Author Archives: nate

A Planeful of . . . Bounty Hunters?

Well, this is interesting.

The latest tidbit in the tale of the captured mercenaries is the claim, made by several of their family members and some news outlets, that they weren’t going to Equatorial Guinea to stage a coup, but to use that country as a staging area in order to capture Charles Taylor.

Wacky as it may seem, it’s actually quite plausible. EG borders Nigeria, and Calabar, where Taylor lives in exile, is only 200 miles away. And, as I’ve discussed before, a bounty for Taylor’s head is not a new concept. But current sources (the above-cited and this one are good; the news hasn’t been picked up by AP or BBC yet) mistakenly state that the U.S. has a $2 million bounty on Taylor’s head. The reality is more complicated, again as has been discussed here—check out the links in the highlights for all the info. The short version is that some enthusiastic Congresspeople put the money into the big $87 billion spending package for this purpose, but the State Department has distanced itself from the notion. And the wording is ambiguous enough that, coupled with State’s position, you can’t really say that there’s an official bounty out there.

Northbridge Services has been excited about cashing in on that “bounty” money. There’s even some indication that they’re the ones who put the group together, though they deny it. (Of course they would, at this point.) Again, it’s plausible: Northbridge is basically the old Executive Outcomes with a bunch of cosmetic changes, and a bunch of the captured mercenaries are known former employees of EO.

I’ll come back to all this when there’s a bit more news out and when I have more time to sift through it all—I’m tossing this off in a jiff before Ella wakes up from her nap. Oh, and go back and read Josh Marshall’s notes on Dodson Aviation, the American company that sold the captured plane to Logo Ltd. He found a connection between Dodson and the Sierre Leone Special Court—yet another tidbit that makes the “bounty hunt, not coup” notion quite plausible. In fact, I’m even leaning toward “likely” now. And kicking myself for not prophetically speculating in this direction a few days ago . . .

UPDATE: Thinking about it a little more, I’m downgrading the likelihood of the Taylor hunt, though it’s still very much on the table. But: if you were in a Zim prison looking at life incarceration, maybe even death, wouldn’t you scramble for any defense you could? And since you’d been caught with all sorts of equipment for a military operation, it has to be plausible. “We were going after Taylor” is the perfect alibi for these guys, since Calabar is nearby, Taylor has been in the news, and there’s even a kind of U.S. imprimatur thanks to the $2 million in the budget. This would also explain why one source for this info is the families speaking out. Why hadn’t they said anything before? And how likely is it that they’d be informed about their husbands’ operation beforehand? But, having those husbands facing a gruesome fate, wouldn’t they readily lie to protect them?

What’s remarkable is how much circumstantial evidence there is for both theories. But they can’t both be true. Anyway—more in a few days.

UPDATE: Something else I forgot to mention: Nick du Toit, the leader of the mercenaries held in EG, confessed on TV that he was there to start a coup. Now, he clearly could have been forced to make such a claim, so that President Obiang could carry out the reprisals and clamping-down that he’s doing even now. But the Zimbabwean government claims that the mercs there made the same confession.

On the one hand, if they really were going after Taylor, I can’t imagine why they would confess to a completely different plan—especially since it’s one that carries possibly deadly consequences for them. On the other hand, we can’t fully trust anything they say while they’re speaking from their respective prisons.

Still a muddle . . .

Breaking the Machinery of Division

I wasn’t all that surprised to hear about Richard Clarke’s allegations against the Bush Administration — it all jibes with stuff we’ve been hearing about them from the beginning. The only thing that surprises me less, really, is how quickly the partisans on both sides have laid out the talking points for why he’s credible or why he’s not. Suddenly, Clarke is either a pompous, craven opportunist or a truehearted civil servant finally speaking out — there’s precious room for anything in between, though you can find more “nuanced portrayals”:http://slate.msn.com/id/2097685/ out there if you look.

