of student loan forgiveness. In addition to preventing any student loan forgiveness, McCarthy wanted immediate restoration of student loan payments plus retroactive back interest added to loans during the Covid period moratorium. In exchange for McCarthy dropping these draconian proposals, Biden agreed to resume student loan payments this August 2023.

    Deficits and Debt Continue

    Previously it was noted that Neoliberal fiscal policy is fundamentally unconcerned with annual deficits and a rising national debt. That’s no less true in the current debt ceiling deal.

    McCarthy may brag that the agreement amounts to a $2.1 trillion reduction in non-defense spending over two years due to the freeze and 1% caps.  But the truth is that the annual deficits will continue to rise in the $1.5T to $2T per year range. Independent estimates are the US debt will continue to rise by $4 trillion by the end of the deal. That’s more than $35 trillion by the end of fiscal year 2025.  Interest on that debt that year will rise to approximately $600 billion, up from less than $3 trillion in 2019.

    The causes are obvious: No rescinding of Trump’s 2018 tax cuts (which the CBO estimates will add $2.7 trillion to the debt). Continued below historic average US GDP growth which reduces tax revenues as well. Third, an ever-rising Pentagon and Defense spending trajectory, as the US funds the Ukraine war while preparing for another, even bigger one in west Asia with China before the end of the decade.

    Debt Ceiling As Political Theater

    The US has raised the debt ceiling 78 times before the current negotiation. This writer has argued the recent negotiations are just a ‘debt ceiling dance’ and predicted it too will be raised, a 79th time. And it has.

    It’s virtually certain the deal will be approved by both the US House and Senate and signed by Biden by next weekend at the latest.  McCarthy’s margin in the House was a mere 217-215 vote in support of his initial proposals. By agreeing to a two year non-defense spending freeze and 1% caps—or in other words a $2.1 trillion and 18% discretionary spending cut—Biden clearly gave in far more than he needed to. One would have to conclude McCarthy and the Republicans came out ahead in the negotiations.

    The House will vote on the deal on Wednesday, June 1, 2023 and will likely pass it. The Senate will take a little longer but will pass it as well by the weekend. Biden will sign by the weekend. Thereafter, both sides will ‘spin’ the deal and exaggerate their claims. They’ll both hide behind a claim that the economic sky would have fallen in had they not agreed. A dubious claim at best.

    Then the real negotiations will begin. For the political theater surrounding the debt ceiling negotiations was in fact an attempt to renegotiate the Biden 2024 budget that commences next October 1, 2023. McCarthy simply used the debt ceiling issue to cut programs early. And he’ll come back for a second ‘bite of the apple’ at the end of this summer.

    And if Biden’s negotiating performance during the debt ceiling negotiations is any indicator, he’ll get even more concessions from Biden


    This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Jack Rasmus.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

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    President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy are urging lawmakers to support a deal to suspend the debt ceiling until January 1, 2025, in order to prevent the United States from defaulting on its debt for the first time in history. The two leaders reached a tentative agreement over the Memorial Day long weekend, but it must still be approved by Congress before a June 5 deadline, when the government is expected to run out of money to pay its bills. Both progressive lawmakers and members of the far-right House Freedom Caucus have expressed some opposition to the deal, which calls for nondefense discretionary spending to remain mostly flat while boosting military spending by about 3%. New work requirements would be established for some recipients of federal aid programs, and it cuts funding to the IRS and lifts a moratorium on student loan payments in place since the pandemic. The deal also speeds up the approval and construction of the proposed $6.6 billion Mountain Valley Pipeline in Virginia and West Virginia. We speak with Lindsay Owens, executive director of the Groundwork Collaborative and a former policy adviser to Senator Elizabeth Warren.


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

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