[playing politics]

Topic: Foreign Affairs
The White House is accusing former antiterrorism expert Richard Clarke of playing politics with his new book, which accuses the Bush Administration with neglecting the threat from Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda both before and after 9/11.

Which leads me to wonder: exactly how is this a politically savvy move for career civil servant who was originally appointed by President Reagan? The assumption is that he has some kind of motive of personal gain, but I think the truth may be simply that he is concerned with American security and has an important story to tell. As Clarke put it, “I’m not doing this because I’m disgruntled, I’m doing this because I think the American people need to know the truth.” Is all disappointment or disagreement with the White House “playing politics”? This White House would have us believe so.

A second line of attack has been to say that Clarke was out of the loop, that major antiterror policies were formulated without his involvement:

Clarke’s successor as the top counter-terrorism official at the White House, Wayne Downing, told NBC’s “Today” show that “there may be some ego issues here because I know the operating style of the White House changed a lot when the Bush administration came in and a lot of Dick’s direct access to the president just didn’t occur any more.”

Which raises the question: why not?

Clarke served as antiterrorism expert for the National Security Council, and his brief was coordinating antiterrorist efforts across all executive-branch departments. If Clarke wasn’t given access to the president, the conclusion I draw is that the president didn’t think antiterror efforts were a priority. But if Bush and his top advisors were formulating antiterror plans, then Clarke’s exclusion suggests a certain degree of disarray within the administration. It’s as if Bush had decided to develop a national healthcare plan without mentioning any of it to the Secretary of Health and Human Services. Either that, or it’s just another example of this White House’s lack of interest in any information that doesn’t advance their own story.

[to all my friends in far flung places]

Topic: Foreign Affairs
One of the chief pleasures of the Internet is its connective power ? its ability to bring distant strangers together with an immediacy unlike that of any other medium.

As such, I want to invite any readers out there from beyond the borders of New York to send me a short piece on what’s going on where you are. Even the simple details of an ordinary day are worthwhile. Did you buy groceries in Indiana? Work late in Lahore? Go out to a bar with your friends in Singapore? Whatever and wherever, and I’ll post them up. Or get us up to date on the politics of the moment in Oregon or Scotland or Lahore. Whatever, from wherever, send it in and I’ll try to post it.

[demand the truth]

Topic: Politics

As I have pointed out before (1, 2, 3), the problem with reelecting Bush on his record of fighting terrorism is that his record on fighting terrorism is terrible.

Well, today it’s all over the news because Richard Clarke, the former “terrorism czar” who served under Reagan, Bush I, Clinton and Bush II, said so on 60 Minutes yesterday and in a new book. He provides a detailed account of the ways that the Bush administration downplayed the threat from Al Qaeda before 9/11, actually reversing Clinton Administration efforts to tackle the problem of Osama Bin Laden.

The White House, of course, has begun a vigorous campaign to discredit Clarke, just as they have attempted to discredit former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill and former Ambassador Joseph Wilson (the latter by feloniously revealing that his wife, Valerie Plame, was a covert CIA operative). It’s more of the same pattern of blaming someone else and pretending that problems aren’t really there. This isn’t leadership, it’s fantasy.

The Democratic Party has a petition up to demand the truth. Sign it if you’re interested.

[escapist fantasies]

Topic: Personal
It’s days like this, when I’m sitting here freezing in my cubicle (the sweater and winter hat aren’t enough to keep me warm) and doing completely pointless data entry (someone converted some tables to GIFs, of all things, and now I’m typing them into Excel), that I seriously consider dropping out of high school. Never mind that I’m already seven years out of college, it’s high school I want to drop out of. That would fix everything.

Well, that or a long nap.

[oh, the places you’ll go]

Topic: India
The other day, while digging through stacks of paper in search of a voucher for a free air ticket, I ran across an envelope full of business cards I’d acquired in India. Several of them have web addresses, and that got me to thinking. How many of the places we stayed are online?