It’s a commonplace notion that Washington is divided; what’s surprising is how trenchant the partisanship has continued to be. Bush’s out of control spending and interventionist foreign policy should be pissing off Congressional conservatives, to say nothing of the fact that the White House knowingly lied to Congress about the real costs of a Medicare Bill that, now that it’s passed, _nobody_ seems happy with. So where’s the revolt? You won’t see it, because as much as Bush’s credibility is crumbling, if Congressional Republicans decide he’s no good the only alternative is Kerry, and a big swing for Kerry will ripple into Congressional races, and the Republicans could lose the Senate, and — on a reeeally long shot — the House. No matter how many leaks there are in Bush’s boat, Republicans can’t afford to abandon ship.

The lock-step phenomenon is institutional, but the current White House is encouraging it. Clarke is only the most recent person to “voice this sentiment”:http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2004/03/24/clarke/:

For one, the Bush White House assumes that everyone who works for them is part of a personal loyalty network, rather than part of the government. And that their first loyalty is to Bush rather than to the people. When you cross that line or violate that trust, they get very upset.

What we have here is an object lesson on the weakness of the two party system. Even when there’s not a President enforcing the us-or-them mentality with playground-style bullying, it’s still there. I think voters would be better off without it — years of forcing us into two camps has encouraged a division among the populace as well. The whole “Red Nation/Blue Nation”:http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2001/12/brooks.htm meme is a gross oversimplification, but one that’s borne out around election time because there’s only two real camps to choose from. But the two party system isn’t going away any time soon. What it will take, as a first step in a long, long process, is a viable third-party or independent candidate in a major election — one whose integrity, charisma, and policy savvy clearly exceed that of her opponents, even if she (or he) doesn’t ultimately win. Our recent contenders (Nader, Perot, Reform Party) haven’t even come close.

So else might be done to, if not bridge the partisan divide, at least get everyone to play nice? Let’s look to Congress. The vast majority of those Congressional Republicans I mentioned earlier aren’t falling in behind Bush because they’re worried they’re going to lose their seats, but because if they lose the majority then they lose their committee chairmanships. If the Democrats should inch above them by a single seat, they lose all their cool special abilites in the Congressional game. They become — cue foreboding music — _the minority party_.

The fact that Congressional power is an all-or-nothing proposition, especially in the House, contributes significantly to the partisan divide. It means that every member’s self-interest is tied up with that of their party, even when their policy positions differ or when their leadership is leading them astray. But it’s not the Constitution that makes it so, just rules of order. So change them. As a start, make committee chairs proportional to each party’s representation, instead of giving them all to one side. I’m not a Hill-dweller, I’m just married to an ex-Hill-dweller, so I’ll have to punt here when it comes to other concrete suggestions. But you get the idea.

Of course, for such a change to happen, the majority party would have to want it to happen. And who ever votes themselves out of power? So maybe it’s as much a pipe dream as a multiparty system would be. Ah well. We can dream.

A Planeful of Trouble

The detainment of a cargo plane full of mercenaries in Harare two weeks ago has unfolded into a complicated, very African sort of mess. I missed the boat on the first round of speculation: who are they and what were they planning to do? It’s now fairly certain that their stop in Zimbabwe was a layover to pick up weapons and ammunition, and that their final destination was Equatorial Guinea, where they planned to take part in a coup against President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo. The fact that Robert Mugabe said so counts for very little, but South Africa has confirmed the story, and the available evidence makes the alternate explanation—that they were just a bunch of security guards heading to jobs in DR Congo—seem pretty thin. BBC News is a good source for the basics of the story.

This article, from Joburg’s Mail & Guardian via AllAfrica, explains just who these guys are. Basically, they’re your typical batch of African mercenaries, mostly white, with plenty of connections to the old South African apartheid regime. Simon Mann, the leader of the group arrested in Zimbabwe, was long associated with Executive Outcomes, and later became on the founders of Sandline International. He’s also <a href="http://icderry.icnetwork.co.uk/news/localnews/content_objectid=14058057_method=full_siteid=66002_headline=Wilford-ActorFacing-Death-Penalty-In-Africa-name_page.html%20%20http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/story.jsp?story=501665”>an actor. Nic du Toit, arrested in Equatorial Guinea, is a South African special forces veteran, also with ties to EO. Compared to the sort of mercenaries working in Iraq, these guys seem a little more hard-core. Most of them are veterans of operations in Angola, whose civil war has long been a mercenary-driven bloodfest.

