12 July 2026Focus · MENA · Latin America10 Items · 2 Translated · Shelf › · Archive ›
— The Dragoman's Note —
A week of institutions running out of euphemism: Rome’s pastoral caution over Gaza, Egypt’s “voluntary return” ferry marooned at Aswan, and Israel’s legal and urban machinery all turn on words that no longer cover the force beneath them. The same pressure appears outside war zones, where CNRS tries to claw software back from Microsoft dependency and online personhood schemes threaten to make civic presence pass through a technical gate. Memory is another battlefield: Hubertus Czernin dragged Austria’s Waldheim myth into the archive, while Britain’s Cold War disinformation shop shows how liberal states laundered ideology through respectable channels. Education and aid are not soft backdrops here but instruments of authority, from Japanese volunteers in Chuuk to madrasa credentialing in Afghanistan and public research procurement in France. Across Gaza, Vienna, Aswan, Paris and Chuuk, the question is who gets to certify reality: a church, a border guard, a platform, a ministry, a university, or a file in an archive.
Gaza is forcing the Catholic hierarchy to choose how much moral authority it is willing to spend against a powerful state and its allies.
The Unspoken Name
Pope Leo XIV has kept Francis’s ethic of empathy while avoiding the word many Catholics now want from Rome on Gaza. The tension is institutional as much as moral: a universal church built on pastoral diplomacy is being pushed by its own clergy and laity to name state violence more directly.
Why it leads: Gaza is forcing the Catholic hierarchy to choose how much moral authority it is willing to spend against a powerful state and its allies.
English · 2d ago · Deep
The Brief
The Brief tracks a world where moral language, migration labels, research software and online identity all become systems of control once institutions enforce them.
Scheffler’s four reasons to care about future generations
Reason
What it rests on
Force
Interest
Activities lose meaning if humanity ends
Self-regarding
Love
Attachment to people and valued things
Personal
Evaluation
Judgments depend on human continuation
Cultural
Reciprocity
Debt across generations
Moral
Samuel Scheffler’s problem is brutally simple: much of what gives present lives meaning depends on there being future human beings after us. Responsibility to future generations is not an optional ethical add-on; it is already inside our projects, institutions, and ideas of achievement.
« De nombreuses activités que nous trouvons aujourd’hui valoir la peine d’être menées perdraient beaucoup de leur sens et nous sembleraient de bien moindre valeur si nous pensions que la vie humaine était sur le point de s’éteindre. » (p. 54)
East Medinipur’s betel-leaf economy has changed over four decades without losing its older agricultural grammar: varieties, enclosed baroj cultivation, caste and regional consumption habits, and local marketing networks still matter. A common chewing habit becomes a map of labor, land, taste, and smallholder adaptation.
In a nearby field, a farmer had gone inside the boroj, among the leaf-laden enclosures, and was irrigating with an earthen pot. In conversation with him, I learned that the betel plant is exceedingly tender. Strong sunlight can scorch its soft leaves, and excessive watering can rot the roots of the vines.
Britain’s Information Research Department treated information as a battlefield long before the internet made the phrase fashionable. The Cold War lesson is uncomfortable: liberal states fought propaganda with their own semi-deniable networks, selective leaks, and ideological laundering through friendly intellectuals.
All kinds of factors affect the outcome of elections, making it almost impossible to prove that a disinformation campaign on social media, for example, played a significant role in the outcome.
Hubertus Czernin’s work on Kurt Waldheim forced Austria to confront the postwar fiction that it had been Hitler’s first victim rather than a society deeply implicated in Nazism. The scandal mattered because one journalist turned archival detail into a case against national self-exoneration.
Postwar Austria had built its identity on precisely that cultivated art of forgetting. The Opferthese – the claim that Austria had been Hitler’s first victim – offered a narrative that was both politically useful and socially comforting.
More than 70 South Sudanese people boarded a “voluntary return” ferry from Egypt, only to be trapped on Lake Nasser when Sudan refused transit and Egypt blocked return. The word voluntary collapses when the route depends on hostile border regimes, war, and a state eager to remove unwanted migrants.
Swift’s Gulliver keeps traveling because the satire was never just about imaginary islands; it was a portable machine for shrinking political vanity, scientific pride, imperial innocence, and human self-importance. Three centuries later, the book still works because each age finds a new reason to think it is the rational one being mocked.
In realtà il viaggio più creativo e sorprendente del romanzo swiftiano è probabilmente il terzo, il più vivace e frammentario, in cui Gulliver si trova sull’isola di Laputa, una vera e propria fortezza volante che interagisce con un enorme magnete sottomarino.
