The US kills the leader of the Taliban — and Pakistan is pissed; the post-neo-Nazis almost won in Austria; Obama lifts the arms embargo on Vietnam.
Vox Sentences is written by Dylan Matthews and Dara Lind.
TOP NEWS
Taliban in disarray
Stringer/AFP/Getty Images
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Mansoor's death may, however, affect the US's relationship with Pakistan — which reportedly backed Mansoor in the Taliban's internal leadership struggles. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the US didn't notify Pakistan in advance about the strike.
[NYT / Mujib Mashal]
The center cannot hold
Jan Hetfleisch/Getty Images
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Some observers caution against reading too much into the rise of the Freedom Party, claiming that while its rhetoric might be far to the right, its policies aren't that far off from the centrist parties that have traditionally governed the country.
[European Council on Foreign Relations / Gustav Gressel]
Comrades in arms
Martin H. Simon-Pool/Getty Images
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It's not that memories of the Vietnam War are dead, exactly — 100,000 Vietnamese have been killed or wounded by unexploded bombs and mines since the war ended, and (as Michael Sullivan reports) schoolchildren are still taught how to avoid land mines.
[NPR / Michael Sullivan]
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Rather, the Vietnamese have embraced the free market and therefore, by extension, America; at Quartz, Matt Phillips observes that the turn to economic populism in America and Europe has left Vietnam as "globalization's last big fan."
[Quartz / Matt Phillips]
MISCELLANEOUS
VERBATIM
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"[Moby's] been in a relationship for eight months now, his first in 10 years. It seems to be going OK, though he can’t really tell… He keeps having to ask his girlfriend things: 'Like, is it OK if I go to bed after you do?'"
[The Guardian / Miranda Sawyer]
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"It is also an established fact that Taylor Swift is secretly a Nazi and is simply waiting for the time when Donald Trump makes it safe for her to come out and announce her Aryan agenda to the world. Probably, she will be betrothed to Trump's son, and they will be crowned American royalty."
[White supremacist Andre Anglin, to Vice / Mitchell Sunderland]
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"It is my contention that the tendency of strategy games to turn even the woolliest of liberals into ravening tyrants is a result of a perspective that the games foist upon us. … People placed in positions of power do not become authoritarian because the system is ‘rigged,' they become authoritarian because in order to control a state they have to see the world like a state — and the state cares no more for individual humans than we do for the individual cells in our bodies."
[Futurismic / Jonathan McCalmont]
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