AFGHANISTAN: Cloak & Box Trick

Lean, wiry Bacha Sakao, “The Water Carrier,” bandit King of Afghanistan sat, unconcerned, in the capital city of Kabul last fortnight while the King he drove from the throne, plump, oily Amanullah, prestidigitated in far off Kandahar to show his fitness to rule. To suspicious Kandahar Afghans plump Amanullah promised last fortnight to show the famed Khirkai Shereef , a religious relic of great potency kept in a locked box which only “a man fit to be King” can open

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Humanitarian Intervention: Whom to Protect, Whom to Abandon

Death and taxes are always with us, and so are arguments about whether nations ever have the right or duty to intervene in the affairs of others. The case for “humanitarian intervention,” under a variety of names, has been asserted at least since the great powers threw their weight behind Greece’s struggle for independence in the 1820s, but in its modern form was developed during the Wars of the Yugoslav Succession, when it appeared to many that armed force was the only way to end terrible atrocities.

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