1
U(D54G1D)y+$!&![!?!# WASHINGTON — President Biden, under pressure to ag- gressively address the global co- ronavirus vaccine shortage, will announce as early as Thursday that his administration will buy 500 million doses of the Pfizer- BioNTech vaccine and donate them among about 100 countries over the next year, according to people familiar with the plan. The White House reached the deal just in time for Mr. Biden’s eight-day European trip, which is his first opportunity to reassert the United States as a world leader and restore relations that were badly frayed by President Donald J. Trump. “We have to end Covid-19, not just at home, which we’re doing, but everywhere,” Mr. Biden told American troops after landing at R.A.F. Mildenhall in Suffolk, Eng- land. “There’s no wall high enough to keep us safe from this pandemic or the next biological threat we face, and there will be others. It requires coordinated multilateral action.” People familiar with the Pfizer deal said the United States would pay for the doses at a “not for prof- it” price. The first 200 million doses will be distributed by the end of this year, followed by 300 million by next June, they said. The doses will be distributed through Covax, the international vaccine-sharing initiative. Mr. Biden is in Europe for a week to attend the NATO and Group of 7 summits and to meet with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia in Geneva. He is likely to use the trip to call on other nations to step up vaccine distribution. In a statement on Wednesday, Jeffrey D. Zients, the White House official in charge of devising a global vaccination strategy, said Mr. Biden would “rally the world’s democracies around solving this crisis globally, with America lead- ing the way to create the arsenal of vaccines that will be critical in our global fight against Covid-19.” The White House is trying to spotlight its success in fighting the pandemic — particularly its vaccination campaign — and use that success as a diplomatic tool, especially as China and Russia seek to do the same. Mr. Biden has been insistent that, unlike China and Russia, which have been sharing their vaccines with doz- ens of countries, the United States will not seek to extract promises from countries receiving Ameri- can-made vaccines. The 500 million doses still fall far short of the 11 billion the World Health Organization estimates are needed to vaccinate the world, but significantly exceed what the United States has committed to share so far. Other nations have been pleading with the United States to give up some of its abun- dant vaccine supplies. Less than 1 percent of people are fully vacci- PRESIDENT TO SEND 500 MILLION DOSES TO NATIONS IN NEED U.S. Is Said to Be Planning to Buy Pfizer Vaccine at a ‘Not for Profit’ Price This article is by Sharon LaFra- niere, Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Noah Weiland. “There’s no wall high enough to keep us safe from this pandemic,” President Biden told U.S. troops Wednesday in Suffolk, England. DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A10 WASHINGTON — CNN se- cretly fought an attempt by the Justice Department to seize tens of thousands of email logs of one of its reporters, the network dis- closed on Wednesday, adding that the government imposed a gag or- der on CNN’s lawyers and its president, Jeff Zucker, as part of the legal battle. The disclosure — including that CNN ultimately agreed to turn over “a limited set of email logs” involving the reporter, Barbara Starr — was the latest to recently come to light in a series of ag- gressive steps that federal pros- ecutors secretly took in leak in- vestigations late in the Trump ad- ministration. It is also the second such episode known to have spilled over into the early Biden adminis- tration. CNN struck a deal with prosecutors to settle the matter on Jan. 26, it said, and the govern- ment only recently lifted the gag order. Last week, a New York Times lawyer revealed a similar fight — and a gag order imposed in March. The government aban- doned its battle for the Times re- porters’ email logs on June 2 with- out having obtained any, asking a judge to quash a Jan. 5 order for them. In recent weeks, the Justice De- partment has also disclosed sepa- rate Trump-era seizures of phone records of the same Times and CNN reporters, along with sev- eral reporters at The Washington Post. In the fallout, President Bi- den barred the department from CNN Lawyers Silenced as Justice Dept. Sought Reporter’s Email By CHARLIE SAVAGE Continued on Page A15 Eric Adams, who is considered the leading candidate for mayor of New York City, came under in- tense fire on Wednesday from Democratic rivals who ques- tioned whether he lived in New Jersey or the city and cast doubt on his honesty. Mr. Adams, the Brooklyn bor- ough president, says that an apartment in a multiunit town- house he owns on Lafayette Ave- nue, in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, is his primary residence. But he also co-owns a co-op in Fort Lee, N.J., with his partner, who lives there, and has said pub- licly that he moved into Brooklyn Borough Hall for a time after the pandemic hit because he was working such long hours. On Tues- day, Politico New York reported that Mr. Adams used conflicting addresses in public records and that he was still spending nights at Borough Hall, based on surveil- lance by the publication and rival campaigns. Before that story was pub- lished, Mr. Adams said that he would skip a debate among the top candidates scheduled for Thurs- day and would instead attend a vigil for a 10-year-old killed in gun violence in Queens. Amid the attacks from other campaigns, Mr. Adams invited re- porters to the townhouse, where he plied them with vegan pastries, offered a tour of what he said was his apartment — pointing out the “small, modest kitchen” and “small, modest bathroom” — and sought to dismiss residency ques- tions in a news conference during which he at times grew emotional. “How foolish would someone New Yorker? Adams Vows City Is Home. This article is by Katie Glueck, Jef- fery C. Mays and Michael Rothfeld. Continued on Page A14 NASHVILLE — Public health departments have held vaccine clinics at churches. They have or- ganized rides to clinics. Gone door to door. Even offered a spin around a NASCAR track for any- one willing to get a shot. Still, the country’s vaccination campaign is sputtering, especially in the South, where