MONARCHS NEW, EMPIRES OLD I much enjoyed watching the coronation of King Charles III on Saturday. It's really quite convenient that the live coverage happened to be right at prime evening viewing time here in (the Commonwealth of) Australia. I had planned to point to the photos and newspaper feature from the coronation of Elizabeth II over in the History Snippets section before the event, but the sun was shining that morning (they certainly could have done with that in London) so I went to work on one of my outdoor projects instead. Anyway, head over here and scroll down a fair way: gopher://aussies.space/1/~freet/historysnip They certainly scaled back the street decorations for the procession compared to 1953, but of course back then many still beleived London was the centre of an empire. In fact from the end of the second world war the British empire was already a fading echo, but one still loud enough to be heard by very many of those within it, including many politicians. Lately I've been watching a few documentaries that highlight some milestones in the British government's subsequent failures to keep the more practical traditions of empire running in the new age of cold war superpowers. So, at the risk of bringing down the mood (or maybe lifting it, if you're a republican). The classic turning point in the political history is the Suez Crisis, and the three-part BBC doumentary series "Suez: A Very British Crisis" shows how even secret dealings to justify starting an invasion weren't enough for Britain to win at old colonial games without support from the USA. Nuclear threats from the Soviet Union and paniced financial markets were the decisive factors for the failed invasion of Egypt in 1956, rather than the actual fight on the ground. Suez: A Very British Crisis (2008) https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=Suez:_A_Very_British_Crisis YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UkeDOHb0scc https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvrY7MQu0aI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dlAvhcmeec There's also a follow-up documentary "The Other Side of Suez" which has something of a condensed version of the whole story. The Other Side of Suez (2008) https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Other_Side_of_Suez YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETOUALw2EIs But an aspect that I find very interesting is how the wheels kept on turning within the UK to develop the technology fit for a global superpower. Around the time of Suez crisis, the government was ordering new aerospace projects to keep pace with Cold War weapons technology, on the back of their already hard won nuclear weapons capability developed without the assistance of the United States. Two of the most advanced projects kept on going into the 60s and reached a late stage of development before both were eventually abandoned before ever going into use. The corresponding waste of technology and money is saddening, and the later particularly given the gloomy economic period that Britain was entering in the 70s. But the technology itself is also a glimpse at the answer to a great "what if?" of modern history. Were Britain to have remained a global superpower in the cold war era, here are two weapons, the Blue Streak missile programme and the TSR2 supersonic jet aircraft, that might have distinguished the era. TSR2 - The Untold Story (2005) https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=TSR2_-_The_Untold_Story BBC Time Shift - The British Space Race (2004) https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=British_Space_Race The Blue Streak Rocket (1964) https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Blue_Streak_Rocket Beyond Britain, the Suez crisis is also an interesting lens through which to consider other points of military history in the modern era. The BBC documentary makes clear the parallels between that 1956 invasion of Egypt, and the 2003 invasion of Iraq, where the US proved itself powerful enough to win the war, but perhaps not wise enough to win the following ill-conceived peace. But it also highlights some less well remembered points in history. A decade after starting the Suez conflict under a secret agreement with the French and British governments, Israel again went to war with Egypt, and, while again remaining withdrawn from the conflict itself, the US sent a spy ship to monitor radio communications on both sides. Amazingly the Israeli air force and navy attacked the US spy ship, attempting to sink it and killing many of of the men on board, apparantly to prevent it from intercepting more of their transmissions, although this was later explained by both sides as an unlikely case of mistaken identity. The way the event was downplayed for the US media is also facinating. The torpedoed ship, which barely limped away, was even secretly patched up and repainted before returning to the US in order to disguise the severity of the attack in front of the media. The Day Israel Attacked America (2014) https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Day_Israel_Attacked_America Later of course, the Soviet Union attempted its last roar of empire in the familiar fighting grounds of Afghanistan, withdrawing from there in defeat during the communist government's own dying years (a correlation that's notable as something of a historical trend in Russia). This 1980s US documentary, remarkably granted access within the withdrawing soviet army far beyond what seems to have been allowed by the US military during its recent repeat performance, is an excellent accompaniment to Adam Curtis' TraumaZone series. The footage is the best I've ever seen of the soviet war in Afghanistan, tripping over itself with parallels to the later US invasion, and also surprisingly musical. Afgan - The Soviet Experience (1989) https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=Afgan_-_The_Soviet_Experience Finally, next on my to-watch list is an Academy Award winning documentary about a war which I'm embarrassed to admit to not being aware of, taking place in the world's other great canal country, Panama. Although it happened not that long ago, in 1989, the strikingly familiar-sounding story of the US Invasion of Panama is something that I really just haven't heard about, or at least remembered. Indeed PBS even banned its TV stations from broadcasting this documetary in the US, so clearly that alone makes it worth watching. The Panama Deception (1992) https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Panama_Deception http://www.empowermentproject.org/pages/panama.html - The Free Thinker