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The Spectator

22 February 2014 Aus

Putin’s masterplan

Russia is returning as an ideological force in the world – to champion conservative values

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Breaking windows

Smash! Don’t say we didn’t warn you. As one energy-reliant manufacturer after another shuts up shop; as our energy prices…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Australian Notes

In his eloquent ‘Closing the Gap’ speech Tony Abbott’s call to all Australians ‘to open their hearts’ to Aborigines was…

Brown Study

Brown study

I wonder why international leaders make decisions that are clearly against their own interests. There have been two recent examples.…

Diary Australia

Diary

The Governor-General hosted an informal BBQ dinner for parliamentarians and their partners at Yarralumla the night before the first day…

Australian Features

The Don in his heyday

Features Australia

Academics against The Don

Bradman’s brilliance was peculiar; his personality wasn’t

Australian Viewpoint

On the Contrary

Once again, Labor seems genuinely baffled that there aren’t more votes in propping up dying industries. The (non-existent) canneries and…

Features Australia

Don’t mention the war

It’s time for a serious inquiry into our invasion of Iraq

‘Ah, those were the days’

Features Australia

American notes

The 1980 US presidential election campaign was characterised by warnings from the Carter White House about the impact of a…

Features

Features

Putin’s masterplan

After Sochi and Crimea, the world

Features

Really wild excuses

In fact, if you're a depressed river mussel, it's handled the floods perfectly

Features

‘A screaming, grievance-hawking shambles’

Today’s left is a competition in shouting one another down

Features

The church of self-worship

I’ve never been asked about my beliefs at a regular church service. Sunday Assembly was different

Features

Nuclear fallout

MPs owe it to the taxpayer to throw out the Hinkley Point deal

Notebook

New York notebook

Plus: A discussion in George Soros’s flag, the irrationality of Vladimir Putin, and the mystery of Britain’s brilliant actors

Features

Investment: In safe hands

My favourite investment class is finally coming back into fashion

Features

Investment: Love for shale

How to get a slice of the fracking action

Features

Investment: America vs gravity

Reality may be about to reassert itself after an extraordinary hot streak

You’ll think you’ve gone to heaven: Lynmouth pier

Notes on...

North Devon

We needed a break. We found one

The Week

Leading article

How to save elephants

Making animals more valuable is better than trying to make ivory less so

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home It would be ‘extremely difficult, if not impossible’ for an independent Scotland to join the European Union, José Manuel…

Diary

Diary

Plus: The world in a doctor’s surgery, and Somerset’s last great floods

Ancient and modern

Hadrian on the Somerset floods

The Romans knew that flood plains flood

Letters

Letters

Caution over wind Sir: While the broadcast media have assailed their audiences with simplistic yet blanket coverage of the floods…

Columnists

World Politics

Only Angela Merkel can save Cameron now

Forget the special relationship. The German Chancellor is the indispensable ally

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s notes

Plus: Shirley Temple vs Graham Greene, and the poetry of le Metro

Matthew Parris

Back in time to a childhood discovery in Africa

The ‘Arab slave pit’ my brother and I found. And what happened when I found it again

Hugo Rifkind

Time for posh Scotland to break its silence

From the spires of Loretto, Glenalmond, Fettes and Gordonstoun, let the cry go up...

Any other business

Sochi’s spotlight reveals the rottenness at the heart of the Russian body politic

Plus: Scotland’s tax-haven future, and the perverse power of banking fines

The Speculator

Terminal news for bookies

‘The crack cocaine of gambling’ and its enemies

Books

Lead book review

A bold artistic vision

James McNeill Whistler fashioned himself into a brand, and was a social butterfly who could sting like a bee

Books

Lady in waiting

Who is Hillary Clinton? HRC, a biography by Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes, has sentences full of anecdotes but empty of analysis

Books

A romantic dream

Two new books, My Promised Land and Herzl, document the creation — and some of the costs — of Zionism

Books

After the funeral

David Gilbert's second book, & Sons, is so clever and knowing that I don't think it'd mind that I don't like it

Man between vice and virtue in St Augustine’s City of God. French incunabulum from Abbeville, 1486-87

Books

Christianity’s moral revolution

How did we get here? Larry Siedentop's Inventing the Individual shows how our religious tradition brought us individualism, equality — and charity

Books

A choice of first novels

Helene Gestern's People in the Photo deserves all its accolades; Ghost Moth and Land Where I Flee are good, too

Arts

Arts feature

At the crossroads again

With Mark Wigglesworth about to replace Edward Gardner as musical director, English National Opera is again at the crossroads

Opera

Dazzled but confused

Christopher Alden's new ENO production has given the heave-ho to Jonathan Miller's after 32 years. Prepare to be dazzled and confused

Theatre

Misdirected rage

Plus: How to spend the night with Tennessee Williams in three rooms at the Langham Hotel

Exhibitions

Small wonders

Here's why you must see the small wonders of Liam Hanley, James Turrell, Brian Rice, John Kiki and Gauguin

Cinema

Blood lovers

Jim Jarmusch is a noted cult director. Judged by this movie, the cult can keep him

Television

Blind ambition

Storage Hunters and Bakery Boss are actually rather captivating, but aren't reality programmes completely fabricated and dishonest?

Radio

Remaking history

Plus: 'This is a scream for all the women in Iran who have been suppressed'

Culture notes

Laugh but don’t pop

Martin Creed's retrospective, What's the point of it?, is best seen with children in tow

Life

High life

High life

We all know unfortunates who succumbed to weakness and can only focus on their next fix. Eddie Somerset was one of them

Low life

Low life

'I will demonstrate to you, Jeremy, that there is infinitely greater pleasure in making love with a man than with a woman.'

Real life

Real life

Forget the Big Society — it's more Knackered Society as campaigners take flak from all and sundry as they protest day in, day out

Long life

Long life

The novelist's idea that the child star resembled Marlene Dietrich when wearing trousers is quite extraordinary

The turf

On course for thrills

This year you don’t want to be a jockey’s valet. Never have their washing machines spun so vigorously. From every…

Bridge

Bridge

Bridge players are a generous bunch — both with their expertise and their time. There are many charity events to…

Chess

Triumvirate

Three important tournaments concluded this month, for two of which (Gibraltar and Bunratty) I attended the awards ceremonies. I have…

Chess puzzle

no. 302

White to play. This position is from Keogh-Chevannes, Bunratty 2014. How did White’s massive central build-up transform into a winning…

Competition

Lonely hearts

In Competition 2835 you were invited to submit a profile for an online dating website for a well-known politician, living…

Crossword

2150: Content

Each of thirteen clues contains a superfluous word. Initial letters of these words spell the first four words of a…

Crossword solution

Solution to 2147: Amazing Performance

Taking one unchecked letter from each across solution gives EXTRAORDINARY RENDITION, whose victims, according to Chambers 2011, include TERRORIST SUSPECTs.…

Status anxiety

A question of authority

How can parents and teachers both maintain their authority and inspire a questioning spirit?

Spectator sport

Flying boards and killer moustaches

Ed Leigh, Aimee Fuller and Tim Warwood are hardly Dan Maskell, but they set an exciting tone

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Plus: The answer to arriving at a party presentless

Food

Multi-story dining

It’s three floors high, two days old, and full of young lawyers dressed as Patrick Bateman

Mind your language

England

What shall we call the remainder of Britain? There’s one obvious answer