{"id":1968,"date":"2017-08-27T04:10:26","date_gmt":"2017-08-27T11:10:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=1968"},"modified":"2017-08-27T04:10:26","modified_gmt":"2017-08-27T11:10:26","slug":"spies-like-us-a-conversation-with-john-le-carre-and-ben-macintyre-the-new-york-times","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=1968","title":{"rendered":"&#8220;Spies Like Us: A Conversation With John le Carr\u00e9 and Ben Macintyre&#8221;, The New York Times"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>By Sarah Lyall, Sunday Book Review, In Conversation, Aug. 27, 2017<\/p>\n<p>BRISTOL, England \u2014 Their subject is spying. Their obsessions are secrecy and betrayal. They are Englishmen of a certain background, old friends and admirers of each other\u2019s work. One writes novels; the other, nonfiction. They speak in practically perfect sentences.<\/p>\n<div id=\"page\" class=\"page\">\n<article id=\"story\" class=\"story theme-main   \">\n<div class=\"story-body-supplemental\">\n<div class=\"story-body story-body-1\">\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"620\" data-total-count=\"889\">Conversations between John le Carr\u00e9 and Ben Macintyre are inevitably warm, interesting, witty, discursive, conspiratorial and gossipy, although their gossip is often espionage-related and more rarefied than yours or mine. They met for lunch recently, on a desultorily sunny weekday in a private dining room at a boutique hotel in Bristol. Le Carr\u00e9, 85, had been driven from his home in Cornwall (he also lives in London) by his family\u2019s \u201coutdoor man,\u201d responsible for yardwork and other outside-the-house tasks; Macintyre, 53, had come by train from Winchester, where he had been speaking at a literary festival.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"536\" data-total-count=\"1425\">As usual, they were in the midst of a flurry of projects, finishing things up and starting new ones. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.penguinrandomhouse.com\/authors\/2140966\/john-le-carre\">Le Carr<\/a><a href=\"http:\/\/www.penguinrandomhouse.com\/authors\/2140966\/john-le-carre\">\u00e9,<\/a> who over a 56-year career has virtually single-handedly elevated spy novels from genre fiction into works of high literature, has a new book, \u201cA Legacy of Spies,\u201d coming out in September. Thrillingly for his admirers, it is a coda of sorts to \u201cThe Spy Who Came In From the Cold\u201d (1963), the third of his two dozen novels and the one that for many readers serves as the gateway drug to full-blown le Carr\u00e9 addiction.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"420\" data-total-count=\"1845\"><a href=\"http:\/\/benmacintyre.com\/\">Macintyre<\/a>, meanwhile, is a longtime columnist for The Times of London and the author of 11 elegant, authoritative and dryly humorous nonfiction works, focusing most recently on 20th-century British espionage. He has a deep appreciation for the amusing and the absurd. His most recent book is \u201cRogue Heroes,\u201d about the origins of the British special forces unit; he is working on a new one, about a Cold War spy case.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"420\" data-total-count=\"1845\">Early in his writing, le Carr\u00e9 introduced the subversive hypothesis that the spies of East and West were two sides of the same tarnished coin, each as bad as the other. It was a stunning idea, espionage painted not in black and white but in shades of gray. With the fall of the Berlin Wall, the author lost the scaffolding for his fiction. His later books are angrier, more polemical, their worldview darker, reflecting the chaotic morality of the post-Soviet era and often presenting the United States \u2014 with its exceptionalism, its flouting of international norms, as he sees it \u2014 as the villain in the post-Cold War era.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"672\" data-total-count=\"3145\">\u201cA Legacy of Spies\u201d returns to the past from the vantage point of the present. Elderly and retired to France, the ex-spy Peter Guillam, an old acquaintance of the attentive le Carr\u00e9 reader, is made to answer for long-buried sins when the adult children of the two principal casualties in \u201cThe Spy Who Came In From the Cold\u201d suddenly bring a lawsuit against the security services. Guillam is forced to revisit the dubious setup and muddy justification for that operation, answering awkward questions from humorless young officials who have no patience for or understanding of how the agency operated in the old days. Even George Smiley himself makes an appearance.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"219\" data-total-count=\"3364\">The publication of the new work is being treated as a major literary occasion in Britain. A reading and Q. and A. at the Royal Festival Hall in London on Sept. 7 will be broadcast live in theaters in Britain and Europe.