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The NFL will be doing something it has never done before when it starts the 2024 regular season: have an international game.

Speaking at his annual press conference on Super Bowl Opening Night, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell announced the Philadelphia Eagles will be the host team in the league’s first game in Brazil, and it will be playing on Friday night of Week 1. Philadelphia’s opponent was not revealed.

With the announcement, the NFL will have its season kickoff on Thursday, Sept. 5, the Brazil game the following day and games on that Sunday and Monday.

‘The Eagles organization is honored to have been selected to play in the first-ever National Football League game in South America,’ Eagles chairman and chief executive officer Jeffrey Lurie said in a statement. ‘With the global growth of our sport being a top priority to our league, we embrace the opportunity to grow our fanbase around the world and bring Eagles football to the 38 million sports fans in Brazil. As one of the world’s most culturally diverse nations, Brazil is an international melting pot, and we look forward to experiencing its warm, vibrant and welcoming environment later this year.’

The Brazil game, which will be played at Corinthians Arena in the city of São Paulo, will be the latest international game added to the NFL’s schedule. The game in São Paulo will be one of five international regular-season games next season. Three games will be played in London, with Tottenham Hotspur Stadium hosting two games and Wembley Stadium hosting a Jacksonville Jaguars home game. Another game will be played in Germany, with the league returning to Allianz Arena in Munich.

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

2024 NFL international game home teams

The NFL had previously announced which will be the host teams of each international game. The teams are:

Philadelphia Eagles: São Paulo, Corinthians Arena
Chicago Bears: London, Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
Minnesota Vikings: London, Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
Jacksonville Jaguars: London, Wembley Stadium
Carolina Panthers: Munich, Allianz Arena

The NFL will continue to expand its international game series in the future; the NFL owners recently approved an increase in international games beginning in 2025, meaning up to eight regular-season games can be played outside of the U.S. in a season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Brock Purdy has led the San Francisco 49ers to Super Bowl 58, but it very well could hae been another signal-caller leading the team to Las Vegas: Tom Brady.

Heading into the 2023 season, there were a lot of questions of who would be San Francisco’s quarterback with Purdy and 2021 first-round pick Trey Lance each coming off injuries. Purdy was the assumed starter, but after he suffered an elbow injury in the NFC championship game last season, there were questions as to whether the second-year passer would be ready by the start of the new season.

As a result, there were rumors the 49ers considered reaching out to Brady about coming out of retirement. Turns out they weren’t just rumors, but something head coach Kyle Shanahan actually considered after evaluating and speaking to Purdy about his injury.

‘Yes, I was serious about it,’ Shanahan told NBC in a story published Monday. ‘As we talked, I’m looking at Brock, and he’s got his arm in a sling, and I really am not sure I’ve got a quarterback who’s going to be ready for the start of the 2023 season. That started all of this.

‘I mean, if Brock never got hurt, this wouldn’t have been a consideration at all. I’d never have brought it up. But I’ve got to think about the team. What if he’s not ready in September?’

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

Shanahan also revealed he had talked to Purdy about the possibility of the seven-time Super Bowl champion joining the team, telling him it was giving him the ‘biggest compliment.’

‘I let him know he’s our guy long-term. No question. And if Tom Brady wanted to come here and start for one year, that’s the only way you’re not starting when you’re healthy this year. That’s pretty cool,’ Shanahan said. ‘I wanted to assure him, ‘Don’t worry. You’re our guy. But how cool would it be if Tom Brady would be the quarterback here for one season? How cool would it be for you to learn from him?”

Ultimately, Brady didn’t join the 49ers. Still, San Francisco can’t hate where it’s at right, playing in its second Super Bowl in five seasons and going for its first Lombardi Trophy since the 1994 season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The London (Ontario) Police Service confirmed the names of the five hockey players charged with sexual assault in a 2018 case and said Monday that one player faces two charges.

New Jersey Devils forward Michael McLeod faces the two charges. The others facing a single sexual assault charge are Philadelphia Flyers goalie Carter Hart, Devils defenseman Cal Foote, Calgary Flames forward Dillon Dube and former Ottawa Senators player Alex Formenton.

Those players, who are on leave from their teams, were in London, Ontario, in 2018 at a Hockey Canada gala honoring the gold-medal-winning world junior championship team.