How online identity checks have shifted as bots became agents
Era
Signal of humanness
Weakness
Old web
Reputation, names, karma
Mostly local trust
Bot era
CAPTCHAs, phone numbers
Automation caught up
Agentic web
Proof of personhood
Governance stakes rise
The AI web is eroding the old assumption that a user, a post, or a crowd is human unless proved otherwise. Personhood systems promise a fix, but they also move identity, privacy, and platform power into a new technical layer that could become mandatory for public life.
The agentic web will force us to verify something the old web mostly presumed: that there is a morally and legally accountable person somewhere in the chain. “Proof of personhood” technology is emerging as the fix. But that fix is not merely technical plumbing.
CNRS is shifting away from Microsoft-style dependency toward sovereign digital tools, not only as a symbolic French tech-sovereignty gesture but as an institutional cost and control strategy. The deeper issue is procurement: public research bodies become structurally dependent when everyday software, data, and cloud habits are outsourced by default.
Japanese Aid Boosting Education, Health, and More in Chuuk, Micronesia
Japanese aid and volunteer work in Chuuk
Person or project
Role
Scale or date
Hatayama Takashi
Japanese teacher at Xavier High School
Arrived Dec 2024
JICA volunteers
Education and health support
480 to date
Weno Harbor
Post-typhoon expansion
2002
Health project
Portable ultrasound for remote islands
Pilot project
Japanese volunteers in Chuuk sit inside a wider aid vacuum created by the retreat of US foreign assistance. Education and health projects become soft power in miniature: language, training, and daily institutional presence do more than embassy communiques can.
Whenever Hatayama Takashi wants to get a haircut or pick up something at the store, it becomes a major undertaking. He must walk some 9 kilometers along badly rutted roads that trace the edge of the lagoon until he reaches the largest town on the island of Chuuk.
Translated from Japanese · 3d ago · 5 min · Skim
Many Views
Many Views holds Israeli coercion up to four mirrors: clause, city, courtroom and regional bargain.
Many tongues on one question
Israel’s coercive order in law, cities, courts and the region
An Arabic legal critique, a Gaza urban essay, an Israeli rights analysis and a French interview with Robert Malley read Israeli power at four scales: a Lebanon framework clause, Gaza’s built environment, Palestinian citizens inside Israel, and the Iran-Gulf-US triangle. The split is over where coercion is most visible: treaty language, rubble, indictments, or regional dependency.
Israeli courts are being used against prominent Arab officials through old statements and severe punishments, extending repression from Palestinian citizens to their leadership. +972 Magazine · English
After the Israeli-American offensive on Iran, Israel’s many fronts strain its bond with Washington while Gulf states weigh US military dependence against life next door to Iran. Orient XXI · French
Deep Research
Deep Research follows power after the slogan ends, into budgets, checkpoints, fuel roads, customs offices, party factions and classrooms.
One fault line, many vantages
The War Runs Through Budgets, Bazaars, Tankers and Dubai
The War Mill
Russia’s war capacity is not a single GDP number. These four reads put the same machine under different lights: fiscal extraction at home, military spending as social mobility, sanctions as maritime and gold logistics, and the Gulf as a pragmatic back door rather than an ideological ally.
Ру · Russian independent analysis of domestic fiscal capacity and everyday economic adaptation
Теневая экономика и мобилизационное государство: неудержимая сила против неподвижного объекта
Russia’s wartime state needs more tax visibility just as sanctions and parallel imports make opacity useful. The informal economy is not a leftover from weakness; it is a social stabilizer for low earners, a rent machine for elites, and a workaround for keeping shelves stocked under sanctions. Riddle · Russian
Fr · French Russia/Eurasia research, focused on the class geography of Russian militarization
War spending has redistributed money toward poorer regions, soldiers’ families, defense workers and peripheral towns that rarely gained from normal Russian growth. That does not make the model sustainable, but it explains why the war economy can buy compliance as well as shells. Ifri · French
Ру · Russian Middle East specialist reading Gulf monarchies as sanctions-era commercial infrastructure
Россия и арабские монархии: прагматичное сближение в эпоху санкций
The Gulf is not replacing the West for Moscow; it is providing selective channels: UAE corporate registration, services trade, logistics, re-export, gold, grain and petroleum-product arbitrage. Iran may be Russia’s military partner, but the Gulf monarchies are more valuable to Russia’s sanctioned economy. Riddle Russia · Russian
One fault line, many vantages
Who Rules Gaza When the Government Is a Map?
Read together, these four pieces strip the “day after” down to coercion, land and aid. Gaza is being partitioned before it is administered: technocratic committees can sign papers, but the real state functions are the yellow line, militia checkpoints, food distribution and the surviving force structure of Hamas.
ع · Palestinian/Arab, close to Hamas’s institutional logic and the negotiations over Gaza’s internal administration.
