• Some Republican politicians scrambled on Sunday to distance themselves from remarks the president made in an interview with Fox News presenter Bill O’Reilly. When discussing Trump’s views on Russian President Vladimir Putin, O’Reilly pressed Trump on his Russian counterpart’s legacy of silencing opponents. “Putin’s a killer,” he said. Trump countered: “We’ve got a lot of killers. What do you think? Our country’s so innocent?”

This is not the first time Trump has seemingly rejected the U.S.’s moral high ground on the world stage. He made a similar point defending Turkey’s Erdogan last summer. Whatever his friendliness to Moscow, Trump’s rhetoric here flies in the face of GOP dogma. The Republicans are the loudest boosters of the idea of “American exceptionalism,” a concept that clearly doesn’t animate Trump as much.

“I’m not going to critique the president’s every utterance,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), “but I do think America is exceptional. America is different. We don’t operate in any way the Russians do.” 

• France’s far-right leader Marine Le Pen formally declared her presidential candidacy on Sunday at a rally in the city of Lyon. "The divide is not between the left and right anymore but between patriots and globalists,” she proclaimed, deepening the parallels between her campaign and Trump's. His victory, along with Brexit, gave Le Pen momentum; resentment over globalization and hostility to Islam are the twin pillars of her campaign.

Now Le Pen and her National Front, a party steeped in a history of neo-fascism, are closer to winning power than ever before. “Everything that yesterday was said to be impossible or improbable, has today become highly possible and highly probable,” Le Pen’s chief strategist told the Guardian last week.

• The Trump administration has signaled its willingness to take on Iran, first issuing a warning to the regime in Tehran over the test-launch of a missile and then issuing a new round of sanctions. They may find real confrontation with the Islamic Republic a tricky proposition, though.

As my colleagues Liz Sly and Loveday Morris report, Iran is now more powerful than ever. Many observers in the Arab world fear “a return to the tensions of the George W. Bush era, when U.S. and Iranian operatives fought a shadow war in Iraq, Sunni-Shiite tensions soared across the region and America’s ally Israel fought a brutal war with Iran’s ally Hezbollah in Lebanon.” But the stakes are higher now, with Iran’s regional clout greater than it was in the past, not least in Iraq — a country where Iran gained huge geopolitical influence after Bush’s 2003 invasion.

• And what of the battles already being fought? The U.S.-led coalition in Iraq and Syria acknowledges the deaths of 173 civilians killed as a result of coalition airstrikes against the Islamic State since the summer of 2014. But a new investigation by the Military Times raises the chilling prospect that that total could be considerably higher.

It found that the American military has “failed to publicly disclose potentially thousands of lethal airstrikes conducted over several years in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.” These were carried out by attack helicopters and armed drones operated by the U.S. Army, metrics that apparently have been excluded from existing tallies made available to the public. “The enormous data gap raises serious doubts about transparency in reported progress against the Islamic State, al-Qaida and the Taliban, and calls into question the accuracy of other Defense Department disclosures documenting everything from costs to casualty counts,” the paper reported.

• The New England Patriots won the Super Bowl on Sunday night, beating the Atlanta Falcons 34-28 in Houston, Texas. Across an ocean and in the world of actual football, meanwhile, Cameroon defeated Egypt 2-1 in the nail-biting final of the African Cup of Nations, a tournament pitting the continent’s top soccer teams against each other.

 
Victoriei Plaza in Bucharest, Romania, filled with anti-corruption protesters on Feb. 5. (Dan Balanescu/EPA)</p>

Victoriei Plaza in Bucharest, Romania, filled with anti-corruption protesters on Feb. 5. (Dan Balanescu/EPA)

People power

Late last Tuesday night, the Romanian government bypassed parliament and tried to enact an “emergency decree” that decriminalized cases of official misconduct in which the damage is less than roughly $47,000. It also moved toward commuting the sentences of people previously convicted of such crimes.

The ruling party claimed the decree was intended to ease prison overcrowding, but many Romanians saw it as a free pass for corrupt leaders.

Official corruption has long plagued Eastern European nations, and it has been widespread in Romania for decades. The ruling Social Democratic party campaigned on eliminating graft, and the decree was seen as a betrayal of that promise. One of the people who stands to benefit from the decree is the current head of the Social Democrats, who was ineligible to be prime minister because of an election fraud conviction and other abuse of power charges.

For five days, Romanians filled a central square in their capital, Bucharest, demanding the decree be withdrawn. Many protesters expressed humiliation that their government would, by cover of night, try to pass new laws pertaining to crimes that only they could commit. The demonstrations were the biggest since Romania’s communist regime was overthrown in 1989.

Romanian prime minister Sorin Grindeanu held firm through the first three days of protests. But by Saturday, when crowds swelled to 500,000 people nationwide — and nine close allies, including Germany and the United States, had chimed in with their disapproval — Grindeanu had to back down.

Yet massive protests continued on Sunday, even after the government rescinded its decree, with thousands demanding the resignation of top government officials.

The protests have been peaceful, festive, and — to a certain degree — successful. But the government, despite the evident crisis in confidence, is still planning to introduce a similar version of the same decree in parliament. While the popular movement has made undeniable progress, Romania’s long battle against corruption is far from finished. — Max Bearak

Secretary of Defense James Mattis reviews an honor guard&nbsp;at the Japanese defense ministry on Feb. 4. (Franck Robichon/EPA)</p>

Secretary of Defense James Mattis reviews an honor guard at the Japanese defense ministry on Feb. 4. (Franck Robichon/EPA)

The big question

Secretary of Defense James Mattis visited Japan and South Korea last week, giving the American allies their first chance to see the new administration's security team in action somewhere other than Twitter. So we asked Anna Fifield, the Post's Tokyo bureau chief: Was Mattis' trip to Asia a success?

"In a word, yes.

"Nerves have been jangling in this part of Asia since Donald Trump, who called into doubt the U.S.’s post- World War II alliances with Japan and South Korea, won the Republican nomination. Mattis put those fears at ease, telling his Japanese counterpart that the Trump administration was 'committed to the defense of Japan under the Treaty of Mutual Security.'

"Japan was after reassurances that the U.S. would still come to its aid if there was a fight over the Senkakus, a group of islands in the East China Sea controlled by Japan but claimed by China. Mattis confirmed that the U.S. would adhere to the countries' security pact, which states the U.S. military will help Japan defend any Japanese territory that comes under attack from a third country. Tokyo breathed a sigh of relief.

"In Seoul, there was widespread relief at Mattis’ commitment to taking a strong stance against North Korea and defending South Korea against attack from Kim Jong Un’s regime. The Trump administration has said very little about North Korea to date.

"And, in a surprising turn of events, Mattis’s military record turned out to be a plus. His four-decade-long service in the Marine Corps meant Mattis required special dispensation from Congress to become defense secretary. But in Japan, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he was 'very encouraged' that Mattis was in the job, noting that Mattis served in Okinawa in 1972, the year that the United States gave sovereignty of the southern island chain back to Japan. His record also earned him a warm welcome in South Korea. Defense Minister Han Min-koo, formerly top brass in South Korea’s army, said that he and Mattis had formed a close bond because of their shared backgrounds in military service."

 

So what kind of damage might divide-and-conquer populist politics actually do? It may end trade deals without little corresponding benefit for Americans, give Chinese universities a boost in catching up with American colleges, and even harm intelligence gathering, according to former NSA and CIA director Michael V. Hayden. For evidence, says the Independent, simply look to Theresa May, whose embrace of Brexit has cost her on the world stage.

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This eight-year-old is way better at solving Rubiks' cubes than you are.