‘After the event, the accused and several teammates met the victim at a downtown bar and later invited her to a hotel room, where the sexual assault by the individuals now charged took place,’ police chief Thai Truong said in a news conference.

The police department’s initial investigation closed in February 2019 without any charges. It was reopened in July 2022, two months after Canadian network TSN reported that May that Hockey Canada paid an undisclosed settlement to a woman who alleged in a $3.55 million lawsuit that she was sexually assaulted by eight players in a hotel room.

‘I want to extend, on behalf of the London Police Service, my sincerest apology to the victim, to her family for the amount of time that it has taken to reach this point,’ Truong said.

What else did police say?

They said they couldn’t discuss the evidence in the case or its review of the department’s initial investigation because the matter is before the courts.

Detective Sgt. Katherine Dann of the police department’s Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Section said additional witnesses were spoken to and additional evidence was collected starting in 2022.

‘I can confirm that some of this evidence was not available when the investigation concluded in 2019,’ she said. ‘This is one investigation, not two. The evidence that was collected in 2018 and 2019 was used in combination with newly gathered evidence to form reasonable and probable grounds to charge these five individuals with sexual assault.’

She also explained the second charge against McLeod for being a party to the offense.

‘The one charge he is laid with is in relation to his own actions and the party to the offense charge is in relation to aiding someone else in committing the offense,’ she said before adding that she couldn’t provide details.

Hockey Canada launched an independent investigation in 2022 as did the NHL. Both of those investigations have been completed, though findings haven’t been released.

Dann said the multiple investigations did ‘add complexity to the case.’

Though the woman in her lawsuit mentioned eight players, Dann said, ‘We have laid out the charges that we have reasonable grounds for at this time.’

Where does the court case stand?

The first court hearing in the case was Monday and the next hearing will be April 30, according to the Associated Press.

It said prosecutors obtained an order protecting the identity of the woman as well as that of two witnesses.

Lawyers told the AP that their clients are not guilty and will defend themselves against the allegations.

What did NHL commissioner Gary Bettman say at All-Star weekend?

The league’s independent investigator talked to every member of the 2018 team but didn’t get permission to talk to the woman, he said.

Bettman said the league wouldn’t reveal its findings while the case is going on and wouldn’t decide on a response until after the court case has concluded.

He noted that the four NHL players are on leave and are free agents at season’s end.

‘I would be surprised if they’re playing while this is pending,’ Bettman said.

What did Hockey Canada say?

The 2022 TSN report led to a major shakeup at Hockey Canada. The organization said Monday it has cooperated with the London police and would continue to do so but would have no comment during the legal proceedings.

An external report has been completed but an appeal was filed in November. Until that is heard, all players from the 2018 national junior team are ineligible to play, coach, officiate or volunteer with Hockey Canada-sanctioned programs.

Hockey Canada said it requires training on sexual violence and consent and has taken other steps.

“Hockey Canada recognizes that in the past we have been too slow to act and that in order to deliver the meaningful change that Canadians expect of us, we must work diligently and urgently to ensure that we are putting in place the necessary measures to regain their trust, and provide all participants with a safe, welcoming and inclusive environment on and off the ice,” said Katherine Henderson, president and chief executive officer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The London (Ontario) Police Service confirmed the names of the five hockey players charged with sexual assault in a 2018 case and said Monday that one player faces two charges.

New Jersey Devils forward Michael McLeod faces the two charges. The others facing a single sexual assault charge are Philadelphia Flyers goalie Carter Hart, Devils defenseman Cal Foote, Calgary Flames forward Dillon Dube and former Ottawa Senators player Alex Formenton.

Those players, who are on leave from their teams, were in London, Ontario, in 2018 at a Hockey Canada gala honoring the gold-medal-winning world junior championship team.

‘After the event, the accused and several teammates met the victim at a downtown bar and later invited her to a hotel room, where the sexual assault by the individuals now charged took place,’ police chief Thai Truong said in a news conference.

The police department’s initial investigation closed in February 2019 without any charges. It was reopened in July 2022, two months after Canadian network TSN reported that May that Hockey Canada paid an undisclosed settlement to a woman who alleged in a $3.55 million lawsuit that she was sexually assaulted by eight players in a hotel room.

