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  • The Week Evening Review
    Colombia’s falling out with the U.S., the Taliban’s war on the internet, and Eurovision’s Israel boycotts

     
    In the Spotlight

    The US and Colombia renew their feud over the drug war

    Colombia has long battled a reputation associated with images of narcoterrorism and Pablo Escobar, but it has actually been in lockstep with the U.S. in fighting the war on drugs since the late 1990s. Now, however, the Trump administration has begun sparring with Colombia over its anti-drug efforts, saying the country has not done enough to stem the flow of illicit substances. Colombian officials have pushed back against the accusations, which could mark the end of close ties between the two countries.

    ‘Failed demonstrably’ to stop drugs
    Since President Donald Trump retook office, there has been “anxiety in Colombia, where soaring cocaine production has stoked fears of sweeping U.S. sanctions,” said NPR. While the White House has not yet imposed sanctions on Colombia, it did take the significant step of decertifying it as a drug control partner nation. This marks the first time since 1997 that it won’t be on that list. 

    Colombia has “failed demonstrably to meet its drug control obligations,” the U.S. Department of State said in a memorandum announcing the decertification. Trump chose to decertify Colombia because the country’s “coca cultivation and cocaine production have surged to all-time records” under Colombian President Gustavo Petro, who has been in office since 2022. The nation is indeed “behind a record-breaking year for the global cocaine market,” said NPR. 

    Hitting back
    Petro, Colombia's first democratically elected left-wing president, decried the decision by the U.S., arguing that it was not grounded in reality. Colombia has “seized 1,000 tons of cocaine this year and more than 5,000 cocaine-making laboratories,” Petro said on X. The U.S. is “simply participating in Colombia’s internal politics; it wants a puppet president. The Colombian people will respond.”

    But the rift means relations between the U.S. and Colombia have “frayed,” said Time. In response to Trump, Colombia has “suspended its arms purchases from the U.S” and made clear that it has “dedicated resources to combating cocaine production and trafficking.”

    There could also be bigger consequences for both nations, as the decision from the Trump administration is “likely to hit foreign investment, multilateral funding and tourism, as a long-time ally of Washington now finds itself in the same rogue category as Venezuela, Bolivia, Afghanistan and Myanmar,” said Bloomberg.

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    The Taliban bans high-speed internet

    For the first time since reassuming control of its country in 2021, Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban regime this week shut down huge swaths of internet access across multiple northern provinces, which contain the nation’s major population centers. The ban applies only to high-speed fiber-optic connections. But for many Afghans — particularly women — the move is the latest impediment to education and economic security imposed under the Taliban. As the Afghan government vows to expand the high-speed ban for the whole country, concerns have grown over the lasting effects of such a change.

    Why is high-speed internet being throttled?
    The crackdown on internet access comes after the Taliban released a “long set of rules governing morality” late last year, which mandated that women wear facial coverings and men grow beards, said Reuters. This new attempt to restrict access to the greater internet makes it more difficult for Afghans to “communicate, attend online classes and receive or send news,” said The Washington Post. 

    The ban “not only disrupts millions of citizens’ access to free information and essential services” but also “poses a grave threat to freedom of expression and the work of the media,” said the Afghanistan Media Support Organization in a statement to The Associated Press. Coming on the heels of the Taliban’s previous digital restrictions on certain social media platforms and pornography websites, and the education ban for girls, these latest measures “extend beyond media and entertainment, targeting women and girls in daily life,” said The Diplomat.

    Can the Afghan economy survive the ban?
    A complication is that the shutdown is “connected to a lingering competition for power” between the Taliban’s central authority in the city of Kandahar and the "more pragmatic officials" tasked with “day-to-day” governance in Kabul, said the Post.

    Any internet ban is “beyond my comprehension in such an advanced era,” said one resident of the northern province of Balkh to the AP, refusing to provide his name “for fear of Taliban reprisals.” Not only is the decision to throttle high-speed access in Balkh “absurd and unwise,” said former U.S. Special Representative to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad on X, but it will “undermine investment and development” while damaging the province’s economy and the country’s "prospects as a whole.”

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    $203 billion: The amount that U.S. tech companies have pledged to invest in the U.K., according to the British government. The move is part of a tech deal between Trump and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and the investment is expected to create about 7,600 jobs.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘Congrats to LimeWire for their winning bid for Fyre Fest. I look forward to attending their first event but will be bringing my own palette of water.’

    Canadian actor and entrepreneur Ryan Reynolds in a press release, after his production company, Maximum Effort, was outbid by LimeWire to purchase the rights to the Fyre Festival brand. Fyre Fest made global headlines in 2017 as a fraudulent and failed luxury music event that spawned memes and documentaries.

     
     
    TALKING POINTS

    Eurovision faces its Waterloo over Israel boycotts

    BBC Director-General Tim Davie has refused to say whether the corporation will take part in next year’s Eurovision, as the national broadcasters of Iceland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Spain threaten to boycott the song contest if Israel is allowed to participate. The European Broadcasting Union is consulting with members on how to “manage participation and geopolitical tensions” around next year’s event. 

    ‘Hypocrisy and division’
    It would be impossible to overlook the “double standards” if the European Broadcasting Union allowed Israel to compete after throwing out Russia in 2022 over the Ukraine invasion, said Pablo O’Hana at The Independent. Unless the EBU “rediscovers its backbone,” Eurovision risks becoming a “stage for selective storytelling, hypocrisy and division” at a time when our continent “most needs unity.”

    Azerbaijan was not suspended during its war in Nagorno-Karabakh nor Turkey during its incursions into northern Syria, even though both countries “initiated the wars they fought while Israel was attacked,” said Jack Simony at The Jerusalem Post. For Eurovision to single out Israel would be “undermining its own ethos” as a “festival of inclusion.” 

