Emerging from the vacation cocoon

As I have previously noted, vacation for me means that I tend not to pay attention to international news all that much. So, when I return to the world, I inevitably find myself astonished that certain events actually occurred. For example: 1) Did Sylvio Berlusconi really lose his composure altogether on the day he assumed ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

As I have previously noted, vacation for me means that I tend not to pay attention to international news all that much. So, when I return to the world, I inevitably find myself astonished that certain events actually occurred. For example: 1) Did Sylvio Berlusconi really lose his composure altogether on the day he assumed the EU presidency? [UPDATE: Henry Farrell provides an astute analysis of the political fallout from this] 2) Did Antonin Scalia really use the phrase "so-called homosexual agenda" in a Supreme Court dissent? 3) Did an Oxford professor really tell a possible grad student that he would not work with him because of his Israeli citizenship? I'm glad OxBlog has been monitoring this one. 4) Did George W. Bush really dare Iraqi guerillas to attack U.S. forces? It's a bad sign when CNN reports that, "more than one White House official acknowledged that, at a minimum, the Bush line was open to misinterpretation." 5) Did Al-Jazeera really air a tape allegedly recorded by Saddam Hussein just because they couldn't prove that it wasn't Hussein (link via Kieran Healy)?

As I have previously noted, vacation for me means that I tend not to pay attention to international news all that much. So, when I return to the world, I inevitably find myself astonished that certain events actually occurred. For example: 1) Did Sylvio Berlusconi really lose his composure altogether on the day he assumed the EU presidency? [UPDATE: Henry Farrell provides an astute analysis of the political fallout from this] 2) Did Antonin Scalia really use the phrase “so-called homosexual agenda” in a Supreme Court dissent? 3) Did an Oxford professor really tell a possible grad student that he would not work with him because of his Israeli citizenship? I’m glad OxBlog has been monitoring this one. 4) Did George W. Bush really dare Iraqi guerillas to attack U.S. forces? It’s a bad sign when CNN reports that, “more than one White House official acknowledged that, at a minimum, the Bush line was open to misinterpretation.” 5) Did Al-Jazeera really air a tape allegedly recorded by Saddam Hussein just because they couldn’t prove that it wasn’t Hussein (link via Kieran Healy)?

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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