Here, then, as a service to future travelers, is my travelogue in links. If you happen to be heading to India, you might want to take these recommendations. Or not. As Salman Rushdie is so fond of saying, “It is true, it is not true …

Hotel Utse
On my first trip to India, back in 1997, I found Bombay so utterly bewildering that I fled to Kathmandu on the next available flight. On the appointed day I was deadly sick, unable to keep down any food. But somehow by the time we touched down in Kathmandu, all that misery seemed to have dropped away. On the flight I’d befriended English guy about my age, and together we’d decided on Hotel Utse because the write-up in the Lonely Planet sounded good. Miracle of miracles, there was a taxi driver at the airport who actually worked for Utse and charged us nothing for the ride. And while he probably received a commission, that cost wasn’t passed on to us: the rooms cost what they cost, no bullshit. And that, in the subcontinent, is worth a premium.

The rooms are simple but adequate, the rooftop garden offers marvelous views, and the lobby restaurant is extraordinary, serving primarily Tibetan cuisine, which is something of a mix of Indian, Chinese and Russian food: thick noodle soups, potato dumplings, rich stews, savory stir-fries. And the family of owners do their best to make you feel welcome.

Kopan Monastery
We spent 10 days living at the monastery, learning from the monks, meditating, and absorbing the atmosphere of this very different world. We had our difficulties with Ani Karin, the Western nun who led the course. But nothing can compare to those dawns over the Kathmandu Valley, when we all kept silence during morning tea, the chanting of the monks wafting out from the main hall to greet the arriving sun as it chased away the mist from the ripples and folds of the surrounding mountains.

Muktinath
The highest I’ve ever been is Muktinath in the Annapurna Himalaya. It is a place of purification where devout Hindus wash away their sins in 108 fountains that surround a Vishnu temple, while an eternal flame burns beneath a statue of the Buddha. I hiked up to it in the dim light before dawn and watched the sun rise over the ridge to the east, spreading jagged shards of illumination on the peaks to the west. I felt astonishingly close to the sky, but the mountains stretched as far above me as they did below me.

Hotel White Pearl
Located on a Muslim block in the tourist ghetto of Colaba, this Mumbai hotel (whose keychains say “Gulf Flower Hotel”) is more popular with visiting Arabs than with Western backpackers. Which is just as well, because you can get a room when the Lonely Planet-listed hotels are all full. What you get for the price would be embarrassing anywhere else in India, but for Mumbai it’s reasonably clean, ferociously air-conditioned, and offers the delights of cable television. If your TV only gets 28 channels, ask at the front desk and they’ll bring you a TV that gets 100. Our only major complaint was the rats in the ventilation system. But for under $40 in Bombay, it’s about as good as you’re gonna get.

But the real reason to stay at White Pearl is so that you can tip the elevator man and get him to take you up to the roof. Spreading out across several buildings is a luxurious hubbly-bubbly (that is, hookah) cafe where young Gulf Arabs mix in male-female groups and drink surreptitious beer with their apple tobacco and kebabs. The views of the harbor are extraordinary. It’s an exclusive club and we weren’t entirely welcome, but it was an experience not to be missed. Back downstairs, White Pearl is just up the block from Basilico, which serves phenomenal breakfasts that will make you weep with pleasure if you’ve been living off idli and dosas and banana pancakes for a few months.

Kapithan Inn
This is hands down the cleanest place we stayed in all our travels. Run by a charming family out of their home, the hotel opens out onto a field where on Sundays the locals gather to play cricket. It’s close to everything you want to be close to in Cochin, like the Bascillica and the Kashi Art Cafe (see below), and you can rely on your hosts to set up your tour of the backwaters. Helpful, restful, friendly, lovely.

