Weekly Links

Wladimir Gawriilowitsch Krikhatzkij, “The First Tractor,” date unknown. Via wikimedia.

By Danny Hirschel-Burns

Wladimir Gawriilowitsch Krikhatzkij, "The First Tractor," date unknown. Via wikimedia.
Wladimir Gawriilowitsch Krikhatzkij, “The First Tractor,” date unknown. Via wikimedia.

In the Monkey Cage, Kerry F. Crawford, Amelia Hoover Green, and Sarah E. Parkinson challenge the ‘rape as a weapon of war’ narrative.

BBC Magazine takes a look at the eccentric life of the ‘Greek Robin Hood’ who robs banks, gives to the poor, and has escaped from jail by helicopter twice.

Several Brookings fellows debate what’s driving ISIS’ strategy. Robert Engell argues ISIS is simply obscuring bigger problems in the Middle East. Vice News has a new documentary series shot while embedded with Islamic Front fighters in contested Aleppo. Frederic Wehrey and PVG guest contributor Ariel Ahram look at the pros and cons of creating a National Guard in Iraq. Bridget Conley-Zilkic of the World Peace Foundation criticizes militarized atrocity response in general and American airstrikes in Iraq in particular. Finally, Matthieu Adkins weaves a compelling narrative of those that dig civilians out of the rubble in the aftermath of barrel bombs, “Smaller chunks of concrete were picked away, larger ones levered free, webs of rusted rebar were sawed in half. Finally, they opened a hole through the floor, and there they were: The brothers crouched down by their beds, chalk-white but seemingly unharmed. It was as if they had been etched back into the world.”

The Mexican drug war has a high death toll, but it’s hard to know exactly the scale of the tragedy when hundreds of people can disappear without a trace.

Berit Bliesemann de Guevara identifies the International Crisis Group’s bias.

How to build democracy? Brian Levy argues for an incrementalist approach based in realism. In Tunisia, democracy is growing largely thanks to reasonable politicians. Somewhat relatedly, Rachel Strohm supplies evidence that weak central states do not always breed disorder. While Israel is certainly not a weak state, it is privatizing violent authority to settlers in the West Bank.

Rwanda’s government is increasingly cracking down on internal threats, real or imagined.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like
Read More

Weekly links

By Sarah Bakhtiari Fighting authoritarianism without violence: annually, the North Korea Strategy Center smuggles thousands of USB drives…
Read More
Read More

Weekly Links

By Patrick Pierson. Read about the paramilitary forces mobilized in Nicaragua to quell popular protests against the Ortega…
Read More
Read More

Weekly Links

By Taylor Marvin A video imagining a future where Russian freedom fighters battle a fascist, expansionary, and — ludicrously…
Read More
Read More

Weekly Links

By Patrick Pierson. Turns out that it’s difficult to make a new NAFTA deal. The US government is…
Read More
Read More

Weekly Links

By Patrick Pierson. The economic and political turmoil in Venezuela continues. Venezuelans are flocking to neighboring Colombia in…
Read More