The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Monday, February 19, 2024
Episode Date: February 19, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 13:07)‘No Man, No Problem’: Russia Makes Totalitarian Dissenter Alexei Navalny Disappear—That... Is the Goal'Death Solves All Problems,' He Said by The New York Times (Richard Pipes)Kremlin Critic Aleksei Navalny Says Attack Left Him Mostly Blind in an Eye by The New York Times (Andrew E. Kramer)Part II (13:07 - 20:52)A Russian Killer Satellite? The Story Behind Russia’s Major New National Security Threat to the WestStatement from Chairman Mike Turner by TwitterRussia Using Thousands of Musk’s Starlink Systems in War, Ukrainian General Says by The Wall Street Journal (James Marson and Thomas Grove)Part III (20:52 - 28:01)Former President Trump’s Civil Fraud Verdict: Big Political and Moral Issues Are Driving the Story — And the U.S. Is Worse For ItTrump’s $355 Million Civil Fraud Verdict by The Wall Street Journal (The Editorial Board)Sign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
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It's Monday, February 19, 2024. I'm Albert Mowler, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Totalitarian regimes and dictators know how to deal with problems. They disappear. And when it comes to human beings, that often means they disappear by death, by murder, by assassination.
Joseph Stalin, perhaps the darkest of all of the dictators of the 20th century, put it this way. No man.
No problem. The disappearance of a man is not only the loss of a voice in history, it is often
an attempt to shore up a totalitarian regime from any outside threat, and quite frankly,
to send the message that anyone else who might pose such a threat is likely to meet the
very same end. In this case, of course, we're talking about Alexei Navalny, who died Friday
in a Russian penal colony in or near Siberia. He died a day after appearing to be extremely
healthy in a video appearance related to his legal situation. He died after prison authority said he had
taken a walk and then collapsed. In any situation, in which the main political opponent of an
autocrat at the head of a government, at any point when such a person should just disappear,
having been healthy, all the sudden, end up dead. That would raise a lot of eyebrows, and it would
raise huge questions. But in this case, let's be honest, we're talking about a documented,
continuing effort by the Russian regime to kill its most prominent political opponent.
The story behind this is just massively important.
Alexei Navalny was a figure born in 1976.
His father was a Red Army officer in the Soviet Union.
So he was raised within the context of the Soviet Union,
but he was a teenager when the Soviet Union came to an end.
He was a part of a rising generation in what had been the USSR and is now Russia,
a generation that confronted an open question as to what kind of country Russia was going to be.
You may recall, there were high hopes that with the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia would become
basically a nation among other nations, a normalized nation, even a European nation.
But all of that, of course, began to crash, and it came as a result of several different simultaneous developments.
For one thing, you had this massive disruption when the USS O'SO.
are collapsed. That disruption led to a couple of things. Number one, it led to many of the satellite
nations that have been imprisoned within the Soviet Union leaving. One of those nations was Ukraine.
You also had the development that there was a free-for-all. Russia's economy is and has long been
heavily dependent on what are called extraction industries. Those are sections of the economy.
Often it's referred to as extraction, which means you're taking them out of something and most
importantly out of the ground. This would include steel and core, all kinds of minerals that are mined
out of the earth. And of course, you also have oil. And given the massive landmass of Russia,
and it is an almost unimaginably large landmass, you're looking at massive opportunities for
extraction. You're looking at billions upon billions, trillions upon trillions of dollars. And you're
looking at a situation just made for corruption and for the rise of what amounts to organize crime. And that
is exactly what happened. And the shorthand for that, you may have heard throughout the Western
media is the Russian oligarchs. And that means oligarchs of the extraction economy by and large,
but of course other industries as well, including everything from high tech to sex trafficking.
All of that under the umbrella of the reach and the corruption of the oligarchs.
Now, Alexei Navalny was a part of a generation that was horribly offended by the corruption
that was reflected in the Russian government. And Navalny himself,
after being in various businesses, basically turned into an activist and something of a
self-made journalist in terms of exposés of the corruption among the Russian political and
economic elite. He also came to despise the deep and pervasive, even unhidden corruption of the
Russian regime. And that was true under Vladimir Putin, most importantly, but also under
Dimitri Medevaev, who served for a relatively brief period of time as a president in the interim
between Vladimir Putin serving in that post. But even then, Vladimir Putin was the power behind
the throne. He had himself made prime minister, and no one really doubted who the center of power was.