there are many more doses than people who will take them. As reports of new Covid-19 cases and deaths plummet, and as many Americans venture out mask-free into something ap- proaching normalcy, the slow- down in vaccinations presents a new risk. As coronavirus variants spread and restrictions are eased, experts fear that the virus could eventually surge again in states like Alabama, Louisiana and Mis- sissippi, where fewer than half of adults have started the vaccina- tion process. “A lot of people have the sense, ‘Oh, dodged that bullet,’” said Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, the director of the Division of Infectious Dis- eases at the University of Ala- bama at Birmingham. She added, “I don’t think people appreciate that if we let up on the vaccine ef- forts, we could be right back where we started.” A range of theories has emerged about why the South, which as of Wednesday was home to eight of the 10 states with the lowest vaccination rates, lags be- hind the rest of the country: hesi- tancy from conservative white people, concerns among some Black residents, longstanding challenges when it comes to health care access and trans- portation. The answer, interviews across the region revealed, was all of the above. “It’s kind of a complex brew, and we’re teasing apart the indi- vidual pieces,” said Dr. W. Mark South Lags in Vaccinations, Risking New Surges By RICK ROJAS and MITCH SMITH A vaccination site in Forest, Miss. The state has the lowest vaccination rate in the United States. ELIJAH BAYLIS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Issues of Complacency, Distrust and Access Offset Incentives Continued on Page A13 Lauren O’Brien, above, is a leader of an effort by the Tenement Museum, which has focused on white immigrants, to look at the lives of Black people. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 A More Inclusive History Rafael Nadal, the 13-time French Open champ, above, and Novak Djokovic, the world No. 1, will meet again. PAGE B9 SPORTSTHURSDAY B8-10 A Semi That’s Fit to Be a Final After generations of silence and denial, a city has begun a search for the vic- tims of the 1921 massacre. PAGE A15 NATIONAL A12-18 Search for Graves in Tulsa New laws and changing times mean that many student-athletes will soon be able to profit from their fame. PAGE B10 Payday for College Athletes The Biden administration is restoring clean-water protections eliminated during Trump’s presidency. PAGE A16 ‘Dirty Water’ Rule Is Repealed The F.B.I.’s recovery of Bitcoins paid in the recent Colonial Pipeline ransom- ware attack shows that cryptocurren- cies are not as hard to track as many people believe. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-7 Bitcoin Can Be Traced After All As the country reopens, it is relying on antigen tests to ensure that anyone not yet vaccinated against the coronavirus is also not infectious. PAGE A10 INTERNATIONAL A4-11 Germany Adopts Rapid Testing The former president’s ban from Twit- ter and Facebook has not kept him silent online. Many of his supporters have been amplifying his statements on social networks. PAGE B1 Carrying the Torch for Trump A motorist’s attack prompted demands for action against Islamophobia that’s “more and more in our face.” PAGE A4 Canada Mourns Muslim Family Barbara Comstock PAGE A23 OPINION A22-23 Gender fluidity enters its next phase as men are increasingly stepping out in skirts and frocks. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-8 Summer Dresses for Him WASHINGTON — The Penta- gon is considering seeking au- thorization to carry out airstrikes to support Afghan security forces if Kabul or another major city is in danger of falling to the Taliban, potentially introducing flexibility into President Biden’s plan to end the United States military pres- ence in the conflict, senior officials said. Mr. Biden and his top national security aides had previously sug- gested that once U.S. troops left Afghanistan, air support would end as well, with the exception of strikes aimed at terrorist groups that could harm American inter- ests. But military officials are ac- tively discussing how they might respond if the rapid withdrawal produces consequences with sub- stantial national security implica- tions. No decisions have been made yet, officials said. But they added that one option under considera- Pentagon Eyes Future Strikes At the Taliban This article is by Helene Cooper, Eric Schmitt and Thomas Gibbons- Neff. Security forces on a road in Kabul, Afghanistan, this year. JIM HUYLEBROEK FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A6 MOSCOW — A Russian court on Wednesday designated Aleksei A. Navalny’s political movement as an extremist network, a remark- able move that sent a message to President Biden ahead of his meeting next week with President Vladimir V. Putin: Russian do- mestic affairs are not up for dis- cussion. The court decision — taken al- most certainly with Mr. Putin’s blessing — is bound to push the movement further underground, after several months in which the Kremlin’s yearslong effort to sup- press dissent had entered a new, more aggressive phase. Under the law, Mr. Navalny’s organizers, do- nors, or even social-media sup- porters could now be prosecuted and face prison time. The ruling heightened the stakes of the summit in Geneva for Mr. Biden, who has promised to push back against violations of international norms by Mr. Putin. But the Russian president has said that, while he is prepared to discuss cyberspace and geopoli- tics with Mr. Biden, he will not en- gage in talks over how he runs his country. The question is how much Mr. Biden accepts those de- mands. “Views on our political system can differ,” Mr. Putin told the heads of international news agen- cies last week. “Just give us the right, please, to determine how to organize this part of our life.” The Geneva meeting on June 16 will come after months in which Mr. Putin has dismantled much of what remained of Russian politi- cal pluralism — and made it clear that he would ignore Western crit- In Ban of Group Tied to Navalny, A Sign to Biden By ANDREW E. KRAMER and ANTON TROIANOVSKI Continued on Page A9 Late Edition VOL. CLXX .... No. 59,085 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 2021 Today, periodic clouds and sunshine, less humid, high 82. Tonight, clear to partly cloudy, cooler, low 62. Tomor- row, clouds and sunshine, cooler, high 74. Weather map, Page A19. $3.00

