Tag: Political Science

Critical Thinker

Serial 2 Present for Duty Response

My view before listening to the entirety of Serial 2 was that I knew little of the American military presence in Afghanistan. I did not know what soldiers experienced on the ground, how captured Taliban are treated by the U.S. government or how captured U.S. soldiers are treated by terrorist organizations (the closest thing I read about it before was Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand, about an American POW), how long Bowe was in Afghanistan or what the U.S. was doing in Afghanistan now. I lacked the most basic awareness of Bowe’s case or what his recovery meant for American and international politics and the war in Afghanistan.

Critical Thinker

Serial 2 Thorny Politics Response

Listening to the podcast now, I want to know the answer to my original question. In the penultimate episode of Serial 2, narrator Sarah Koenig hones in on this politicization of Bowe’s rescue, and what that means for military strategies, political compromises and diplomatic negotiations today.

Critical Thinker

Serial 2 Trade Secrets Response

After listening to Episode 9, I found out that peace talks with the Taliban have hit setback after setback, and some have seemed especially calculated and intentional. For example, the leaks about the U.S.-Taliban peace talks; when the Afghanistan High Peace Council head and former president Burhanuddin Rabbani was assassinated, right before international peace talks were set to begin in late 2011. Then in 2013, the Afghan government, the U.S., the Qataris and the Taliban are working to allow the Taliban to have a political office in Qatar. Then the Taliban violates the ground rules and labels the office as the ‘Islamic Emirate.’ Karzai is upset, and the Taliban feel humiliated over a misunderstanding. Talks halt again.

Critical Thinker

Serial 2 Meanwhile, in Tampa Response

In Serial 2’s fifth episode, narrator Sarah Koenig tries to make sense the entangled and frustrating process to try to bring Bowe back to the U.S., but the finished product seems to obscure more than it enlightens. The episode seems to show how impossible the situation was: Pakistan is friendly, the Haqqanis and Taliban are terrorists, Bowe is an enlisted solider.

Critical Thinker

Serial 2 Escaping Response

From the third episode, Escaping, it looks like Bowe Bergdahl is at least 60 (and probably much more than that) away from FOB Sharana, in Pakistan. Wherever he is held, especially in Pakistan, it is far from any metropolis, and far from U.S. personnel. In the third episode of the Serial 2, the listener begins to feel a sense of the vast aloneness Bowe felt in captivity, and two escapes he attempted in the first year of captivity. I was much harsher in my opinion of Bowe when I had only heard the first part of the story, but now hearing about this first year and how much he suffered, he was still a young, twenty-three year old guy, not much older than me. I do not think the media treatment of Bowe, the sensationalization of him was at all deserved.

Critical Thinker

Chapter Nine Summary

In chapter nine of professors Karen A. Mingst and Ivan Arreguín-Toft’s Essentials of International Relations, the international political economy is explained by its history, systems, functions and challenges. By explaining the institutions and reforms that maintain economic globalization, states who participate in its liberalization, and crises that show its weaknesses, Mingst and Arreguín-Toft highlight the […]

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