Navalny formed a political party along with others who were very concerned, wanting Russia to follow
a more democratic and, frankly, a less corrupt future. And Navalny himself ran for various
offices, including mayor of Moscow. He was not only telegenic. He also understood the new
communications environment. He was, and this is in contrast to other Russian leaders, he was a master of
social media. He knew how to engage the media. He knew how to speak to the West. He also knew how to
speak to the Russian people, most importantly, younger Russian people. As such, he posed a direct
and undeniable threat to Vladimir Putin and to the oligarchs and to the entire corrupt regime.
He named things for what they were. He exposed them, and he sought to organize opposition, believing
that the formation of opposition parties in Russia could eventually lead to the overthrow of the
corrupt regime. But instead, predictably, and given the history of Russia, following a very familiar
pattern, the regime struck back. There was not only harassment and attempts at cancellation and
at censorship, he also was attacked. He had an attack by poison or chemicals in his eyes,
and then came a massive attack in 2020. On a flight within Russia,
Alexei Navalnyi fell very ill and catastrophically this cascaded into a situation from which very few human beings would have survived.
Clearly he had been poisoned.
At the very same time, he and those around him knew that he had been followed for a matter of about a couple of years by a Russian agent,
who at that point wasn't even trying to hide his identity.
And all of a sudden the poisoning happened.
The jet landed.
Alexei Navalny was removed from the plane.
Very few people thought he would survive.
he was taken to a Russian hospital.
Eventually, his family and others, especially with Western pressure,
convinced Russia to allow a private effort to remove him from Russia
and take him to a hospital in Germany.
When he was in Germany, it was determined by German medical authorities
that he had been poisoned with a specific nerve agent known as Novichok.
Now, to state the matter clearly,
most perhaps listening to the briefing are not familiar with nerve agents.
they are the most toxic of all poisons.
Nerve agents, and these nerve poisons, are so, so deadly.
There's sometimes contact or even aspiration of a microscopic amount of the chemical
can lead to almost instant death, and if not, to death after ongoing agony.
These weapons have been considered so dangerous that in international treaties they have been
banned, and yet it is well known that the Russian army and Russian
armed forces have large stocks of these weapons.
And Novichok is one that it is fairly easy to document was in the possession of the Russian
army and its armed forces.
And it was a form of Novichok that was used against Alexei Navalny.
Given Western medical attention, Navalny did survive.
Very few people would have survived.
But that just goes into a history of this kind of political assassination in which, quite
frankly, the Soviet Union first, and then Russia, and this is connected to Vladimir Putin,
remember, he was a KGB officer. This was his craft. This was his assignment under the Soviet Union.
He knows how this is done. And Western political authorities do not believe that assassinations at this
level could take place without Vladimir Putin's personal authorization. The Soviet Union sent a very,
very clear signal that it would find you wherever you are if you were the enemy of the regime and
you had publicly embarrassed to the regime. And there were those who died of nerve agents and other
poisonings or other forms of assassination and murder, even in places such as London, which became
not only a place where many Russian dissidents had landed, but a place where, at least some of them,
were targeted. And there were very famous murders that took place.
all connected politically to the Kremlin, and there were other attempted murders that took place,
and one of the interconnecting issues here was often the use of this kind of nerve agent,
which appears to be a favored way of the KGB and of the current Russian regime of getting rid of its enemies.
Given that Western medical treatment in 2020, Navalny returned to health, and he also returned to voice.
What's most amazing is he also returned to Russia.
There were many of the time who were asking why Alexei Navalny would return to Russia and almost
certain imprisonment, if not worse. And now we know it was certain imprisonment and certain worse.
Navalny seemed to be driven by a patriotic impulse that he could not speak to the problems
in Russia if he was unwilling to be in Russia. And you can question the wisdom of that.
As you go to the Cold War and other periods during the 20th century, it can be an open question
as to whether or not a dissident like Alexei Navalny can or cannot be effective outside the country of concern.
But Alexei Navalny was a Russian patriot. He spoke openly, publicly in terms of his patriotism.
He returned to Russia because he wanted to lead in opposition. He wanted to lead to a democratic reform and uprising.
He spoke of being absolutely convinced that one day it would happen.
Now, that raises a very interesting question. Was Stalin right? No man? No person. No
problem. It is really clear that Vladimir Putin is the student of Joseph Stalin on that lesson.
