Take Syria Seriously--And Stay Out
Commentary
Why start another body count in a Middle East conflict with no direct relationship to U.S. security?
Commentary
Why start another body count in a Middle East conflict with no direct relationship to U.S. security?
Blog
For many the decomposition of Yugoslavia into its constituent republics in the early 1990s was anything but smooth.
Commentary
Hope and history are sisters: one looks forward and one looks back, and they make the world spacious enough to move through freely.
Blog
A resolution to that end may be just sound and fury.
The only permanent thing is the soul,
and what has happened to it.
Patrick Kavanagh
Like a dancer covered in nothing
but white powder, then sponged
with course brown makeup;
nothing else in plain sight
but silver anklets; arms
extended to take
the tribute of a guard's embrace.
We are watching from behind;
though, there are no flowers,
no curtain. And it's not a ballet.
It's a macabre charade,
one night in the secret
theater of Abu Ghraib.
The anklets are shackles.
In another, a leashed
dog -- loud, black,
and snarling -- takes
center stage. And, in others,
real men, looking like oddly
manipulated Kachina dolls
or naked degraded marionettes
in medieval hoods --
their elbows akimbo --
are paraded, strung erect,
wired, collapsed;
are stacked into a pile.
"Save us
from noisy oblivion;
from despair. Save us,
one by one,
from Roman cruelty;
from death
by water;
from death
by fire. Save us
from being eaten alive."
Scott Hightower, "Rubber Dollie" (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, June 17, 2011)