<\/p>\n<p id=\"story-continues-3\" class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"425\" data-total-count=\"3789\">In real life, le Carr\u00e9 is known as David Cornwell. He took his pen name to keep his day job \u2014 spying for Britain, which he did in the 1950s and early \u201960s \u2014 separate from his writing identity. Over a bottle of white wine and, among other things, smoked salmon served under a glass from which clouds of smoke actually billowed out, he and Macintyre needed little prompting to speak. They all but interviewed themselves.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"44\" data-total-count=\"3833\">The interview has been edited and condensed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"140\" data-total-count=\"3973\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong><em>Let\u2019s talk about the new book, David. It\u2019s been a long time since you wrote about the Cold War. Why did you want to revisit it now?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"208\" data-total-count=\"4181\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> Because it seems to me, as Smiley says at the end of the book, that what happened then turns out to have been futile. Spies did not win the Cold War. They made absolutely no difference in the long run.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"460\" data-total-count=\"4641\">I wanted to take the characters and apply the experience of my own life, and examine what happened to them from a human, humanitarian dimension.\u00a0And then place the whole story in this vacuum in which we live at the moment, which is occupied by really threatening forces. What marks the Cold War period is that at least we had a defining mission. At the moment our mission is survival. The thing that joins the West is fear. And everything else is up for grabs.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"158\" data-total-count=\"4799\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong><em>Ben, you have said that David\u2019s work had a big influence in your becoming interested in the world of espionage. Which of his novels did you read first?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"297\" data-total-count=\"5096\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> Oh, I think it was \u201cThe Spy Who Came In From the Cold.\u201d It had a profound impact on me. I always felt that the books were deeply based in experience. It\u2019s no accident that some of our greatest writers have been spooks \u2014 Greene, Somerset Maugham, Ian Fleming, Priestley and you, David.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"359\" data-total-count=\"5455\">Spying and fiction are not entirely different processes. You try to create an artificial world. And the better and more realistic and more emotionally believable you can make that world, as either a spy or a novelist, the better you are going to be at it. These are characters who make up their past, who make up their present and who try to imagine a future.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"431\" data-total-count=\"5886\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> And you must also contemplate all the varieties of a person\u2019s character. Could she be this? Could he be that? Can I turn him or her into that other person? All of those are actually the serious preoccupations of a novelist. One of the fascinations of the intelligence world is that it\u2019s such a reflection of the society it serves. If you really want to examine the national psychology, it\u2019s locked in the secret world.<\/p>\n<div class=\"story-body story-body-2\">\n<p id=\"story-continues-4\" class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"377\" data-total-count=\"6263\"><em>As it turns out, both le Carr\u00e9 and Macintyre were recruited by Britain\u2019s intelligence services as young men. Their experiences were starkly different. Le Carr\u00e9, whose childhood was awful and whose father was a notorious con man, signed up. Macintyre, approached by a professor in his final year at Cambridge and interviewed by someone called \u201cMajor Halliday,\u201d demurred.<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"424\" data-total-count=\"6687\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> Ben came from a secure family, nice background, interesting father, all of that. [Macintyre\u2019s father was a history professor at Oxford.] But I felt in a curious way that I needed a stable institution, and more than that, a kind of paternalistic institution. I mean, I was brought up middle class, but I came from the criminal class. And that made me enormously attractive to the spies, because larceny was built in.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"541\" data-total-count=\"7228\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> It was the typical sort of tap on the shoulder. It was quite amusing, really. A don that I didn\u2019t know terribly well came barreling up and he said, \u201cWhat are you doing after university?\u201d I said, \u201cI don\u2019t really know.\u201d And he said, \u201cWell, there are some parts of the Foreign Office that are different from other parts of the Foreign Office. In a sense, they are different from the Foreign Office itself.