But here's where Christians thinking this through need to understand one of the lessons of
history, which is unpredictability. As you look at something like this, you look at the
martyrdom in one sense, martyrdom for the cause of Russian democracy, Russian integrity,
of different Russian political future. As you look at an Alexei Navalny, does his death now
strengthen the Russian regime or does it weaken it?
Joseph Stalin's long-term bet was that the West would forget all these things out of political pressures and historical contingencies and move on.
And at least during his lifetime and during his reign of terror, that was apparently true.
Joseph Stalin experienced the West as a set of countries that would be vocal in opposition to the horrors of his regime until they needed him or until they needed to do business with him.
Vladimir Putin clearly is counting on the same thing.
On the other hand, it is also clear sometimes that a death like this can have very unintended consequences.
And those who shared the hopes of Alexei Navalnyi simply have to hope that there will be no way that the Kremlin can suppress the reality of what it has done,
and that somehow there will be a cumulative sense of moral outrage such that a younger generation perhaps will rebel against the corruption of the regime of Vladimir Putin.
The other thing that we know, and Christians know this, particularly so, is that Vladimir Putin can't live forever.
And so it may be that he is like Joseph Stalin. He dies in office, his horrible reign, basically to be undone and denied by successors, who, by the way, might well pick it up and do the same thing again.
Just a couple of final notes on this story. Number one, we probably will never, ever know exactly what was the cause of death.
of Alexei Navalny. And that is because his body is in Russia under the custody of Russia's
penal authorities. The likelihood that there will be any honest inquest that could reach an honest
determination of the cause of death is to state the very least. It's incredibly unlikely.
The second thing is that in the days to come and recall that Alexei Navalny died on Friday
and especially given the time difference, as you look at Europe and the United States dealing with this,
it really is going to be as if it is a fresh story this week in the media, and especially among government officials.
And so it's going to be very interesting to see what kind of statements are made,
what kind of actions are threatened or taken, and by the way, those are two very different things,
and how Russia responds to this, Vladimir Putin responds to this, if they respond to it at all.
If they follow the traditional Russian playbook, they will simply look to the camera with a blank stare.
Next, we'll be returning to the question of Russia and Ukraine in coming days, but right now I want to look at Russia in outer space.
Because unexpectedly, that also turned into a very big story as America went into the weekend.
And it emerged from a very strange and unprecedented source, a tweet from the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee.
Congressman Mike Turner, Republican of Ohio, chairman of the committee, posted on the 14th, quote,
Today the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence has made available to all members of Congress information concerning a serious national security threat.
I am requesting that President Biden declassify all information related to this threat so that Congress, the administration, and our allies can openly discuss the actions necessary to respond to this threat, end quote.
nothing like that, to my memory, has happened in American political history.
And this demonstrates a couple of things. Number one, the power of social media and the fact that
headlines have now sometimes just shifted from the mainstream media to social media.
But the second thing is, as this unfolded, it appeared at first as an effort undertaken by a Republican
committee chairman in the House to coerce the White House to release information it did not want to
release. There might be something to that angle. On the other hand, as the days unfolded, it appeared
that the Biden administration knew that the chairman was going to release this statement.
And quite frankly, when it comes to the kind of intrigue that takes place not so much within a
government, but among governments, and that includes the relationship right now between
the United States and Russia, there is probably more acting in concert than acting in
conflict on the American side. But after Wednesday,
and then Thursday and Friday, as events unfolded and information was released, it became very clear
that the big threat here is one documented by American intelligence, and that is that Russia has
developed and made capable a space weapon that is basically a very deadly anti-satellite killer.
And that means that the race to war in outer space is now continuing.
Perhaps by leaps and bounds, it's hard to say.
The United States authorities came back.
National Security White House spokespersons came out and said, look, this is not an imminent danger.
And even as there was the description of a nuclear element to this, they said this isn't so much a nuclear weapon as it is, well, they weren't really clear about what exactly it might be.
But it appears to be a Russian killer satellite.
Now, such a thing has been envisioned in the past. And of course, some of this has come, not so much from military history, but science fiction.
and you just look at Star Wars and look at so many of these, say, entertainment events of the 1970s and 80s,
the idea of a killer satellite was something, well, it's very James Bond-like, but it's also very real.
And this gets to another issue that many people have simply not been watching.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, a brutal aggression by Russia against its neighbor to the east,
led to a war that has come, as most major wars do, with some pretty big revelations about the present and future of war.