The new big question is: Who hired these guys? Mugabe’s statement is predictable: he says it’s the intelligence services of the U.S., Britain, and Spain. That’s a claim that’s transparently designed play on the preconceptions of the populace. It is impossible to overstate the shadowy, Illuminati-like powers that many Africans believe the CIA possesses. In Liberia and Nigeria, you’d hear those letters pronounced with a certain degree of ominousness, spaced out to make each one sound like a separate word: “C … I … A.” Given the CIA’s actual involvement in all sorts of Cold War shenanigans, especially in Angola, this perspective isn’t at all surprising, although it ascribes way more power, influence, and competence to the organization than it actually has.

Throwing Spain into the accusation may be a little more than just an Iraq War reference, though—Equatorial Guinea is a former Spanish colony. It achieved full independence in 1968, and President Obiang seized power twelve years later in a violent coup in which he executed the former President, his uncle. As brutal dictators go, he isn’t in the same league as Saddam Hussein, who himself has to get in line behind Robert Mugabe. (The Atlantic recently ran an excellent piece detailing Mugabe’s systematic destruction of his homeland.) But if you measured human-rights abuses and corruption on a per capita basis, Mbasogo would definitely be in the running for first place. The discovery of oil in the mid-Nineties has given Equatorial Guinea astonishing economic growth in the past few years; it goes without saying that the wealth has been channeled to Obiang’s friends & relations, who hold virtually all positions of power in the government. Oil means an explosion of unrest, external meddling, and a constant state of political instability—far from being black gold, it’s a black curse, just as it’s been in Nigeria and Angola.

Given all of this, it’s easy to see why Mugabe would want to enthusiastically punish coup plotters with the death penalty, even though he wasn’t their target. As Obiang goes, so might he go someday. But stable African nations, too, have an interest in curtailing mercenary revolutions of this kind. As long as the coup d’etat is a commonplace way to change power in Africa, the continent will never achieve its economic and social potential.

News of what’s going on in Equatorial Guinea right now is sketchy, but none of it is good. Obiang is clearly using this opportunity to foment hysteria in the capital and crack down on his political rivals. Foreigners are leaving the country in droves, mostly by choice but some by force. The conspirators arrested in EG are likely to face a shotgun trial and quick execution (one, a German, has already died in prison); the ones in Zimbabwe aren’t likely to fare much better. And while you could easily say that them’s the breaks in the line of work they’ve chosen, it’s not like EG would have been much worse off if they’d succeeded.

So, who did hire the mercenaries? Though opposition leaders in EG deny involvement, they’re at the top of the suspect list. Severo Moto Nsa, the head of the opposition Progress Party, is currently exiled in Spain. It would surprise me more to hear that the CIA was involved than to hear that oil interests were. A grand, multinational conspiracy is unlikely; all it takes to get a bunch of guys like this on the move is a few million bucks. The most interesting as-yet-unconfirmed wrinkle is that the mercenaries captured in EG itself were actually working for President Obiang’s government as part of a security contract for Logo Logistics, the guys who bought the detained plane. It’s wacky, but the “secret insider” theory rings true, especially since (according to this article) one of that company’s senior executives is Ely Calil, “a wealthy London-based Lebanese businessman with close ties to Equatorial Guinea opposition leader Moto Nsa.”

There’ll be plenty more coming to light in the next few weeks, to be sure—too bad a lot of up will come from the EG and Zimbabwe governments, and so be of questionable reliability. The current big story is where the Plane mercenaries will be tried and whether they’ll get the death penalty. But my thoughts are with the people of Equatorial Guinea, a country I hadn’t given a second thought to before now, but who, despite the fabulous wealth of their leader, will be having to live under an even more autocratic regime from here on out.

