Taking over Afghanistan, it turns out, was the easy part. Now the Taliban鈥檚 lack of vision or capacity to govern is being exposed, and patience is wearing thin.
The European Union has a problem. What should it do about two countries (Poland and Hungary) that are blatantly violating democratic rule of law. The debate should sound familiar, no matter where you live: Basically, do we draw a hard line, or do we appease?
That鈥檚 the question at the heart of Ned Temko鈥檚 Patterns column in today鈥檚 issue. German Chancellor Angela Merkel offers a characteristic answer: 鈥淓urope is only as strong as it is united.鈥澛燭hat can sound like political happy talk. But it鈥檚 not.聽
In many ways, today鈥檚 entire edition examines that broader idea: What is true unity?聽
Are the Taliban really interested in creating a Pan-Afghan society built on the Islamic ideals of justice, or is that just a cloak for an opportunistic power grab? Early evidence points to the latter, Scott Peterson writes. So Afghanistan is again in danger of fracturing.聽
Meanwhile Henry Gass and Ashley Lisenby examine two examples of communities coming together to try to build a sense of unity through hard work 鈥 turning to nature in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and, at a university in Texas, a desire to create genuine equality in all spaces.
It鈥檚 that work that Chancellor Merkel is talking about. Unity is difficult. As the Taliban are finding, it鈥檚 easier to take shortcuts or to leave some people out. But ultimately, that doesn鈥檛 work. Unity is not a 鈥渘ice to have.鈥 It won鈥檛 mean unanimity, but聽even as a work in progress, it鈥檚 an essential foundation stone.