2023
June
20
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 20, 2023
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When a CBS reporter signed up to visit the Titanic on an OceanGate Expeditions voyage, he read aloud one key part of the waiver: “an experimental submersible vessel that has not been approved or certified by any regulatory body.”

That experimental vessel is now missing in the North Atlantic. Titan launched early Sunday morning and has not been heard from since communications were lost one hour and 45 minutes into the voyage. Five people are aboard, including the CEO of OceanGate, Stockton Rush. Titan had up to 96 hours of oxygen – on Tuesday, the U.S. Coast Guard estimated that about 40 hours were left.

Clearly, Mr. Rush felt the submersible – which he had built for this purpose – was safe. But while space-tourism outfits such as Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin navigate complex regulations, OceanGate operates in a space with greater freedom – and risk. For example, the submersible is operated by a repurposed video game controller.

The Titan crew includes Mr. Rush, a French diver who has visited the Titanic more than 30 times in other submersibles, and a British national who has captained a record-setting flight around the world and plunged to the Challenger Deep at the bottom of the Pacific, 36,000 feet down. It also includes a science-loving Pakistani billionaire and his son.

Frontiers once seen only by seasoned explorers and intrepid scientists are increasingly being opened by the power of the checkbook, with “traffic jams” on Mount Everest and chartered flights into space. OceanGate was at the vanguard of this trend, asking clients to trust its judgment in exchange for a glimpse of a legendary wreck. But as the lines between exploration and thrill-seeking blur, the incident raises questions about when the spirit of ingenuity passes the barriers of acceptable risk.


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Howard LaFranchi/The Christian Science Monitor
Ukrainian soldier Dmitry places a helmet on civilian Yvan Daniv's head after presenting him with the wing of a Russian drone, near the Donetsk village of Dachne, Ukraine, June 18, 2023.

Russian forces are well dug in to fend off Ukraine’s long-anticipated counteroffensive. So even as Ukrainian civilians speak of eventual victory, many soldiers are concerned that such hopes not reach unrealistic heights.

Wang Ye/Xinhua/AP
Chinese leader Xi Jinping (right) talks to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken during a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, June 19, 2023.

Trust between nations comes down to the alignment of words and actions. Talks held this week between top U.S. and Chinese officials provided an opportunity for clarity, and with it, a chance to rebuild relations.

The Explainer

The Hunter Biden plea deal comes from a longtime Department of Justice investigation. Yet the younger Mr. Biden, as an issue and political symbol, will likely figure in the presidential election race.

Graphic

Bilal Hussein/AP
Syrian children stand on a hill above a refugee camp in the town of Bar Elias, in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, on June 13, 2023.

World Refugee Day: A crisis tests individuals and nations

On World Refugee Day, our chart package highlights where displaced people are coming from – and heading to – as a United Nations report calls for more global action to help.

SOURCE:

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

A documentary about Afghan evacuees offers a window on the challenges many migrants face – and the lengths to which they will go to survive and thrive. 


The Monitor's View

When the interests of nations align, do values follow? That is the cautious hope in Washington as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrives this week on an official state visit.

As the world’s most populous country and fourth-largest economy, India has become an attractive partner for the West amid rising tensions with China and Russia. Yet under Mr. Modi, who rose to power nearly a decade ago, the country’s constitutional principles – like civic secularism and freedom of speech – are in retreat.

The former, however, may be providing corrective leverage to the latter. As India seeks to assert its newfound clout abroad, it is also acknowledging the primacy of international rules and norms.

“Our job today is to bring global awareness into the minds of Indians,” Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, India’s minister of external affairs, told The Economist last week. "To me, security is such an enormous landscape out there, a whole very intricate set of connections and interactions and relationships."

Mr. Modi arrives in Washington on strong political and economic tail winds. He is gliding toward reelection next year, his personal popularity soaring as a result of vigorous domestic investments in education, health care, and housing. Trade with the United States reached $191 billion last year, surpassing China to become India’s largest economic partner. India is negotiating a free trade agreement with the European Union. A similar accord with Australia went into effect late last year.

But his reception in the West is complicated firstly by his refusal to lessen India’s close ties with Moscow – Mr. Modi has steadfastly refused to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – and secondly by increasingly anti-democratic practices at home that have diminished the rights of women and religious minorities.

Those trends leave Western powers with a discomfiting choice, argues Daniel Markey, a South Asia expert at the United States Institute of Peace, in Foreign Affairs: Unless India changes, the West must “cooperate with India on the reality of shared interests, not on the hope of shared values.”

That is why Mr. Jaishankar’s acknowledgment matters. Transparency is the starting point for trustworthiness. In Beijing on Sunday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken emerged from meetings with leader Xi Jinping saying that “direct diplomacy is the best way to advance US interests and values and responsibly manage competition.”  In the way that nations speak to each other, his message may have been meant as much for Mr. Modi.

“When you speak of a world of trusted collaboration, because that’s the world we are heading towards, which countries will be able to work with which other countries?” Mr. Jaishankar asked. In Washington this week, the answer to that question may rest on whether President Joe Biden and his counterpart from India find common principles to build on.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

We can look to God for the peace of mind, inspiration, and strength to handle whatever challenges come our way in life – and to do so with patience and joy.


Viewfinder

Joan Mateu Parra/AP
Migrants from Eritrea, Libya, and Sudan try to make their way across the Mediterranean Sea in a wooden boat before being assisted by aid workers of the Spanish nongovernmental organization Open Arms, about 30 miles north of Libya, June 17, 2023. So far this year, about 73,000 migrants have arrived by sea to Spain, Italy, Malta, Greece, and Cyprus. Some 1,200 are estimated dead and missing, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for spending time with the Monitor Daily. Tomorrow, staff writer Laurent Belsie will look at whether humans should regulate the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence. We’ll examine the debate and the practical options, as some experts call for a pause to avoid unintended harm to society.

Also, please see our article on how a new rule that limits access to asylum in the United States is stirring debate on World Refugee Day. The U.S., traditionally a leader in offering refuge, received the world’s most asylum applications last year. You can read the article here.

More issues

2023
June
20
Tuesday

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