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C M Y K Nxxx,2021-06-10,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

U(D54G1D)y+$!&![!?!#

WASHINGTON — PresidentBiden, under pressure to ag-gressively address the global co-ronavirus vaccine shortage, willannounce as early as Thursdaythat his administration will buy500 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and donatethem among about 100 countriesover the next year, according topeople familiar with the plan.

The White House reached thedeal just in time for Mr. Biden’seight-day European trip, which ishis first opportunity to reassertthe United States as a worldleader and restore relations thatwere badly frayed by PresidentDonald J. Trump.

“We have to end Covid-19, notjust at home, which we’re doing,but everywhere,” Mr. Biden toldAmerican troops after landing atR.A.F. Mildenhall in Suffolk, Eng-land. “There’s no wall highenough to keep us safe from thispandemic or the next biologicalthreat we face, and there will beothers. It requires coordinatedmultilateral action.”

People familiar with the Pfizerdeal said the United States wouldpay for the doses at a “not for prof-it” price. The first 200 milliondoses will be distributed by theend of this year, followed by 300million by next June, they said.The doses will be distributedthrough Covax, the internationalvaccine-sharing initiative.

Mr. Biden is in Europe for aweek to attend the NATO andGroup of 7 summits and to meetwith President Vladimir V. Putinof Russia in Geneva. He is likely touse the trip to call on other nationsto step up vaccine distribution.

In a statement on Wednesday,Jeffrey D. Zients, the White Houseofficial in charge of devising aglobal vaccination strategy, saidMr. Biden would “rally the world’sdemocracies around solving thiscrisis globally, with America lead-ing the way to create the arsenalof vaccines that will be critical inour global fight against Covid-19.”

The White House is trying tospotlight its success in fightingthe pandemic — particularly itsvaccination campaign — and usethat success as a diplomatic tool,especially as China and Russiaseek to do the same. Mr. Biden hasbeen insistent that, unlike Chinaand Russia, which have beensharing their vaccines with doz-ens of countries, the United Stateswill not seek to extract promisesfrom countries receiving Ameri-can-made vaccines.

The 500 million doses still fallfar short of the 11 billion the WorldHealth Organization estimatesare needed to vaccinate the world,but significantly exceed what theUnited States has committed toshare so far. Other nations havebeen pleading with the UnitedStates to give up some of its abun-dant vaccine supplies. Less than 1percent of people are fully vacci-

PRESIDENT TO SEND500 MILLION DOSESTO NATIONS IN NEED

U.S. Is Said to Be Planning to Buy PfizerVaccine at a ‘Not for Profit’ Price

This article is by Sharon LaFra-niere, Sheryl Gay Stolberg and NoahWeiland.