    A nation that’s “perpetrating genocide cannot continue to sing,” said Gideon Levy at Israeli daily Haaretz. The justification for Russia’s 2022 suspension was “considered self-evident,” and Israel’s conduct in Gaza has been “far crueller and more genocidal” than Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    ‘Awkward intersection’ 
    Boycotts and bans are “almost as old as the contest itself,” historian Tess Megginson said to Vox. In the 1970s, Greece and Turkey boycotted Eurovision over Turkey’s invasion of northern Cyprus. And while there were songs about “peace and unity and breaking down walls,” as Eastern European countries started joining in the 1990s, Yugoslavia was banned from the contest following the siege of Sarajevo. 

    More recently, the suspension of Russia symbolized the “awkward intersection of politics and culture at which Eurovision sits,” said Politico. This latest row is part of a wider European debate over “whether cultural bans on Israeli artists and athletes” are “proportionate responses to the war in Gaza” or risk “crossing into antisemitism.”

     
     

    Good day 🧐

    … for $5 words. Using longer words in an apology makes it seem more sincere, according to a study published in the British Journal of Psychology. “Longer words reflect effort and may be interpreted as expressing greater remorse,” said Dr. Sheri Lev-Ari, who led the study.

     
     

    Bad day 🥫

    … for Lake Erie. Campbell’s Soup has admitted to more than 5,400 violations of the Clean Water Act in northwest Ohio. It illegally dumped wastewater into the Maumee River, which feeds into the lake. This wastewater contains phosphorus, ammonia, E. coli bacteria, oil and grease waste, solid materials, and other pollutants.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Streets of rage

    A protester lights a flare in Marseille as hundreds of thousands of people join in a nationwide strike and mass demonstrations today against France’s draft budget. The government says cuts are needed to tackle the ballooning national debt, but unions condemned the “horror show” proposals.
    Miguel Medina / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week's daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    See art in a new way at these exhibitions

    When it comes to new museum exhibitions, this fall has it all — 19th-century American marine scenes, historical Black art, and manga. It’s sightseeing in a fresh way. 

    ‘Art of Manga,’ de Young Museum, San Francisco
    Manga, a style of Japanese comic books and graphic novels, is a “worldwide obsession,” said KQED, but “despite its ubiquity,” it’s rare to see the original drawings on display — until now. “Art of Manga” is the first major U.S. museum exhibition focusing on what goes into creating this work and includes more than 600 drawings from some of the most influential manga creators. (Sept. 27-Jan. 25)

    ‘Reimagine African American Art,’ Detroit Institute of Arts
    The Detroit Institute of Arts will christen its four new African American art gallery rooms with this assemblage of Black masterpieces from its collection. The “reimagined” galleries were moved to the “heart of the museum” to “better showcase” the contributions of local Black artists, said the Detroit Free Press. (opens Oct. 18)

    'Of Light and Air: Winslow Homer in Watercolor,' Museum of Fine Arts Boston
    The Museum of Fine Arts is home to the world's largest collection of watercolors by Winslow Homer, one of “America’s greatest artists” who with “just washes and brushes on paper” could “evoke profound emotions,” said Boston Magazine. “Of Light and Air: Winslow Homer in Watercolor” provides a rare look at almost 50 pieces that have been in storage and are “so fragile” they have not been exposed to daylight in nearly five decades. (Nov. 2-Jan. 10)

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    Over a third of Americans (35%) think a college education is “very important,” according to a Gallup survey of 1,094 adults. This is lower than the 53% who believed college is very important in 2019 and significantly lower than the 70% who felt the same in 2013.

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today's best commentary

    ‘An attack on diplomacy itself’
    Mohammed bin Abdulaziz Al-Khulaifi at The Washington Post
    Qatar has been a “trusted mediator in some of the world’s most complex conflicts,” says Mohammed bin Abdulaziz Al-Khulaifi. Israel’s missile attack on Doha last week “violated the most basic principles of sovereignty and nonintervention enshrined in international law.” If “mediators can be bombed with impunity, then who will host peace talks? Without safe channels for diplomacy, war becomes the only option, civilization recedes, and the rule of law is replaced with brute force.”

    ‘The podcast presidency’
    Noah Rothman at the National Review
    We have “ample evidence to support the conclusion that Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night show was placed on ‘indefinite’ hiatus for cause,” says Noah Rothman. It’s “not beyond the realm of comprehension that ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’s network and affiliates were genuinely put off by the host’s initial comments.” We “can at least hold out the possibility that a private firm with a fiduciary responsibility to investors and shareholders would take a dim view of such conduct in any employee.”

    ‘“SNL” cast exits highlight cracks in the show’s armor’
    Jason Bailey at Bloomberg
    Recent cast exits “highlight two cracks in ‘SNL’s armor — cracks that deserve more attention but that creator and long-time producer Lorne Michaels seems intent on ignoring,” says Jason Bailey. “SNL” is “no longer the trampoline that propels comedy stars to bigger and better things” because of the “splintering of a once-homogenous comedy culture that helped ‘SNL’ become ubiquitous in popular culture.” Michaels should “take a hard look at his creation and acknowledge the role he has played.”

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    orforglipron

    A GLP-1 weight-loss drug in oral pill form being trailed by drug manufacturer Eli Lilly. It works similarly to injectable drugs like Mounjaro, Ozempic, Wegovy and Zepbound, said Reuters, and could get a fast-tracked FDA approval by the end of the year.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Justin Klawans, Summer Meza, Chas Newkey-Burden, Rafi Schwartz and Anahi Valenzuela, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Sardar Shafaq / Anadolu Agency / Getty Images; Fabrice Coffrini / AFP / Getty Images; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
     

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