2019
March
22
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 22, 2019
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Thirty-two years ago this spring I covered almost every day of the Iran-Contra hearings for the Monitor. It was a fascinating story, featuring clandestine cash flows, mysterious foreign characters, and documents smuggled out of the White House inside a secretary’s clothing.

But in the end, the hearings seemed unsatisfying. They did document that the Reagan administration had secretly sold arms to Iran and funneled profits to Nicaraguan contra rebels, defying Congress. But they never established what the president knew and when he knew it or who was responsible for approving the whole thing at all.

The lesson I learned? Scandals aren’t cinematic. Watergate, with its clear narrative arc, was the exception. Sometimes Washington doesn’t fit into a screenwriter framework. Conclusions aren’t conclusive. Things don’t always turn out the way you expect.

That brings us to special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation and his long-awaited report, which he submitted Friday evening to the attorney general. As with Iran-Contra, we’ve already learned lots of details, from Trump Tower meetings with Russians to code names used by Russian hackers.

But meaning remains opaque. As reporter Scott Shane points out in The New York Times, we don’t yet know how much we don’t know. Did we know 90 percent or 20 percent of what Mr. Mueller’s found out? Who will see it? Will it be a bombshell, a nothing burger, or a cliché between those two?

“Nobody knows anything,” screenwriter William Goldman famously once wrote. He meant about Hollywood. Today it applies to Washington as well. Mr. Mueller’s final work will appear soon. Once it becomes public we can begin to sort through and comment on his work.

Now for our five stories of the day.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Jorge Silva/Reuters
A police officer stands guard outside Al Noor mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand, on March 22. Last week’s attacks, which killed 50 people, may spur global action against the threat from far-right extremists.
SOURCE:

National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), University of Maryland. (2018). The Global Terrorism Database (GTD) [Data file]. Retrieved from https://www.start.umd.edu/gtd; The Institute for Economics and Peace Global Terrorism Index 2018

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Architectural renditions of the new Atatürk Cultural Center line the sidewalks around the Taksim Square construction site on Feb. 27 in Istanbul. First built in 1969 with a modernist design meant to serve as the face of a new, secular nation, the center was closed in 2008 for renovation.
Alex Bailey/Twentieth Century Fox/AP
Rami Malek embodies Freddie Mercury in ‘Bohemian Rhapsody.’ That record-breaking, Oscar-winning biopic about the rock band Queen has Hollywood bullish on upcoming stories about Elton John, David Bowie, Céline Dion, Dusty Springfield, and Aretha Franklin.

The Monitor's View

AP
People pass on a road damaged by Cyclone Idai in Nhamatanda near Beira in Mozambique

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Nasser Nasser/AP
A runner passes by the Israeli separation barrier during the International Palestine Marathon in the West Bank city of Bethlehem Friday. Some 8,000 runners from 76 countries participated in the seventh marathon, and just over half of runners were women, according to organizers. This year’s route began in Nativity Square and stretched 13 miles to Solomon's Pools, constructed by King Solomon in 950 BCE, before turning back.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Be sure to come back Monday. We’ll have a story from Washington bureau chief Linda Feldmann on whether ideas, as opposed to personality, can be an animating force in the 2020 Democratic nomination race.

More issues

2019
March
22
Friday
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