“There’s no wall high enough to keep us safe from this pandemic,” President Biden told U.S. troops Wednesday in Suffolk, England.DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A10

WASHINGTON — CNN se-cretly fought an attempt by theJustice Department to seize tensof thousands of email logs of one ofits reporters, the network dis-closed on Wednesday, adding thatthe government imposed a gag or-der on CNN’s lawyers and itspresident, Jeff Zucker, as part ofthe legal battle.

The disclosure — including thatCNN ultimately agreed to turnover “a limited set of email logs”involving the reporter, BarbaraStarr — was the latest to recentlycome to light in a series of ag-gressive steps that federal pros-ecutors secretly took in leak in-vestigations late in the Trump ad-ministration.

It is also the second suchepisode known to have spilled

over into the early Biden adminis-tration. CNN struck a deal withprosecutors to settle the matter onJan. 26, it said, and the govern-ment only recently lifted the gagorder.

Last week, a New York Timeslawyer revealed a similar fight —and a gag order imposed inMarch. The government aban-doned its battle for the Times re-porters’ email logs on June 2 with-

out having obtained any, asking ajudge to quash a Jan. 5 order forthem.

In recent weeks, the Justice De-partment has also disclosed sepa-rate Trump-era seizures of phonerecords of the same Times andCNN reporters, along with sev-eral reporters at The WashingtonPost. In the fallout, President Bi-den barred the department from

CNN Lawyers Silenced as Justice Dept. Sought Reporter’s EmailBy CHARLIE SAVAGE

Continued on Page A15

Eric Adams, who is consideredthe leading candidate for mayor ofNew York City, came under in-tense fire on Wednesday fromDemocratic rivals who ques-tioned whether he lived in NewJersey or the city and cast doubton his honesty.

Mr. Adams, the Brooklyn bor-ough president, says that anapartment in a multiunit town-house he owns on Lafayette Ave-nue, in the Bedford-Stuyvesantsection of Brooklyn, is his primaryresidence.

But he also co-owns a co-op inFort Lee, N.J., with his partner,who lives there, and has said pub-licly that he moved into BrooklynBorough Hall for a time after thepandemic hit because he wasworking such long hours. On Tues-day, Politico New York reportedthat Mr. Adams used conflictingaddresses in public records andthat he was still spending nightsat Borough Hall, based on surveil-lance by the publication and rivalcampaigns.

Before that story was pub-lished, Mr. Adams said that hewould skip a debate among the topcandidates scheduled for Thurs-day and would instead attend avigil for a 10-year-old killed in gunviolence in Queens.

Amid the attacks from othercampaigns, Mr. Adams invited re-porters to the townhouse, wherehe plied them with vegan pastries,offered a tour of what he said washis apartment — pointing out the“small, modest kitchen” and“small, modest bathroom” — andsought to dismiss residency ques-tions in a news conference duringwhich he at times grew emotional.

“How foolish would someone

New Yorker?Adams VowsCity Is Home.

This article is by Katie Glueck, Jef-fery C. Mays and Michael Rothfeld.

Continued on Page A14

NASHVILLE — Public healthdepartments have held vaccineclinics at churches. They have or-ganized rides to clinics. Gone doorto door. Even offered a spinaround a NASCAR track for any-one willing to get a shot.

Still, the country’s vaccinationcampaign is sputtering, especiallyin the South, where there aremany more doses than peoplewho will take them.

As reports of new Covid-19cases and deaths plummet, and asmany Americans venture outmask-free into something ap-proaching normalcy, the slow-down in vaccinations presents anew risk. As coronavirus variants

spread and restrictions are eased,experts fear that the virus couldeventually surge again in stateslike Alabama, Louisiana and Mis-sissippi, where fewer than half ofadults have started the vaccina-tion process.

“A lot of people have the sense,‘Oh, dodged that bullet,’” said Dr.Jeanne Marrazzo, the director ofthe Division of Infectious Dis-eases at the University of Ala-bama at Birmingham. She added,“I don’t think people appreciate

that if we let up on the vaccine ef-forts, we could be right backwhere we started.”

A range of theories hasemerged about why the South,which as of Wednesday was hometo eight of the 10 states with thelowest vaccination rates, lags be-hind the rest of the country: hesi-tancy from conservative whitepeople, concerns among someBlack residents, longstandingchallenges when it comes tohealth care access and trans-portation.

The answer, interviews acrossthe region revealed, was all of theabove.