غزة أمام لحظة انتقالية: من حكومة حماس إلى لجنة التكنوقراط
Hamas’s administrative handover is not simple capitulation; it is an attempt to stop the talks being reduced to “disarm first, govern later.” The real danger is clause 17-style partition: reconstruction for “resistance-free” zones, siege and military pressure for the rest of Gaza. NoonPost · Arabic
Tr · Turkish policy-intellectual view, reading Gaza through trusteeship, colonial administration and Muslim-world political failure.
Gazze İşgali Sonrası: Yönetilen Kriz, Ertelenen Adalet
Technocratic rule, demilitarization and reconstruction become a control sequence: Palestinians are managed as a humanitarian population while sovereignty is deferred. Washington’s domestic calendar and Israeli security doctrine shape the “second phase” more than any Palestinian political settlement. Perspektif Online · Turkish
En · British ground reporting, useful here as the concrete militia layer that cross-checks the Arabic and French accounts of managed fragmentation.
The “single Palestinian authority” formula runs into 47 armed groups and about 2,100 fighters, some armed or tolerated by Israel. These militias are not side-noise: they turn food, clan authority and anti-Hamas policing into rival state functions. The Guardian · English
Many tongues on one storm
When a Capital Runs on Convoys
Mali’s crisis is no longer a simple junta-versus-jihadists story. JNIM and the Azawad rebels have turned former rivalry into a working coalition, while the state’s survival is being tested on roads, fuel corridors, tribal mediation channels and Russian force limits.
En · Militant-network tracking from FDD’s Long War Journal; strong on order of battle and territorial sequencing.
The geography is the point: Kidal and Gao in the north, Kati and Bamako’s airport in the south, Mopti and Sévaré in the center. The offensive stretched Russian and Malian forces until Africa Corps had to choose regime survival over holding the north, while JNIM’s shadow taxes, sharia courts and blockades kept eroding state authority behind the front line. FDD’s Long War Journal · English
ع · Arabic edition of an AFRICOM-backed African security magazine; useful for the military-logistics frame, with clear US/security-establishment bias.
تعيين جنرال في مالي لتحقيق النصر في «حرب الوقود» في باماكو
Before the April blitz, JNIM had already made sovereignty a diesel problem: roads from Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, Mauritania and Senegal became the battlefield, with fuel deliveries reportedly cut by about 80%. The junta’s answer is logistics militarization under Famouké Camara; every convoy becomes evidence that the capital cannot function without armed corridors. The Africa Report · Arabic
What they said would happen
The Emirate Was Not a Bargaining Chip
Afghanistan did not become a Taliban 1.0 museum piece or a quickly moderating Doha actor: it became a poor but functioning coercive emirate, with shadow-court habits turned into state practice, tax and customs extraction, moral-police law, madrasa credentialing, managed media, forced gender seclusion, and an economy kept alive by remittances, hawala, aid cash, transit politics and returnees. The scorecard is harsh: Joe Biden said on July 8, 2021 that a Taliban takeover of the whole country was “highly unlikely” and that there would be no embassy-roof evacuation; Kabul fell on August 15, 2021, after US intelligence timelines slipped from six-to-twelve months to 30-90 days and still missed. Zabihullah Mujahid’s August 17 promises of amnesty, women’s work and education, and media independence under Islamic limits aged badly; Younus Negah’s counter-claim that the restrictions are social engineering rather than bargaining has aged well; Lindsey Graham’s “another 9/11” warning has not come true in the literal US-homeland sense, but the safe-haven concern was not imaginary after Ayman al-Zawahiri was found in Kabul and ISKP/TTP made Afghanistan’s neighborhood, not America, the first blast radius. ([zantimes.com](https://zantimes.com/fa/2024/12/06/not-a-bargaining-tactic-it-is-an-attempt-at-social-engineering/))
فا · Afghan writer in exile, writing in Persian for an Afghan women-led newsroom.
فرامین طالبان تاکتیک چانهزنی نیست؛ تلاش برای مهندسی اجتماعی است
Younus Negah cuts through the “changed Taliban” story: the movement’s decrees are not chips to trade for recognition but the program itself, rooted in madrasa networks, wartime economies, shadow courts, taxation and a coherent idea of the emirate. This is the cleanest Afghan-language reckoning with the prediction that pragmatism would moderate the Taliban once they had to govern. ([zantimes.com](https://zantimes.com/fa/2024/12/06/not-a-bargaining-tactic-it-is-an-attempt-at-social-engineering/)) Zan Times · Persian
En · Pakistan-Afghanistan regional security and economy desk, closer to the border/trade politics than Western anniversary coverage.
The “Taliban recovery” is not recovery in the normal sense: agriculture still carries most livelihoods, the opium ban removed a high-value rural income stream, and the macro-system runs on customs revenue, diaspora money, hawala, humanitarian cash injections and import dependence. Useful for seeing why collapse did not happen, and why stability remains thin. The Khorasan Diary · English
En · Collaborative investigation by Guardian, Afghan Witness, Lighthouse Reports, Zan Times and Etilaat Roz, built from satellite imagery and Kabul resident testimony.
