The Color of My Skin Does Not Compel Me
The word Anglosphere has been everywhere this week.
The word Anglosphere has been everywhere this week. It appears in foreign-policy commentary, in arguments about alliances, and — most recently — in angry recriminations about who did and didn’t show up for Operation Epic Fury.
The implication is usually clear: there is supposed to be a natural unity among certain countries — the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand — because they share language, institutions, and history. And when that unity fails to materialize, the conclusion drawn is not that the war lacked justification, or that the process was flawed, but that the allies were pathetic. That they betrayed the family.
That framing deserves scrutiny. So does the war that produced it.