A Gammony Kind of Guy

Backgammon attracts a lot of odd people. And remember, I say that as someone who regularly attends “Gencon”:http://www.polytropos.org/archives/2003/07/sundry_gencon_s.html. A case in point: yesterday “Steve”:http://www.astoundingspacethrills.com/ and I were playing over at “the Grounds”:http://www.commongroundsarlington.com/ when a middle-aged, slightly disheveled guy walked right up to our table. His eyes bugged out slightly, and he wore a pair of really big headphones around his neck.

“That’s a big board,” he said.

I avoided eye contact, knowing that Steve, who is far more polite than me, would shoulder the burden of conversation. “Um, yeah,” he replied.

“Where did you get it?”

“It was a Christmas present.”

“I used to have a round board. It was round. A circle. Round. But a guy borrowed it and I never saw it again.” He paused very briefly. “Do you guys play for money?”

“No,” said Steve, “We just play for fun. I get too stressed out when I play for money.”

“Ah, they don’t let you play for money here,” said the guy. “Well, I’d still like to play. We should play some time.”

“Yeah . . .” said Steve.

“I put up a sign on the bulletin board but they took it down.”

“Well, there’s a lot of people around here who play.”

The guy nodded. “That’s good. I’d like to play. I’m the greatest backgammon player in the world.” I still don’t know if he was serious — his demeanor was just off enough that he could have been simply nuts, but you couldn’t be sure.

“Really?” said Steve.

“The only one better than me is Jesus Christ.”

“Does he play backgammon?”

“He’s the one who brought it to earth.”

Then, without further comment, the guy stalked out. A few minutes later he came back and introduced himself by name. He seemed disappointed that we were still playing each other. “I’d still like to play some time,” he said. “It’s OK if it’s not for money, if they don’t allow that here. I mean, I _do_ play for money, but we can just play for fun if you, you know, don’t want to play. For money.” Then he stalked out again.

The thing is, if he hadn’t said the thing about being the best backgammon player in the world, I would’ve been perfectly happy never to see him again. But now I _want_ to play him, if only to put him in his place — or learn a thing or two if he turns out to be some sort of freaky backgammon genius. Either way, I’ve got to _know_. You can be sure I’ll let you know if he ever turns up again.

Do Something Spontaneous

Denizens of Greater DC, take heed:

Tonight. At “Velvet Lounge”:http://www.velvetloungedc.com/. The long looked-for return of “The Spontanes”:http://www.spontanes.com/. A finer band of finer folk you’ll find hard to hear in this great town. Also on stage tonight: The Spoils of NW and The Five Maseratis. See you there.

The Passion of the Christ: A Review

The Passion of the Christ is better than its harshest critics (like David Denby and David Edelstein) have made it out to be, and far worse than its warm reception by many religious groups suggests. Edelstein calls the movie “a two-hour-and-six-minute snuff movie . . . that thinks it’s an act of faith.” This is an overstatement, but one that gets to the heart of the matter, which is the film’s astonishing violence. As the title indicates, it is concerned solely with the last hours of Jesus’ life, and as most everyone is aware by now, it emphasizes the laceration and physical destruction of Jesus’ body. The patience and detail with which those moments are presented to us are excruciating.

Gibson’s impulse to focus on the bodily nature of Jesus’ suffering is, in itself, sensible and even welcome. Christians believe that Jesus was fully God and fully man, but in the long sweep of interpretation across film, music, drama, art, catechism lessons, and sermons from the pulpit, it’s the implications of the “fully man” side of the equation that usually get short shrift. The Passion of the Christ had the potential to serve as a corrective in this respect, but it fails for two reasons:

First, the excessiveness of the violence. Gibson starkly confronts us with the pain that Jesus experienced, presses on to the point where it literally becomes difficult to keep watching, and then keeps right on going until the depiction is merely ugly and obsessive. With the exception of the raven poking out the eye of Gesmas, there’s no individual moment that’s so awful that it’s inherently inappropriate. But the sheer length of the flagellation scene—which would have been masterful at a quarter of the length—and the sheer proportion of the film that’s taken up by torture and pain, fly far beyond what’s needed to make us feel either empathy or discomfort. Where I differ from Edelstein is that I still think the movie is an act of faith—I just know I’m not going to visit Gibson’s church any time soon.