For one thing, on the lower level of technology, and if this is a low level, you can understand how high the high level is.
At the lower level of technology, one of the most effective lessons of the war between Russia and Ukraine is Ukraine's use of drones, a very strategic use of drones.
killer drones. And that means the little vehicles, which may cost just hundreds or thousands of dollars,
going to have a very big impact. And, you know, Ukraine has made that very clear with missiles
and with the drone attacks that are taking out major Russian naval vessels. And so this is no
longer just science fiction. This is now science fact, but that really changes the war. And by the way,
a little footnote here, that also means that just about anyone armed with this kind of weapon and the
knowledge of how to deploy it in war can pose a very deadly threat, even to a very big,
power. And so there's a warning to Goliath about any number of David, so to speak. But even as the
use of drones has been transformed in this war, and has transformed the war, at the high-tech end,
it is satellites. And in particular, it is Elon Musk Starlink system. A massive number of
satellites, a massive amount of information made available to those who have access to the system.
And for at least the early months of the war, it became very clear that it was Ukraine that had access to the system and that was invaluable in terms of assisting Ukraine and defending itself.
But now it is also clear that Russia is using Starlink, as the Wall Street Journal said, quote, in a big way, end quote.
The General's comments in an interview with the West, quote, suggests that Russia is starting to acquire Starlink terminals made by Elon Musk, SpaceX, at a scale that could cut into a major Ukraine.
battlefield advantage. Ukraine's government said last year that around 42,000 terminals are used by
the military hospitals, businesses, and aid organizations. Now, just get the next sentence.
Starlink, which is more secure than cellar radio signals, is considered so vital to Ukraine's
operations that the Pentagon took a deal with SpaceX last year to help fund access for Kiev's
forces. Up to now, Russian forces have had no similarly secure communication system, end quote.
Now, I think many Americans are frankly unaware of what Starlink is and what it represents.
So many satellites that you are looking at a system that is basically blanketing the sky at one level and to one extent with satellites that can cover anywhere on planet Earth with a privileged satellite-based communications capability that is more secure than anything that has existed before and, frankly, more impervious to earthly,
complications than ever before. So Elon Musk, and he's a story unto himself, an unfolding story,
who is in so many ways a pioneer in this area. He basically is the emperor of the air when it comes to
this Starlink system. So there are a couple of issues that arise here. Number one, Russia has developed
somehow related to nuclear threat to missiles orbiting the earth. And this poses a threat to our national
security such that the chairman of the House Select Committee on Intelligence, basically publicly
called upon the White House to declassify and at the very least to talk out loud about these
issues. And then you have the backup where people are saying, you know, they don't have the
capability to launch this thing right now, but it could be a game changer. But as the editors of
the Wall Street Journal make clear, the big point here is that the United States and its allies
are simply unprepared for war in outer space. And as it turns out, we have moved so much of
economy, we have moved so much of our communications, we've moved so much of our warfare into outer
space. How in the world do we not know that war was going to end up in outer space?
Now, from a Christian biblical perspective, just understand what this means. It means wherever human
beings go, sin goes. And so human beings can go into outer space with all kinds of highfaluting
ideals of how we're doing this in the name of humanity. And this is going to be a regime and an area of
peace. The next thing you know, there are defense satellites, killer satellites, dangerous satellites,
satellites used by the enemies of those very same things orbiting in the very same band.
But finally, for today, we simply have to go to an issue that also made huge headline news.
As the United States went into the weekend, it's been an incredibly intensive weekend in that sense.
This has to do with a verdict of $355 million against the former president,
of the United States, Donald Trump, for civil fraud. This took place in a New York City courtroom.
$355 million with interest, it could well total somewhere around $450 million. This on top of more
than $80 million in civil penalties already handed down against the former president.
Now, at this point, I simply want to say to listeners to the briefing, these are the hardest issues
for me to talk about, because when you talk about Donald Trump, you are talking about someone who is a
force unto himself, and when you talk about his enemies, they also are a force unto themselves.
