Sunday, 12 April 2026

A game of chess?

 

A game of chess?

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

Is politics a game of chess, or it is a guessing game? It shouldn’t be a game at all, of course, but it provides material for discussion.

There was a clever cartoon by Ella Baron in The Times this morning, so clever that I had to read the comments to understand it! Nothing unusual there.

I have not reproduced it here, as I don’t want to infringe copyright.

It was a satirical comment on the latest unsuccessful talks between the US and Iran, and showed J.D. Vance and his team facing Iranian negotiators across a table. Vance is holding a handful of playing cards, interestingly all showing Kings, and declaring, ‘We have all the cards.’ Their opponents have a chess board in front of them, so the two sides are not even playing the same game, which is a telling point. The Iranian spokesman is saying, ‘Checkmate,’ even though the chess position is not showing that.

‘Checkmate’ is a corruption of the Persian phrase. ‘Shah Mat,’ meaning ‘The King is dead.’

26 comments:

  1. Putting JD in charge of any negotiations is a stupid move.

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  2. That’s clever and slightly scary.
    I’ve never learned chess and probably never will.
    Alison in Devon x

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    1. I've tried several times to learn chess, but it just won't stick!

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  3. tRump also claimed to have all of the cards when it came to canada. It turns out that they don’t.

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    1. US tried five times to conquer Canada and obviously never learnt the lesson!

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  4. I gave up chess when a 6 year old grandchild said I'll win granny. He did.

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  5. I love playing chess as a hobby, but I am not a professional with a high ELO rating. I once had a memorable experience playing against a professional chess master who defeated me in only a few minutes. LOL.

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    Replies
    1. I think that's quite an achievement. I can never remember the rules.

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  6. My hubby loves chess and so do my grandsons.. Too difficult for me to learn. I try to steer clear of politics on my blog....Enjoy this beautiful Sunday.

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    1. I reached the conclusion a long time ago that I just haven't the right brain for chess . . .

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  7. I‘m too lazy to learn chess properly, although my sister made an attempt to self-teach her and me when we were about 12 and 13 years old.

    Yes, politics should not be a game, but for some it seems to be, all about „winning“ in terms of money and power. Scary indeed.

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    1. We have tried several times to learn chess but it just won't stick. I could never be a politician.

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  8. I often played chess as a child. Definitely different from playing cards. I agree the two sides in the US-Iran war are playing different games, but then the American ones change the rules as the game goes along.

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  9. That's the way my eldest daughter played board games - she would change the rules to suit her hand.

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  10. Thank you for explaining what 'Shah Mat' means. Chess in Hebrew is 'Shach-mat,' and all the years I took my boys to after-school chess classes, it never once occurred to me to ask what the name actually meant!

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  11. Well, that pretty much sums up the current situation, all right!

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  12. That is a very sharp observation about the current state of world affairs. It is quite a powerful image to think of two sides sitting at the same table but playing completely different games. When one side is looking at cards and the other is focused on a chessboard, it is no wonder that finding a common ground feels nearly impossible.

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  13. The US has no idea what they are doing. No plan, no ending.

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  14. I taught my grandson how to play chess last year.

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  15. Iran is impressing us, even though the culture there is loathsome for the women folk...Iran know strategy!

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  16. My dad taught me some basics of chess back in my childhood/youth, but I never got really good at it. He also introduced the card game of bridge to our family of four (a game where one plays in teams of two) but I never took to that either. I guess both involve too much strategic thinking ahead for me - and trying to guess what others are planning as well! ... Strikes me now that perhaps that also answers why I never felt drawn to politics!

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  17. I was given a chess set as a child. I tried to teach myself. No surprise, that didn't work. But while in high school, I sat with. a group of girls and boys. Two of the boys would play almost daily games of chess. It was interesting to watch but I didn't have the intellectual skills to really play it.

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  18. I can't sit down or stay focussed long enough to play chess - it bores me senseless hut i recognize it is an intellectual and strategic exercise.

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  19. I've never played chess ...
    A clever cartoon!

    All the best Jan

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