Second, and more importantly, the emphasis on Jesus’ humanity doesn’t extend beyond the bodily suffering. The biggest exception is a wonderful flashback scene between young Jesus as a carpenter and Mary his mother. In the other flashbacks, when we see him at the Last Supper and at the Sermon on the Mount, we see a airbrushed Jesus with a chiseled face and a salon-trimmed beard, delivering his lines with a Buddha-like detachment from reality. Even in Gethsemane, we see him wracked not by doubt so much as pain. Most disappointing of all is the resurrection scene: we see the stone roll away, and the camera pans over to the burial clothes floating down over emptiness, Obi Wan Kenobi-style. Airbrushed Jesus is revealed standing next to the slab (apparently he teleported there). But what we needed to see in that moment, after all emphasis on the destruction of Jesus’ body, is that body lurching up again from the slab, achieving victory over death.

In the Gospels, Jesus’ physical suffering comes in a distant second to his existential suffering. He doubts. His prayer in Gethsemane is a one-way conversation, and, like us, he has to take on faith that there’s someone up there listening. On the cross, in one moment he’s promising the good thief that he’ll see him in heaven, but in the next he’s crying out “My God! My God! Why have you forsaken me?” That Jesus himself has a crisis of faith seems to me to be central to the Passion, and certainly the part that enables Christians to identify with him, since faith is an ongoing process, sometimes struggle, for all of us. This side of Jesus’ suffering, the one that really counts, is absent from the film.

Gibson’s concern, ultimately, is not with the human side of Jesus overall, but with the suffering of his body at a particular point in time. This is too bad, because his attention to historical detail (visually speaking) and the use of Aramaic and Latin create a powerfully immersive experience. If you’re someone who’s grown up with the story of Jesus, you’ve had plenty of opportunities to get a deeper and more nuanced understanding of the texts, but how often has your visual vocabulary of the events been updated since Sunday School? How often have you heard Aramaic or Latin spoken?

Bringing us those things is the film’s greatest accomplishment. Alongside that are some moments, most involving Mary, that achieve a piercing emotional intensity. I’ve never been in a movie before where I was cursing the director for crassly manipulating me in one moment, and fighting back tears that were honestly won in the next. That said, the camera work was heavy-handed as often as it was restrained and elegant—God’s tear falling from the sky is a good example of the former. The score, too, was good but not in the same league as Peter Gabriel’s masterful work for The Last Temptation of Christ.

The film itself is not antisemitic—and I say that as someone who went in expecting it to be, based on reading reviews like Denby’s, and on the fact that Gibson himself hadn’t distanced himself from his father, who has made blatantly antisemitic statements. The most common thing that reviewers like Denby cite is the portrayal of Pilate as a guy Just Trying To Do the Right Thing, as opposed to a (more historical) depiction of him as a ruthless and pitiless local governor. By this logic, making Pilate look better = making the Romans look better = making the Jews look worse = antisemitism. I don’t buy it. Depicting Pilate as sympathetic is certainly within the interpretive boundaries of what the Gospels say about him, and his own soul-searching doesn’t make the Romans look better—Pilate and the Pharisees are all interested in maintaining the status quo, and his ultimate inaction ends up being as much a factor in Jesus’ execution as their bribery and crass manipulation of the populace. Even with the inclusion of Pilate the Thoughtful, the Romans come off as a far worse group than the Jews. After the bloody pulp of Jesus’ body, the only thing in the movie that’s emphasized more, moment by moment, is the casual, pitiless cruelty of the Roman soldiers. From the time when Jesus shoulders the cross to when he dies, they chat, chuckle, and chide. For them, it’s just another day at work.