And in one sense, they live off of each other. And as you look at this, we do recognize this is a
major blow to the former president. Regardless of how wealthy he is, virtually no one has
ready cash of around half a billion dollars for this kind of civil penalty judgment, or put together
these kinds of judgments. The other thing is that given the New York system is that even if he
appeals, he has to put up the money in order to press an appeal that makes the situation all
the more difficult. The verdict that was handed down in this case, which came down to the former
president and his company misrepresenting the value of real estate properties and the total
wealth of the Trump organization when it came to getting loans, and in particular, from the Deutsche
Bank. And even the allies of the former president will indicate that, yes, there were
misrepresentations. And yes, there were very, let's just say, optimistic valuations that were used
in order to gain advantage in securing loans at a lower interest rate. But here's the issue, though,
even though New York Attorney General Letitia James has gone after the former president on these grounds
and his company, and by the way, this verdict comes with a ban on the former president from
involvement in New York business, basically for about three years. It's a major blow to the Trump
organization and both of Trump's sons were also the recipients of judgments,
multimillion dollars judgments in this case, but nothing like the former president.
The fact is that it's hard to separate what is criminal here from what's political.
And I just want to state that straightforwardly.
We're in a situation where all of this is so intertwined that it is very difficult,
regardless of where you stand on Donald Trump or these issues, to separate them fully.
for one thing, the political is just so large in this.
Lettisha James had stated that if elected, she would seek to prosecute Donald Trump,
even though there was no specific charge.
And it is not healthy for our system of justice that you have prosecutors, including the
Attorney General of the State, who basically run on prosecuting someone else, even though
there is no specific charge.
In other words, you elect me, I'll find the charge, I'll prosecute him.
and that is a grave danger to our political system.
Donald Trump has known his own breaking of rules and his own flaunting of the system,
and in one sense you have these two opposing forces that now face off.
I think the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal in its weekend edition basically hit the issue
pretty squarely when they ran a piece by the editorial board.
Somebody saying Trump's 355 million civil fraud verdict, and underneath they put the judge
found he inflated his assets, but they ran a piece.
this penalty is unreal. And the former president and his supporters are coming back saying,
you know, a crime requires a victim. Who is the victim here? And that's going to be a very big
question. Who's the victim here? Because the company paid the loans that were at the center of
these charges. Deutsche Bank made money on the deal. They have not asked for the prosecution.
You're talking about the investment of millions upon millions of dollars in the name of the people
of New York in putting together this case. But it is going to try
the American system of government to figure out how in the world these things can be
rightfully adjudicated. In terms of appeal, this might go on for years. The editors of the journal
went on to question as to whether chief executive officers in New York, quote, might wonder
about doing business in a jurisdiction where elected politicians use the law to smash companies
this way, end quote. Thus far, many of these prosecutions have actually effectively helped the former
president and building political support for the 2024 Republican nomination and for the presidential
election. Will that continue? It's hard to say. But this much is really clear. And it appears to come
with a good biblical background in terms of our understanding. Donald Trump has at least
forged much of his political character by making enemies. That's been a part of his political
methodology. Up front, it's a part of what's made in popular.
But the downside of that is that he has very real political enemies,
and some of them are able to do very real damage.
None of this is good for the American people.
None of this is good for the American system of government.
None of this is good for the health of the American civilization.
The fact that all this is playing out in the midst of an American presidential election
just makes the issues all the more excruciating, all the more headline-grabbing,
and frankly, all the more uncertain.
All right, on a very different note,
I want to tell you about a course I'm going to be teaching at Southern Seminary and Boyce College.
I'm going to be teaching it in a modular course this spring, and I'm talking about it because I
want to invite you to join us. The class is entitled, 10 Battles that Define the Gospel, 20 centuries
that shaped and reshaped the Christian Church. We're going to go right into the heart of 2,000
years of theological controversies and how those controversies shaped and forged our understanding of
the Christian faith. We're going to look at 10 of the most significant theological controversies and battles
the churches face over the past two millennia.
We're going to start out with the formation of the New Testament, the development of New Testament
Christology, modern debates over sexuality and gender.
We're going to cover a lot of territory.
Just imagine, in between all of that are debates such as the Reformation.
This is really going to be interesting.
Our purpose, of course, is not just to understand the past, but to come to understand
our responsibility for defending and teaching and perpetuating the faith once for all delivered
to the saints in our generation.
The course is going to begin March 19. It's available to both on-campus and online students.
To learn more, just go to sbts.org.org.
That's one word, Mueller course. I hope to see you there.
Thanks for listening to the briefing. For more information, go to my website at Albertmuller.com.
You can follow me on Twitter by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Mueller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.bts.com.
For information on Voice College, just go to voicecollege.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for The Brief.
