Everybody likes maps

Map of the current ME Crisis

The Beeb provides us with a map of the “key flashpoints”:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/629/629/5177932.stm between Israel and Hezbollah.

About Younghusband

Sir Francis Edward Younghusband (1863-1942) was a British explorer, army officer, military-political officer, and foreign correspondent born in India who led expeditions into Manchuria, Kashgar, and Tibet. He three times tried and failed to scale Mt. Everest and journeyed from China to India, crossing the Gobi desert and the Mustagh Pass (alt. c.19,000 ft/5,791 m) of the Karakoram mountain range in modern day Pakistan. Convinced of Russian designs on British interests in India, Younghusband proactively engaged in the nineteenth century spying and conflict over Central Asia between the British and the Russians known as the Great Game. "Younghusband" is a Canadian who has spent a number of years bouncing back and forth between his home country and Japan. Fluent in Japanese and English with experience in numerous other languages from Spanish to Georgian, Younghusband has travelled throughout Asia. He graduated with an MA from the War Studies Department at the Royal Military College of Canada, where he focussed on the Japanese oil industry and energy security issues. He has recently returned to Canada from Japan, and is working in the technology sector.
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6 Responses to Everybody likes maps

  1. Somebody say “maps”?

  2. Curzon says:

    Indeed we do.

    (Like maps, that is.)

  3. sun bin says:

    i found “this one”:http://img122.imageshack.us/img122/4060/lebanonhs0.jpg
    a few days ago.

    it was from a HK newspaper, translated from Agence France. but i couldn’t locate the original.

    !http://img122.imageshack.us/img122/4060/lebanonhs0.jpg!

  4. Everything seems 20,000 times more urgent when Chinese letters are seen all over the place

  5. sun bin says:

    yeah….the oversized characters don’t look nice, that is why i am searching for the AF version (original). to its credit it drawn the route maps and tried to tie with israel’s story of cutting pathway to transport captives.

    anyway, USA today also has “this interactive map”:http://www.usatoday.com/news/graphics/leb_israel_popup/flash.htm