‘I want to extend, on behalf of the London Police Service, my sincerest apology to the victim, to her family for the amount of time that it has taken to reach this point,’ Truong said.

What else did police say?

They said they couldn’t discuss the evidence in the case or its review of the department’s initial investigation because the matter is before the courts.

Detective Sgt. Katherine Dann of the police department’s Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Section said additional witnesses were spoken to and additional evidence was collected starting in 2022.

‘I can confirm that some of this evidence was not available when the investigation concluded in 2019,’ she said. ‘This is one investigation, not two. The evidence that was collected in 2018 and 2019 was used in combination with newly gathered evidence to form reasonable and probable grounds to charge these five individuals with sexual assault.’

She also explained the second charge against McLeod for being a party to the offense.

‘The one charge he is laid with is in relation to his own actions and the party to the offense charge is in relation to aiding someone else in committing the offense,’ she said before adding that she couldn’t provide details.

Hockey Canada launched an independent investigation in 2022 as did the NHL. Both of those investigations have been completed, though findings haven’t been released.

Dann said the multiple investigations did ‘add complexity to the case.’

Though the woman in her lawsuit mentioned eight players, Dann said, ‘We have laid out the charges that we have reasonable grounds for at this time.’

Where does the court case stand?

The first court hearing in the case was Monday and the next hearing will be April 30, according to the Associated Press.

It said prosecutors obtained an order protecting the identity of the woman as well as that of two witnesses.

Lawyers told the AP that their clients are not guilty and will defend themselves against the allegations.

What did NHL commissioner Gary Bettman say at All-Star weekend?

The league’s independent investigator talked to every member of the 2018 team but didn’t get permission to talk to the woman, he said.

Bettman said the league wouldn’t reveal its findings while the case is going on and wouldn’t decide on a response until after the court case has concluded.

He noted that the four NHL players are on leave and are free agents at season’s end.

‘I would be surprised if they’re playing while this is pending,’ Bettman said.

What did Hockey Canada say?

The 2022 TSN report led to a major shakeup at Hockey Canada. The organization said Monday it has cooperated with the London police and would continue to do so but would have no comment during the legal proceedings.

An external report has been completed but an appeal was filed in November. Until that is heard, all players from the 2018 national junior team are ineligible to play, coach, officiate or volunteer with Hockey Canada-sanctioned programs.

Hockey Canada said it requires training on sexual violence and consent and has taken other steps.

“Hockey Canada recognizes that in the past we have been too slow to act and that in order to deliver the meaningful change that Canadians expect of us, we must work diligently and urgently to ensure that we are putting in place the necessary measures to regain their trust, and provide all participants with a safe, welcoming and inclusive environment on and off the ice,” said Katherine Henderson, president and chief executive officer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LAS VEGAS – Who ya got?

My unofficial greeter upon arrival Sunday night, let’s call him the cabbie from Lane 4, was surely feeling the Super Bowl vibe as we headed to my hotel off The Strip.

A taxi driver confession: ‘I put $300 on the Chiefs,’ he revealed. ‘My buddy bet $3,000,’ he added. ‘Last year, he won $10,000 on the Super Bowl.’

That is so Vegas. Such are the legendary tales weaving through this tourist trap and epicenter of the gambling industry.

Why Kansas City? Never mind that the San Francisco 49ers are favored by 1-1/2 points. Cabbie has a theory that goes beyond the brilliance of Patrick Mahomes.

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

‘The NFL is not going to let them lose,’ he insisted. ‘Not with Mahomes and Taylor Swift.’

Here we go. Minutes into the week in Sin City and we’ve already heard a Swiftie-laced suggestion that Super Bowl 58 is rigged. It’s no wonder that ‘integrity’ is the word of the week for the NFL.

‘The integrity, that’s always going to be at the forefront,’ Mark Davis, the Las Vegas Raiders owner, told USA TODAY Sports.

And conspiracy theories will be there, too, sharing the stage.

Granted, integrity is always a concern for the NFL on any given week and in any given city. But the optics of the NFL staging its signature event in a place dominated by casinos and sportsbooks can fuel some serious imagination.

