1/16/2014

What The War in Iraq Wrought : The New Yorker

What The War in Iraq Wrought : The New Yorker

"Indeed, an arc of violent political instability now links Muslim nations from Mauritania to Pakistan, affecting neighbors in Europe and Africa, and there is no end in sight. Most worryingly, in the contiguous nations of central and eastern Africa, where the states are weak, a rash of uncontained conflicts has spread, their violence and refugees flowing outward and overlapping, in a great bulge of mayhem that extends from the Horn to the Nile and from the Great Lakes Region to the Sahel. It is dangerous: war thrives in a vacuum."

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