Kabul’s “modernization” is state power through bulldozers: satellite analysis found 1.56 sq km flattened between August 2021 and August 2024, with Hazara and Tajik districts heavily hit, informal settlements razed, and women-led households blocked from compensation by segregation rules. The emirate governs cities by enforcing property, ethnicity and mobility together. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2024/nov/18/revealed-the-truth-behind-the-talibans-brutal-kabul-regeneration-programme)) The Guardian / Afghan Witness / Lighthouse Reports / Zan Times / Etilaat Roz · English
After the cameras left
Pretoria Stopped the War; It Did Not Decide Who Rules Tigray
The ceasefire froze the front line inside administration itself: military command, party legality, church jurisdiction, farmland access, and IDP return all became rival claims to sovereignty. The next fault line is not one clean Tigray-vs-Addis confrontation, but a layered struggle among TPLF factions, federal officials, Amhara claims in Raya and Welkait, Eritrean pressure, and civilians trying to avoid being recruited, taxed, displaced, or governed twice.
Am · Amharic local reporting from Wazema’s Ethiopian source network, close to Tigray political and military actors.
Tigray’s post-war reality is a command chart: four fronts, named army units, a central command, and a “Mekhete Council” where TPLF political authority and armed authority overlap. Pretoria’s DDR language looks thin beside this machinery; the region is being recentralized around men with guns, not normalized through civilian institutions. Wazema · AM
Am · Ground-level Amharic reporting from Raya’s contested districts, with residents, victims and relatives as the core sources.
In Raya, sovereignty is experienced as ransom, checkpoints, forced recruitment and pressure on local service offices. Wazema’s residents describe politics turning into a protection economy: Tigray-linked armed men, Fano actors, federal command posts and local administrators all coexist, while families sell land or jewelry to free abducted relatives. Wazema · AM
En · Tigrayan-authored Ethiopian op-ed, published in Addis Ababa, written from the accountability-and-state-reconstruction camp.
A Tigrayan peace-and-security researcher treats Pretoria as an intentionally incomplete truce that bought time but never settled Western Tigray, transitional justice, civilian representation or control of armed units. The tone is prosecutorial and factional, but the useful move is the separation of Tigray’s society from TPLF hardliners, federal stalling, Eritrean leverage and Amhara civilian security fears. The Reporter Ethiopia · English
En · Local Ethiopian business paper using regional agriculture officials and humanitarian assessments to follow the material consequences of the frozen settlement.
The peace failure becomes harvest math: Tigray’s agriculture bureau says roughly half the region’s fertile land is inaccessible because armed groups still control key areas, leaving about 763,000 hectares cultivable against a 1.3 million-hectare plan. Food insecurity is no longer a post-war humanitarian aftershock; it is produced by unresolved territorial control. Capital Ethiopia · English
A standing interest, freshly read
Who Gets to Turn Thought Into Authority?
These pieces follow ideas after they leave the book: metaphor becomes AI governance; cybernetics becomes administrative reason; Soviet generational theory becomes a way of assigning agency and defeat; Renaissance humanism becomes a class claim mocked on stage.
It · Italian literary-philosophical blog; Vico read against AI, cybernetics and STEM-era university politics.
AI is not proof that human thought is machinic; it is a Vichian artifact built through metaphorical transfers between body, feedback, brain and code. The ethical gap is concrete: a drone breaks, a body dies, so AI governance needs embodied responsibility, not technological determinism. Le parole e le cose² · Italian
De · German social-theory forum; political-theory critique inside a book forum on cybernetic government.
Cybernetics did not simply dissolve politics into technique. From Plato’s helmsman to Karl Deutsch’s information state, it supplied a politics of adaptive stabilization; any critique that erases institutions also erases the state as a possible site of counter-steering. Soziopolis · German
Ру · Russian literary-intellectual outlet; interview with Dmitry Travin from inside the defeated post-Soviet liberal generation.
«Простой советский человек не мог начать перестройку»
Late-Soviet ‘seventiers’ were neither dissident heroes nor inert masses: activists, escapists and cynics learned private strategies inside a system thought eternal. Perestroika began through elite openings; the generation could join and shape it, not summon it, which sharpens the old question of why anti-Soviet privatism did not produce durable democracy. Gorky · Russian
En · Anglophone public-humanities archive; Renaissance theater as social history of learning.
Renaissance pedantry was not just annoying grammar policing; it was a status conflict over who could turn Latin learning into social authority. Courtly audiences laughed at pedants because humanist educators threatened aristocratic hierarchies by claiming nobility of intellect. The Public Domain Review · English