Given the stakes of the game on Sunday and a huge audience that could top the 115 million viewers of last year’s Super Bowl, the loss of integrity is seemingly the biggest risk for the NFL.

Let somebody muff a key pass or drop a phantom penalty flag. In Vegas, of all places. Conspiracy theories could spread like wildfire, or given this age of social media buzz, go viral. Baseless or not.

‘While Las Vegas is a symbol because it’s had sports gambling for quite some time, it’s also a very sophisticated city and mature city as it relates to engagement with the NFL and other sports,’ Jeff Miller, an NFL executive vice president, said during a Zoom conference last week. ‘At this point, that makes us very comfortable playing a game there.’

It’s also a city that was taboo for the NFL for many decades, with the league shunning even the hint of an association with the gambling industry in the name of integrity. It wasn’t too long ago that the NFL shut down a fantasy football conference here in 2015 that was to be hosted by then-Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, because it was to be staged in a casino.

My, how things have changed. And not just because Romo will be on hand as the lead analyst for the broadcast. Since the U.S. Supreme Court in 2018 struck down restrictions that opened the floodgates to legalized betting across the nation – gambling is legal in 38 states and the District of Columbia – the NFL has become more than a willing player as its revenues continue to soar.

The most popular sports league has embraced gambling – the league has three casino and sportsbooks partners and most, if not all NFL franchises, have sponsorships with gambling entities – with a pronounced philosophical shift.

‘We’re adapting to what the environment is,’ NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said during the last NFL owners meeting in December. ‘And it’s got great benefits in the context of fan engagement. A lot of our fans like to bet.’

Great benefits. Clearly, the NFL’s philosophy swing has follow-the-money roots. While it should be noted that the league doesn’t earn money by getting a cut from wagers placed on games, prop bets, fantasy plays and the like, the American Gaming Association has estimated that the NFL and its franchises earn $2.3 billion per year in revenues such as sponsorships linked to legalized betting.

What a parlay. And it comes with the league going all-in on Las Vegas. Since the Raiders moved here from Oakland in 2020, lured by a sweetheart stadium deal, the league has staged the NFL draft and the Pro Bowl Games here. Now there’s an expectation that this is just the first Super Bowl, with the city potentially becoming part of the rotation of desired sites.

‘Pile up manure … not smell it in the castle’

Goodell has maintained that he is ‘completely comfortable’ with the site of this year’s showcase game, ‘other than the normal anxiety I have before any Super Bowl of getting it right.’

It’s striking when considering that Goodell’s predecessor, Paul Tagliabue, who retired in 2006, was so adamant in his opposition that the NFL put a franchise here.

Tagliabue, who played in a college basketball game for Georgetown in the early 1960s that was later revealed to be influenced by point-shaving, has long been sensitive to threats to the integrity of games because of gambling.

‘I was always opposed to it, the gambling stuff,’ Tagliabue said. ‘And I didn’t want to have a team in Las Vegas.’

Goodell once harbored similar sentiments about the association with gambling, although he was never known to oppose having an NFL franchise here. In 2012, he made a clip-and-save statement in testifying before Congress that if gambling were legally liberalized, ‘normal incidents such as bad snaps, dropped passes, turnovers, penalties and play-calling inevitably will fuel speculation, distrust and accusations of point-shaving and game-fixing.’

Well, a dozen years later, with gambling widely legalized, the NFL is undoubtedly pressed as a matter of routine business to ensure that its games are legit. 

Edwards sees the NFL and college sports as being in the same boat when it comes to this issue.

‘They say, ‘We’re going to discipline our players and coaches,’ ‘ Edwards said. ‘Well, what about the player’s father? What about the player’s uncle? What about the player’s classmate who has somehow managed to lay down a $5,000 bet to not meet the spread? ‘You drop that pass and there’s a piece of this for you, too. I stand to make $10,000.’ ‘

No, there have been no known allegations that NFL games have been tampered with –even with the usual spate of controversial calls by officials. That’s good for the NFL. Yet the threat of a scandal, real or imagined, looms.

While the NFL points to education efforts about its policy that extend far beyond players (the league said more than 17,000 people in its ecosystem have received training) and acknowledges the role of state gaming authorities in helping to monitor activities, the suspensions still constitute a red flag. And with the large volume of bets in so many places, it’s not just Vegas that the league needs to be concerned with. Gambling has come a long way since it was just Las Vegas and an illegal gambling underworld.

