Concettina Died and Other Stories of the East Side
PhotographsDownloadsLinksSelf-portraitContact


"Blumenthal as Poet" posted May 27, 2004 at 01:54 PM

Sidney Blumenthal, writing in Salon today, finished up a good column on Chalabi with this amazingly poetic paragraph:

___________________________
Washington, which was just weeks ago in the grip of neoconservative orthodoxy and absolute belief in Bush's inevitability and righteousness, is now in the throes of agonizing events and being ripped apart by investigations. Things fall apart; all that was hidden is revealed; all sacred exposed as profane: the military, loyal and lumbering, betrayed and embittered; the general in the field, Lt. Gen. Sanchez, disgraced and cashiered; and the most respected retired generals training their artillery on those who have ill-used the troops, still dying in the field; the intelligence agencies, a nautilus of chambers, abused and angry, its retired operatives plying their craft with the press corps, seeping dangerous truths; the press, hesitatingly and wobbly, investigating its own falsehoods; the neocons, publicly redoubling their passionate intensity, defending their hero and deceiver Chalabi, privately squabbling, anxiously awaiting the footsteps of FBI agents; Colin Powell, once the most acclaimed man in America, embarked on an endless quest to restore his reputation, damaged above all by his failure of nerve; everyone in the line of fire motioning toward the chain of command, spiraling upward and sideways, until the finger pointing in a phalanx is directed at the hollow crown.

___________________________
Wow. Great political writing!


Edited on 5/28/04 to add:
When I say poetic, I mean it. Turns out Blumenthal is riffing on a poem by Yeats called "The Second Coming." The ideas of "things fall apart" and "passionate intensity" are direct quotes of Yeats. The structure and the forward motion are also found in Yeats' poem. The politics, of course, are all Blumenthal.


Comments (1)