The story of Jesus is nothing if not resilient, and it shines through frequently despite the weak spots and excesses of this particular film. Approaching The Passion of the Christ with no knowledge of Christianity, you would see a story about power, the hideous lengths that people both monstrous and civil will go to maintain it, and the terrible consequences of their actions. In the face of that, Jesus’ endurance, fueled not by rage but by forgiveness and even love, is a force that those who care about power cannot understand, and can never extinguish. “Love your enemy.” “Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.” You can tell in his eyes that the Pharisee’s worldview is being rent asunder when hears those words. Everything’s topsy-turvy. It’s enough to change the world.

The Passion of the Christ is an unusual narrative construct—it doesn’t set out to be an independent tale. Much of it would be nonsensical to someone not already familiar with the story of Jesus’ last day. Its purpose is to immerse us in the setting of a story we already know, and to generate an outpouring of emotion as a response to it. As an independent aesthetic entity, it doesn’t even make sense. There’s no problem at all with making such a movie, especially since it’s based on the most widely-known story in the world. But it does mean that whatever you take away from the film will depend, much more than usual, on what assumptions and preconceptions you bring to it.

And even as a completion of a narrative experience, the film requires a great deal of additional interpretation and creative license to flesh it out. A couple chapters out of any of the Gospels don’t provide enough material for two hours of film. In Gibson’s case he draws heavily from the Catholic tradition, especially the Stations of the Cross. He also throws in his haunting, androgynous Satan, as well as Satan’s freakish baby and the demon-children that hound Judas to suicide. Again, there’s no problem with any of this, as long as everyone keeps their heads about them and no one goes around claiming that the movie Tells the Story Just As Scripture Tells It.

And therein lies a big problem, not with the film itself, but with how it has been marketed, and how it has been received by a large segment of the evangelical Christian population. By now we’re all familiar with the stories of people who don’t usually got the movies going to this one, even bringing their kids. The assumption, often unspoken, is that the hand of God was guiding Mel to make this movie, that this time it’s the Jesus Story Done Right. This perspective has been enthusiastically embraced by a wide variety of religious groups, leading in large part to its tremendous box office success. I can see how someone who sees himself as a soldier in a culture war, surrounded and beset on all sides by the forces of secularism, would like to think of this movie as a brave and spirited counterstrike into enemy territory. There’s no question that it’s a work done in a spirit of piety. But The Passion of the Christ is just a movie, with its own laundry list of virtues and flaws. It isn’t the Gospels made manifest on film; it’s a particular, idiosyncratic, passionate but at times sadistic interpretation. It sure as heck ain’t holy; as a whole, it isn’t even all that good.

So what does Gibson say about his own film? A transcript of his widely-viewed interview with Diane Sawyer isn’t available online, but there’s plenty in this Christianity Today interview to look at. On the one hand, he is perfectly up front about his interpretive role in the process:

. . . I think that my first duty is to be as faithful as possible in telling the story so that it doesn’t contradict the Scriptures. Now, so long as it didn’t do that, I felt that I had a pretty wide berth for artistic interpretation, and to fill in some of the spaces with logic, with imagination, with various other readings.

On the other hand, he’s equally up front about his belief that Satan tried to obstruct the making of his movie:

[Interviewer]: So you think there are spiritual forces resisting this project?
Gibson: Oh, of course. But that’s the big picture, isn’t it? The big realms are slugging it out. We’re just the meat in the sandwich.

But for me the most telling part of the interview is here:

The most interesting reaction was from the guy who lives over the fence. He’s known my boys since he was a little kid. He wanders in, goes through the refrigerator, helps himself to food, comes in, plops in front of the TV. We’re watching it, so he catches it only from about halfway through, from the flagellation. He forgot to eat. He had his food, but he forgot to eat it. When it’s over, he just has this stunned silence and doesn’t really know quite how to react. He sits there for a couple of minutes, and I’m was watching him. And he finally turned to me and he said, “Dude, that was graphic.”

Now that’s an understatement, but it indicated to me that he was really thinking. He was searching. And I think people don’t usually say much after the film. They can’t really talk, which is a good reaction, I think, because they are introspective—which is what I hoped to achieve: introspection.