‘The challenge is the same,’ Miller said of the evolution. ‘We have to make sure that people see the game and value the integrity of the game in the same way that they had before.’

A tip: If there’s a prop bet for how many times Goodell and other league officials use the word ‘integrity’ this week, take the over.

‘Everything changes with time,’ Los Angeles Chargers owner Dean Spanos, a part-time Las Vegas resident, told USA TODAY Sports as he pondered the philosophy shift. ‘And I think the emphasis right now with the change is really on what the most important thing should be, which is the integrity of the game. We need to ensure that we never lose the integrity of the game.’

With a large number of NFL players who are not participating in the game expected to converge on the Super Bowl, this could be quite the place for monitoring compliance with the gambling policy. While it may seem clear-cut that players can’t bet on NFL games (or place prop bets), they are prohibited from entering a sportsbook … except, of course, if they happen to pass through on the way to the casino or some other entertainment venue.

And it’s not just the players subject to the long arm of the NFL law. On Thursday, Goodell sent clubs a memo addressing compliance with the gambling policy for non-player personnel – including team owners, executives, coaches and staff – during Super Bowl week. As is the case with players, they are prohibited from betting on the Super Bowl.

As for Goodell’s staff at the league office? No gambling of any kind at any time while in town for the Super Bowl, as well as any additional time they may choose to spend in Las Vegas after the game.

Goodell put it this way in the memo: ‘With fans across the globe tuning into the game and related events, we must all do our part to protect the integrity of our game and avoid even the appearance of improper conduct.’

Like Mahomes and Christian McCaffrey, integrity is ramping up for its biggest game of the season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Kansas City Royals have made shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. the highest-paid player in franchise history.

The team announced Monday that Witt agreed to an 11-year contract extension, with three additional team options that could keep him in a Royals uniform through the 2037 season.

A person with direct knowledge of the details confirmed to USA TODAY Sports the initial 11-year pact will be worth just under $288.77 million (approximately $26.25 million AAV), with an additional $89 million possible if all three options are exercised. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because terms of the contract were not released publicly.

Witt also has the ability to opt out of the contract each year from 2030 to 2033.

Witt, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2019 draft, had a breakout year in 2023, his first full season as Kansas City’s everyday shortstop. He hit .276 with 30 home runs and 49 stolen bases — and finished seventh in the American League MVP voting.

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

Witt, 23, is the son of former major league pitcher Bobby Witt, who played 16 seasons with seven different teams and won a World Series ring in his final year as a member of the Arizona Diamondbacks.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The new USA TODAY Sports men’s basketball coaches poll is out, and as one might expect given all the significant showdowns last weekend, it looks quite a bit different than it did a week ago.

The top three teams, however, remain the same as No. 1 Connecticut and No. 2 Purdue continue to monopolize the first place votes. The top-ranked Huskies claim 25 of them, with the Boilermakers getting the other seven. North Carolina, which bounced back from a midweek loss at Georgia Tech with an impressive win against archrival Duke, stays put at No. 3.

Kansas surges up five places and moves ahead of Houston at No. 4 after beating the Cougars on Saturday. Tennessee, which lost earlier in the week to South Carolina, falls just one position to No. 6 thanks to Saturday’s win at Kentucky. That result also knocked the Wildcats out of the top 10, as they tumble seven spots to No. 15.

Marquette, one of just four top-10 teams that did not lose at least once during the week, climbs to No. 7. Another group of Wildcats, Arizona, replaces Kentucky at No. 8, and Wisconsin and Duke round out the top 10.

Alabama is the big mover of the week. Now alone atop the SEC standings, the Crimson Tide climb six places to No. 16. No. 11 Auburn and No. 13 Baylor each gain five positions.

Surging South Carolina makes its season debut in the poll, checking in at No. 20. San Diego State also moves back in at No. 24. New Mexico dips five places but hangs on to the No. 25 slot, just three points ahead of Saint Mary’s.

Oklahoma and TCU fall out after another hard week of Big 12 competition.

