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Friday, March 23, 2018

Robert D. Kaplan & Vladimir Putin's Character






I read the NY Times Bret Stephen’s review of Robert D. Kaplan’s The Return of  Marco Polo’s World – War,  Strategy, and American Interests in the Twenty-First Century with lots of interest.

My first knowledge of this unusually brilliant man began in 1994 when I purloined his Balkan Ghosts from some foreign hotel’s book shelf.

Then in 1998 under the tutelage of the Georgia Straight’s editor Charles Campbell I was given the plum assignment to photograph and interview Kaplan. I was to write a review of his An Empire Wilderness.

Kaplan by then had this theory on how geography affects the decisions nations make.

Interviewing Kaplan was a piece of cake (sort of) as I had gone to Lima in 1990 to interview Mario Vargas Llosa for Books in Canada.

As you can see I am not all that stupid a photographer. Some of us can write a splendid declarative sentence in a pinch.

The Bret Stephens review has one very splendid quote by Kaplan:

“A student of Shakespeare would have grasped Vladimir Putin’s character long before an international relations wonk.”

And there is this:

“The very idea that some sermon or blog or tweet has gone viral is a sad reflection on the state of individualism in the 21st century. The electronic swarm is a negation of loneliness that prepares the way for the new ideology of totalitarianism.”