Kashi Art Cafe
Cochin is the only Indian city that we imagined we could actually live in, and Kashi is a big part of the reason. We would while away our mornings there over exquisite breakfasts with thick slices of grainy bread and mountains of fresh fruit, enjoying the sounds of Edith Piaf or Delta blues and admiring the extraordinary art on the walls. Kashi serves as a hub of Cochin’s thriving contemporary art scene, which hums with a genuine passion to express the complexities of Keralan culture — a mix of Hindu, Dutch, Portuguese, British, Jewish, Arabian, tribal and even Chinese influences — through innovative approaches to figurative and symbolic painting and sculpture.

Gayatri Gamuz
I first came to know Ms. Gamuz’s work in 1998, when it was hanging on the walls of the Kashi Art Cafe. This Spanish woman and her South Indian husband, a poet and ecologist, live with their two sons in Thiruvannamalai, a small town near Cochin. There’s a kind of poignancy to Gayatri’s devotion to a positive spiritual outlook, and it turns her art into a kind of Neo-Pagan icon painting. But she manages to paint and live a set of ideals that are often voiced but rarely achieved, and for this she and her husband should be noticed, supported and paid attention.

[coltrane on the air]

Topic: Culture
WKCR, the Columbia University radio station, is well into its two-week John Coltrane festival, which began on March 11 and ends on March 24. Until then, it’s nothing but Coltrane, 24 hours a day.

You can catch the broadcast on the radio at 89.9 FM or, for those of you outside the broadcast range, you can listen via the Internet on the MP3 or RealAudio stream.

‘Trane is one of the greats. Do check it out. It will improve your soul.

[one way to get noticed]

Topic: Nepal

From the BBC:

Nepal sex workers threaten nude protest

Sex workers from the Badi community in western Nepal have said they will stage a nude demonstration in front of the government headquarters in the capital, Kathmandu, to demand either Nepalese citizenship or the legalisation of prostitution.

They cannot apply for citizenship because they are the offspring of sex workers who were unmarried.

Under current Nepalese law, an applicant’s husband or father must be named before citizenship can be granted.

The women say the same fate awaits their children, unless the laws are changed.

A spokesman for the women’s support group, Kamal Bahadur Rokaya, says they are taking the action to raise awareness of their plight, as other forms of protest have failed.

I think these women have a point, and I do hope their protest gains them the basic rights that they seek. And this is just one more reason to go on a trip to Nepal.

[ode on a grecian coffee cup]

Topic: Link
New York Trash has a fantastic website exploring the many variations on the classical Greek coffee cup that is such a vital part of the New York experience. Where else can you learn the difference between Sherri Cup’s Anthora model and the BHC-10 by Alfred Bleyer & Co.?

But there’s no need to thank us here at The Traveler. We’re just happy to serve you.

[the cult of the ceo]

Topic: Personal

In Jeffrey Toobin’s piece in this week’s New Yorker on the decline and fall of Martha Stewart, my old company got a shout-out:

Stewart said … that she liked to buy shares in the companies of C.E.O.s she admired, as a kind of tribute but also as a way to learn from them. Her stock portfolio, which was made public during the trial, revealed that she fell for other emblematic figures of the nineteen-nineties. She did well with Wal-Mart and Dell, but lost with investments in Amazon, Lucent, Doubleclick, and JDS Uniphase. (Emphasis added.)

I was once a Clicker back in the heyday, when they built us a roof terrace with a basketball court, a climbing wall that we weren’t allowed to use, and a fountain so loud that it could never be turned on. They used to feed us and get us drunk so often that I wondered if they were fattening us up for something, and of course they were. I got off the merry-go-round voluntarily ? that was when I headed off to Korea to teach English ? but took the generous layoff package they were offering. And I managed to make some money on my stock options, but my dad invested my sister’s bat mitzvah money in DoubleClick shares when the company had roughly the same value as General Electric. Which was foolish, but those were heady days and we all liked to believe it would last forever.

Anyway, in terms of CEO worship, DoubleClick was better than some other places. We had two Glorious Founders, Kevin O’Connor and Kevin Ryan, and an advantage of polytheism is that it blunts the power of any one god.