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Republican South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott has responded to Donald Trump’s consideration of him as his vice presidential running mate for the general election in November, telling Fox News Digital his top priority was ensuring the former president beats Joe Biden.

Trump revealed to Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo over the weekend he is considering Scott, along with South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, while detailing what criteria he’d like to see in a running mate.

‘The only thing I can tell you is that the one thing we need is four more years of President Donald Trump,’ Scott told Fox News Digital on Monday.

‘We were better off under Trump. In order for us to be successful, the one thing I can’t afford to do is take my eye off the ball. The eye on the ball means making sure that President Trump gets four more years,’ he added.

After revealing his criteria for a running mate, which included ensuring the individual would be able to step up and handle the presidency in the case of an emergency, Trump said he likely won’t announce a vice presidential pick ‘for a little while.’

‘What criteria are you using to identify who your running mate is?’ Bartiromo asked.

‘Always, it’s got to be who is going to be a good president. Obviously, you always have to think that because in case of emergency. Things happen, right? No matter who you are, things happen. That’s got to be No. 1,’ Trump said.

‘Who is your running mate?’ Bartiromo said.

‘Well, I have a lot of good people. I have a lot of good ideas,’ he added, saying he ‘talks to everybody.’

‘You know, I called [South Carolina Sen.] Tim Scott and people like Tim Scott, and I said you’re a much better candidate for me than you are for yourself,’ Trump said. ‘When I watched him, he was fine. He was good, but he was very low-key.’

‘I watched him in the last week, defending me and sticking up for me and fighting for me. I said, ‘Man, you’re a much better person for me than you are for yourself,” he continued.

Trump went on to praise Noem as well, noting that she said publicly that she would never run against him ‘because I could never beat him.’

Trump denied reports that his campaign reached out to independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to explore a potential ticket with him early on in the campaign season. Trump said the interaction ‘never happened.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Biden’s first three years in office have forced him to confront numerous foreign policy challenges, leading to mixed reviews from experts on how well the president has responded on the world stage.

‘One of the most important accomplishments of the Biden administration has been re-invigorating NATO, which is the most successful military alliance in U.S. history,’ David Tafuri, a foreign policy analyst who served as a foreign policy adviser to the Obama campaign, told Fox News Digital. ‘The future of NATO was in question during Trump’s administration.’

Tafuri’s comments come as Biden faces multiple international crises ahead of his reelection bid in November, including Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, a war in Gaza, and continued tense relations with adversaries such as Iran and China.

To date, Tafuri said the president has demonstrated an improved foreign policy over that of former President Trump’s administration, a comparison that could weigh heavily again as the former president seeks to solidify his grasp on the Republican nomination for president and set up a rematch with Biden.

When it comes to rebuilding the alliance with NATO, Tafuri said Trump ‘openly discussed withdrawing from NATO’ and ‘openly feuded with other NATO members and flirted with [Russian President] Vladimir Putin,’ something that only worked to embolden Russia.

‘Trump’s encouragements to Putin and attempt to blackmail [Ukrainian President Volodymyr] Zelenskyy by withholding weapons from Ukraine (for which he was impeached by the House of Representatives), more than anything Biden did, led to the Russian invasion of Ukraine,’ Tafuri said. ‘Now, the front line for protecting democracy and rule of law runs through eastern and southern Ukraine.’

Tafuri also lauded Biden’s handling of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, noting that the president was well ahead of Putin’s plans and began readying Ukraine and allies to respond to the invasion months in advance.

‘This gave Ukraine and its allies time to prepare for the invasion, which proved crucial in Ukraine’s early success in defending Kyiv as well as most of the territory that Russia thought it would be able to occupy,’ Tafuri said. ‘Biden led NATO to work more collaboratively than it has in decades to provide billions of dollars in aid and sophisticated weapons systems to Ukraine, again flustering Russia’s intentions.’

But Ian Bremmer, the president of Eurasia Group, said that as the war in Ukraine drags on it is getting harder for Biden to claim it as a win.

‘A year ago, maybe even six months ago, you would have said Russia/Ukraine’ was a foreign policy win for Biden, Bremmer told Fox News Digital, noting that the U.S. was ‘leading a multilateral coalition of all the NATO allies to put 11 rounds of sanctions on Russia’ but also provided ‘unprecedented amounts of support for Ukraine’ that helped the country in its early battlefield successes.