How on earth Gibson could take his neighbor’s “dude” line as an indication that he was “really thinking,” an example of “introspection,” is beyond me. Silence is not introspection. Shock is not awe. If Gibson thinks it is, I can understand why he might give himself more credit than he deserves for this film—and why audiences who are stunned by mere brutality might convince themselves they’re being stunned by something more.

As I walked out of the theater yesterday afternoon, I held the door open for a middle-aged woman with a dazed expression on her face. Our eyes met and she asked, rather hesitantly, “What did you think?”

“I had a bit of trouble with all the violence,” I said.

Her face relaxed into an expression of relief. “Oh, yes. Me too. I wasn’t at all comfortable with it. But I didn’t know if I was missing something.”

We talked a little longer, and it became clear that her expectation of the movie didn’t match what she saw, but that what she had heard about it beforehand figured so strongly that she doubted her own response at first. I doubt she’s the only one.

Polytroposmobile For Sale!

As the “previous message”:http://www.polytropos.org/archives/000331.html indicates, it’s time to welcome a new Polytroposmobile and sell the old one. I’d love to give first dibs to one of the “vast number”:http://www.reenhead.com/map/metroblogmap.html of bloggers in the DC area. Buy my car! All the info is in “this Craigslist ad”:http://washingtondc.craigslist.org/car/26502650.html.

UPDATE: It’s sold! No to a blogger, but to Jason, a Polytropos reader and “Common Grounds”:http://www.commongroundsarlington.com/ kingpin. May it serve you well, Jason.

Cruising Solo

Ah, the ol’ family food chain. My dad bought a car, so Suanna and I bought his old one, a ’93 Mazda with considerably fewer miles than our venerable ’92 Corolla. Suanna and Ella flew back from Michigan, but I drove our new ride back to DC alone. Fortunately I had had the forethought to bring the trusty mp3 player along, so I had tunes for the ride.

I ripped mp3s off of my CDs several years ago, at the height of the popularity of _Buffy: The Vampire Slayer_. I knew I wanted to assign genres to the tracks so that I could play songs by genre either on the computer or in the car, but traditional subdivisions like Folk, Rock, and Alternative weren’t useful at all. So I decided to organize by metaphor: my “genres” became characters from _Buffy_, based loosely on the music that character might like. So all geek rock (They Might Be Giants, Moxy Fruvous) went into the “Xander” category, while the artsy moody stuff (Belle & Sebastian, The Pernice Brothers) fell under “Willow,” and so on.

For the long cruise home yesterday, I opted for “Giles”: everything from the 60’s and 70’s, or by artists who were at their height at that time. It turned out to be a good choice. The air was balmy and the sunroof was open around twilight, with the sky dappled orange behind me, when the following sequence kicked in:

Absolutely Sweet Marie –> Respect –> Piece of My Heart –> In the Light –> Like a Rolling Stone[1]

The sublime beauty of those twenty minutes carried me the rest of the way home without complaint. Well, that and lots of cheese popcorn.

It’s high time for a new set of genres, though. I need a set of ten or so characters or other entities that I can assign music to in a non-arbitrary and metaphorical way. Any suggestions?

fn1. That’s Dylan, Aretha, Janis, Zeppelin, Dylan, for those who weren’t sure.

Missing the Zimbabwe Fun

Argh! What a weekend to be out of town and without time to blog. The whole story of the mercenaries held in Zimbabwe is confusing and fascinating, and ties neatly into stuff I’ve written before about “Northbridge”:http://www.polytropos.org/archives/000156.html and “PMCs in general”:http://www.polytropos.org/archives/000312.html. Hopefully by the time I get home there’ll still be something worth commenting on. In the meantime, “Josh Marshall”:http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/ is doing a pretty good job of distilling the news; “Jonathan Edelstein”:http://headheeb.blogmosis.com/ is doing some but I keep hoping for more, seeing as Africa is one of his specialties.