“It’s kind of a complex brew,and we’re teasing apart the indi-vidual pieces,” said Dr. W. Mark

South Lags in Vaccinations, Risking New SurgesBy RICK ROJAS

and MITCH SMITH

A vaccination site in Forest, Miss. The state has the lowest vaccination rate in the United States.ELIJAH BAYLIS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Issues of Complacency, Distrust and Access

Offset Incentives

Continued on Page A13

Lauren O’Brien, above, is a leader of aneffort by the Tenement Museum, whichhas focused on white immigrants, to lookat the lives of Black people. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

A More Inclusive HistoryRafael Nadal, the 13-time French Openchamp, above, and Novak Djokovic, theworld No. 1, will meet again. PAGE B9

SPORTSTHURSDAY B8-10

A Semi That’s Fit to Be a FinalAfter generations of silence and denial,a city has begun a search for the vic-tims of the 1921 massacre. PAGE A15

NATIONAL A12-18

Search for Graves in Tulsa

New laws and changing times meanthat many student-athletes will soon beable to profit from their fame. PAGE B10

Payday for College AthletesThe Biden administration is restoringclean-water protections eliminatedduring Trump’s presidency. PAGE A16

‘Dirty Water’ Rule Is Repealed

The F.B.I.’s recovery of Bitcoins paid inthe recent Colonial Pipeline ransom-ware attack shows that cryptocurren-cies are not as hard to track as manypeople believe. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-7

Bitcoin Can Be Traced After AllAs the country reopens, it is relying onantigen tests to ensure that anyone notyet vaccinated against the coronavirusis also not infectious. PAGE A10

INTERNATIONAL A4-11

Germany Adopts Rapid Testing

The former president’s ban from Twit-ter and Facebook has not kept himsilent online. Many of his supportershave been amplifying his statements onsocial networks. PAGE B1

Carrying the Torch for TrumpA motorist’s attack prompted demandsfor action against Islamophobia that’s“more and more in our face.” PAGE A4

Canada Mourns Muslim Family

Barbara Comstock PAGE A23

OPINION A22-23Gender fluidity enters its next phase asmen are increasingly stepping out inskirts and frocks. PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-8

Summer Dresses for Him

WASHINGTON — The Penta-gon is considering seeking au-thorization to carry out airstrikesto support Afghan security forcesif Kabul or another major city is indanger of falling to the Taliban,potentially introducing flexibilityinto President Biden’s plan to endthe United States military pres-ence in the conflict, senior officialssaid.

Mr. Biden and his top nationalsecurity aides had previously sug-gested that once U.S. troops leftAfghanistan, air support wouldend as well, with the exception ofstrikes aimed at terrorist groupsthat could harm American inter-ests.

But military officials are ac-tively discussing how they mightrespond if the rapid withdrawalproduces consequences with sub-stantial national security implica-tions.

No decisions have been madeyet, officials said. But they addedthat one option under considera-

Pentagon Eyes Future Strikes

At the TalibanThis article is by Helene Cooper,

Eric Schmitt and Thomas Gibbons-Neff.

Security forces on a road inKabul, Afghanistan, this year.

JIM HUYLEBROEK FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A6

MOSCOW — A Russian court onWednesday designated Aleksei A.Navalny’s political movement asan extremist network, a remark-able move that sent a message toPresident Biden ahead of hismeeting next week with PresidentVladimir V. Putin: Russian do-mestic affairs are not up for dis-cussion.

The court decision — taken al-most certainly with Mr. Putin’sblessing — is bound to push themovement further underground,after several months in which theKremlin’s yearslong effort to sup-press dissent had entered a new,more aggressive phase. Under thelaw, Mr. Navalny’s organizers, do-nors, or even social-media sup-porters could now be prosecutedand face prison time.

The ruling heightened thestakes of the summit in Genevafor Mr. Biden, who has promisedto push back against violations ofinternational norms by Mr. Putin.But the Russian president hassaid that, while he is prepared todiscuss cyberspace and geopoli-tics with Mr. Biden, he will not en-gage in talks over how he runs hiscountry. The question is howmuch Mr. Biden accepts those de-mands.

“Views on our political systemcan differ,” Mr. Putin told theheads of international news agen-cies last week. “Just give us theright, please, to determine how toorganize this part of our life.”

The Geneva meeting on June 16will come after months in whichMr. Putin has dismantled much ofwhat remained of Russian politi-cal pluralism — and made it clearthat he would ignore Western crit-

In Ban of GroupTied to Navalny,A Sign to Biden

By ANDREW E. KRAMERand ANTON TROIANOVSKI

Continued on Page A9

Late Edition

VOL. CLXX . . . . No. 59,085 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 2021

Today, periodic clouds and sunshine,less humid, high 82. Tonight, clear topartly cloudy, cooler, low 62. Tomor-row, clouds and sunshine, cooler,high 74. Weather map, Page A19.

$3.00