 

‘Unfortunately, the last few months have made it much harder to say that’s a win, in part because Zelenskyy is looking weaker and more desperate and his counteroffensive didn’t go well,’ Bremmer said.

Bremmer also pointed to the fact that Biden has been unable to maintain unity among European allies as the conflict drags on, while at home the president has also faced division and questions from Republicans about the continued heavy spending on Ukraine.

‘That makes it harder for him to maintain his commitment to do as much as necessary, whatever it takes as long as it takes,’ Bremmer said.

Despite the setback, Bremmer said Biden has contributed to multiple foreign policy accomplishments in his three years in office. Aside from the improvement in relations with NATO allies, Bremmer pointed to Biden’s work strengthening ties between two critical allies in Japan and South Korea.

‘They were basically at each other’s throats and not engaging diplomatically … hurting their economic and security relationship,’ Bremmer said. ‘The U.S. facilitated a breakthrough, hosted a trilateral meeting at Camp David, and since then, you’ve had dozens of high-level trilateral engagements on the economic side, diplomatic side and security side.’

Bremmer likened the breakthrough to the Abraham Accords that were negotiated under Trump, an agreement that normalized relations between Israel, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.

‘It’s that scale of a win,’ Bremmer said.

Another accomplishment Bremmer pointed to was Biden’s handling of China, arguing that the president has facilitated a ‘more functional and more stable’ relationship with one of America’s largest adversaries.

Bremmer said the U.S. has ‘not given up anything that matters’ when dealing with China under Biden, noting that those tariffs remain where they were under the Trump administration, yet the U.S. has been able to secure export controls on ‘semiconductors, cloud computing, the CHIPS Act and the chips agreement with the Netherlands, South Korea and Japan.’

‘That is coordinating U.S. industrial policy and probably the most strategically important part of the advanced economy,’ Bremmer said.

Bremmer noted that coordinating with the advanced economy also ‘underpins artificial intelligence,’ a technology that the Chinese are ‘way back’ on.

While Bremmer cautioned that there should be no ‘false sense’ that the U.S. and China suddenly have a ‘relationship of trust,’ he said Biden’s moves have forced China to negotiate in some areas from a ‘position of weakness,’ making them more willing to meet U.S. demands. This has resulted in other wins such as an agreement for the Chinese to shut down exports of ingredients used to make fentanyl in the U.S. and the stopping of Chinese harassment of American aircraft.

While complex issues remain when it comes to China, Bremmer said Biden has positioned the U.S. well to deal with those challenges.

The same might not be able to be said about the Middle East, Bremmer said, noting that the region has been an obvious place of ‘struggle’ for the administration.

‘The big breakthrough in the Middle East in the last three years was facilitated by China, not the U.S.,’ Bremmer said. ‘It was the Saudi, Iran breakthrough … the Americans were completely on the sidelines and kind of surprised by that.’

Bremmer also pointed to the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, which he said was ‘mishandled’ by Biden despite being given a tough situation by previous administrations.

‘Still, Biden mismanaged the withdrawal and did it unilaterally without engaging properly with allies,’ Bremmer said. ‘Of course, the visuals in particular were incredibly embarrassing as the U.S.-supported government folded, collapsed almost immediately.’

Meanwhile, Bremmer noted the lack of progress made between Israel and the Palestinians during Biden’s time in office, which has now resulted in a ‘massive war’ that Biden will be hard-pressed to contain in his current position.

‘As you’ve heard from the head of the CIA and the secretary of state, this is the most dangerous time in the Middle East in at least four years, and it comes at a time when the president of the U.S. does [not] have a lot of leverage over Israeli actions,’ Bremmer said.

That war has come during a period when American forces in the region have continued to be the target of attacks from Iran-backed proxy militias in Iraq and Syria, the most recent of which killed three American service members and injured dozens more.

Biden responded by authorizing a series of more than 100 airstrikes throughout the region on Friday, with Biden warning, ‘If you harm an American, we will respond.’

‘This past Sunday, three American soldiers were killed in Jordan by a drone launched by militant groups backed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC). Earlier today, I attended the dignified return of these brave Americans at Dover Airforce Base, and I have spoken with each of their families,’ the president said in a statement shortly after the strikes last Friday.