Checking In On Liberia

It’s been a few months since my last Liberia-related post, and even longer since one that addressed Liberian reconstruction and not just the fate of ex-dictator Charles Taylor. This is a case of “no news is good news,” with a couple of big caveats: 1) there’s been plenty of news, just nothing major, and 2) ‘good’ in this context equals ‘no resurgence of civil war, mass starvation, or other complete breakdown of the social order nationwide.’

Briefly, US troops are long-since gone, and the UN maintains a peacekeeping mission with forces from Ireland, Sweden, Pakistan, Nigeria, and many other nations. As part of their general ‘maintenance of law and order’ role, their biggest task has been to oversee the disarmament of thousands of fighters, many of them children, on both sides of the recent conflict. There’s been periodic news of rebel groups acting up in the back country, but nothing that has grown significantly. The current concern that there are Taylor supporters training in Nimba county is more troubling, but as yet unconfirmed. Peace hasn’t been achieved everywhere in Liberia yet, but it’s spreading.

The outlook on reconstruction is better than I thought it’d be. Monetary pledges have been <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,3718634,00.html”>quite generous – $200 million from the U.S.; $520 million from international donors. The interim government, a messy power-sharing arrangement between the former government and rebel forces, is holding together. A clearer indication of progress will be how smoothly elections go late next year.

Charles Taylor continues to find himself under some pressure, even though Nigeria has no intention to extradite him to stand trial before the Sierra Leone Special Court. There’s a proposed UN resolution to freeze his assets. Investigators for the court are also trying to search Taylor’s residences in Monrovia:

The team, headed by Chief Investigator Allen White, met strong resistance on Friday, when they tried to enter a house in Congo Town, the south-eastern suburb of the capital, Monrovia . . . “We can not allow you to enter this house. We are under instructions not to just allow anyone to enter this house. There are properties here and they must be protected,” said Joseph Kollie, one of the supporters of the former president . . . It took the intervention of UN peacekeeping forces and a delay of several hours before the investigators were able to gain access to the building.

First of all, it’s “Congotown,” not “Congo Town,” and second of all, that’s where I lived. I wonder if the residence was on Old Road Congotown, the threading road that was the main route into downtown until the big-road-whose-name-escapes-me was built. There were quite a few swank houses on Old Road, including the big white one my family lived in. Many had lovely views of the ocean on the far side of the not-as-lovely lagoon. It wouldn’t be at all unusual if one of them was Taylor’s. Weird.

Freezing Taylor’s assets is a good idea, since there have been plenty of indications that he wants a victorious return to Liberia, and will use any means to get it. But what about the man himself? On the “get him from Calabar and put him on trial” side we have the unlikely alliance of human-rights groups and private military companies like Northbridge. (Northbridge apparently missed out on all the juicy Iraq contracts, so they really, really want this gig.) On the “leave him there” side there’s the U.S. State Department, which negotiated for his exile and would rather leave this particular boat unrocked for the time being.

Finally, the U.S. Navy has vastly increased its powers to stop commerical vessels in international waters in order to search for weapons of mass destruction, thanks to a <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,3746450,00.html”>new pact with Liberia. Why would an agreement with a tiny, broken nation give so much power? Because this particular tiny, broken nation has always enjoyed a steady stream of income from selling flags of convenience. Plenty of countries will happily let you register your ship with them on the cheap – you pay cheaper licensing fees than you would at your First World home port, and all you have to do is fly that country’s flag on your ship. Liberia has always been one of the very cheapest purveyors of flags of convenience, and consequently, lots and lots of commercial vessels (I hesitate to say ‘the majority’, though I’m fairly sure that was the case in the Eighties) fly the Liberian flag. The Navy has taken advantage of this state of affairs to gain their new searching rights. Clever, clever Navy. Don’t go abusing that power, now.

An interesting footnote, enabled by Google News: the vast majority of newspapers that carried the AP story about the Navy pact gave it the headline “U.S. Given Right to Search Liberian Ships.” But a handful of small papers, mostly in Middle America, gave the headline a more patriotic spin, like the Topeka Capital-Journal’s “Pact empowers U.S. sailors.” I’m sure somebody out there has done a study on trends in regional variations in AP headlines in general. I’d love to see it.