Back channels between adversaries always seem to be useful. They help limit tensions, and can pave the way toward peace. Yet as this round of U.S.-Iran tensions escalates, that outlet appears absent.
Welcome to your Monitor Daily. Today, listen as two astronauts who have been to the moon describe the wonder of space. In addition, we鈥檒l explore the usefulness of political dialogue away from public glare, the ethics of technological augmentation, where truth trumps threats, and the unifying power of music.
But first: Saturday marks 50 years since Neil Armstrong took 鈥渙ne giant leap for mankind.鈥 Millions of people watched live back on Earth as the Apollo 11 crew made history. Now, five decades later, the first moon landing has become one of those where-were-you-when moments.
Linda Feldmann, the Monitor鈥檚 Washington bureau chief, was almost 10 and watched on a friend鈥檚 color TV in her pajamas. Mideast editor Ken Kaplan celebrated with homemade rockets at sleep-away camp in Maine as an 11-year-old. Retired science reporter Pete Spotts, a recent high school graduate riveted by the coverage, thought about calling in sick for work as a disc jockey.
Covering the Apollo program, reporters felt a unique sense of duty, recalls Bob Cowen, longtime Monitor science editor, now retired. 鈥淲e were writing for our publications, but we weren鈥檛 just doing that,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e were conveying the importance of this to all mankind.鈥澛
I have never known a world in which people have not walked on the moon. But for those who did, there is a sense of 鈥渂efore Apollo鈥 and 鈥after.鈥澛
鈥淭he moon landing marked the start of an irreversible optimism about setting audacious goals,鈥 says the Monitor鈥檚 chief editorial writer, Clayton Jones, who was 18 at the time. 鈥淚t made my previous goals in life seem small and needlessly constrained.鈥