Yet Biden has faced calls to do more, including hit Iranian targets directly, with some arguing that the president’s unwillingness to do so has led to Iran being emboldened.

While Tafuri believes Iran remains one of the most challenging foreign policy issues for Biden moving forward, he argued that critics shouldn’t ‘tie Iran’s support for the proxy forces and militias that are attacking Americans to any action by President Biden.’

‘These forces have been active for decades and have been targeting Americans since they were founded,’ Tafuri told Fox News Digital. ‘After the Iraq invasion by the Bush administration in 2003, these groups killed hundreds of Americans. In 2016, the Iranian-backed militias were incorporated by law into Iraq’s armed forces, which gave them a big boost in power and influence.’

Instead, Tafuri expressed confidence that Biden will be able to deter such attacks in the future while also tackling the more pressing matter of ensuring the country does not obtain nuclear weapons.

‘A bigger challenge is ensuring Iran does not get nuclear weapons,’ Tafuri said. ‘I expect that over the next year that the Biden administration will focus on disincentivizing attacks on our soldiers by Iranian proxy forces, while keeping the more important goal of restraining Iran’s nuclear ambitions at the forefront of our policy.’

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House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is preparing to bring a stand-alone Israel aid bill for a House vote on Tuesday, three sources told Fox News Digital, but early opposition from his right flank could already force the Republican leader to seek help from Democrats to pass it.

Johnson announced over the weekend that he intends to pass legislation to send $17.6 billion to Israel as it fights a war against Hamas. 

But GOP hardliners have already come out against it, which could force House leaders to fast-track the bill to the floor via suspension of the rules. 

It would bypass a procedural hurdle known as a rule vote in exchange for raising the threshold for passage to two-thirds of the chamber rather than a simple majority.

‘Congress can pay for Israel aid by cutting funding for the United Nations, repealing the IRS expansion, rescinding the Department of Commerce ‘slush fund’ or ending leftist climate change tax credits,’ House Freedom Caucus leaders said on Sunday. ‘Conservatives should not be forced to choose between borrowing money to support our special friend Israel or honoring our commitment to end unpaid supplemental spending that exacerbate our nation’s unsustainable fiscal crisis and further risks our ability to respond to future crises.’

Rule votes would traditionally fall across party lines; even lawmakers who oppose the legislation itself would vote along with their leadership to pass the rule. But it’s been weaponized several times during the 118th Congress by GOP factions that have deliberately sunk bills in protest of how Republican leaders are handling matters, even those unrelated to the legislation they’re voting on.

Putting up the Israel aid bill under suspension – which two GOP aides told Fox News Digital they anticipate is likely – would make Democrat support critical to its passage. 

Johnson has used suspension to pass several critical pieces of legislation this year, most recently including a bipartisan, bicameral tax bill. 

Making the situation trickier this time, however, is the Senate’s intent to vote on a $118 billion security agreement that includes a border security overhaul and, among other things, funding for Israel. 

That bill, which is backed by the White House and Senate leaders on both sides, is expected to get a vote on Wednesday.

The White House threatened to veto Johnson’s Israel bill on Monday evening, a move the speaker called ‘an act of betrayal’ – but one that could give more Democrats cover to vote against it.

And House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., blasted Johnson’s bill and accused him of trying to kneecap the Senate deal on former President Trump’s behalf. 

Johnson has repeatedly denied following Trump’s orders, but the former president does vocally oppose the bill.

Jeffries called Johnson’s Israel aid proposal ‘a cynical attempt to undermine the Senate’s bipartisan effort, given that House Republicans have been ordered by the former president not to pass any border security legislation or assistance for Ukraine.’

But at least two Democrats – Reps. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., and Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., who are both Jewish – have said they would vote in favor of the Israel aid bill on principle, but they criticized Johnson for decoupling it from the wider supplemental funding bill and for not including humanitarian aid for Gaza.

Pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC also came out in support of the bill on Monday, writing on X, ‘We urge the House to pass this lifesaving aid package to ensure Israel can win its war against Hamas and protect its families.’

The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations announced Monday night that it’s endorsing both Johnson’s bill and the Senate deal, which includes roughly $14 billion for Israel.

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