THE SANDS OF THE TAKLA MAKAN
[This Monday’s article was first published in TTP on October 30, 2008 on the eve of the presidential election on Nov 4. I wrote it while following the route of Marco Polo in hope that America would choose wisely. It did not and suffered horrendous consequences thereby. America did choose wisely last November. Let’s pray it will keep being so – for we are up against a seriously deadly rival in Communist China. This is a story of my personal experience in extreme remote China, told because you may consider it revalatory.]
TTP, October 30. 2008
Charklik, Chinese Turkestan. Since I was a young boy with dreams of exploring the world, the essence of remote mystery was summed up by the innermost heart of Asia called Chinese Turkestan.What that young boy fifty years ago most dreamed of doing was following the route of Marco Polo through Chinese Turkestan, to those lost and forgotten oases of the Southern Silk Road that hardly anyone in the world knew about much less had been to, with the magical names of Kashgar, Yarkand, Khotan, Charchan, and Charklik.
For all but the last few of those fifty years the Southern Silk Road was completely off-limits to foreigners, and the road itself a thousand mile-long four-wheel track of mud and sand. Now it's open, the road is paved, and here I am, having traversed Polo's route from Kashgar to Charklik.
I was expecting an ultimate in the exotic and remote, for things to have changed little since Polo's day. In some ways that's what I found. But for others, I am in a state of shock. What I have found here astounds me, and I thought I'd share it with you.







Last week a
[TTP Warning: snark]
Secretary of State Marco Rubio told US senators Saturday (11/22) that the sweeping peace plan to end the nearly four-year war between Russia and Ukraine was not America’s — but merely a “leaked” Russian “wish list.”