\u201d He went on for about five minutes. Of course, I knew exactly what he was saying, although he never actually said it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"279\" data-total-count=\"7507\">So I went along to Carlton House Terrace [where MI6 had an office]. And there was very clearly more than one Major Halliday, because other people I know were recruited by a completely different Major Halliday. Mine had on socks and sandals, which was quite upsetting at the time.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"394\" data-total-count=\"7901\">I was flattered and interested, and David was probably responsible for my interest. I just thought that the characters seemed so complicated and fascinating and corrupted. I mean, there\u2019s something very louche about British intelligence, something very unmoored. I don\u2019t know whether it creates people who go off the rails, or whether you have to be slightly off the rails to want to do it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"24\" data-total-count=\"7925\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>What happened then?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"29\" data-total-count=\"7954\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> I had one other meeting.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"20\" data-total-count=\"7974\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> And no lunch?<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"536\" data-total-count=\"8510\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> No, it never got to lunch. I was headed off to America, and it wasn\u2019t going to be my scene. But I was very fascinated by it, for nonfiction purposes. There\u2019s something about writing about this world that enables you to write about the sort of things that novelists usually write about \u2014 loyalty and love and betrayal and romance and adventure. And because spies invent their world, and often invent their pasts, they\u2019re tremendously unreliable narrators. You have a wonderful backdrop of truth and nontruth to work against.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"275\" data-total-count=\"8785\">David\u2019s novels are so brilliant because they\u2019re emotionally and psychologically absolutely true, but of course they\u2019re novels. And what I try to do in mine is write something that truly reads like a novel but nonetheless cleaves closely and absolutely to what happened.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"112\" data-total-count=\"8897\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>Is there something about the British psyche that makes spying, or at least duplicity, an enticing prospect?<\/em><\/p>\n<p id=\"story-continues-5\" class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"151\" data-total-count=\"9048\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> We Brits are particularly susceptible to the double life, aren\u2019t we? Is it because we are a sort of theatrical, and sort of unfaithful, culture?<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"355\" data-total-count=\"9403\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> I think it\u2019s because hypocrisy is the national sport. For our class in my era, public school was a deliberately brutalizing process that separated you from your parents, and your parents were parties to that. They integrated you with imperial ambitions and then let you loose into the world with a sense of elitism \u2014 but with your heart frozen.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"200\" data-total-count=\"9603\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> There is no deceiver more effective than a public-school-educated Brit. He could be standing next to you in the bus queue, having a Force 12 nervous breakdown, and you\u2019d never be any the wiser.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"200\" data-total-count=\"9603\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> When you\u2019ve become that frozen child, but you\u2019re an outwardly functioning, charming chap, there is a lot of wasteland inside you that is waiting to be cultivated.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"236\" data-total-count=\"10012\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>David, you\u2019ve spoken about your childhood, your outrageously criminal father, how you were sent to boarding school when you were 5, the lies that permeated everything. How did all this come to play when you were recruited by MI5?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"742\" data-total-count=\"10754\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> The truth, in my childhood, didn\u2019t really exist. That is to say, we shared the lies. To run the household with no money required a lot of serious lying to the local garage man, the local butcher, the local everybody. And then there was the extra element of class. All my grandparents and all my aunts and uncles were entirely working class \u2014 laborers, builders, that sort of thing. One of them worked up telegraph poles. And so out of that to invent, as my father did, this socially adept, well-spoken, charming chap \u2014 that was an operation of great complicity. And I had to lie about my parental situation while I was at boarding school. I only mention these things because they\u2019re the extremes of what can warp an Englishman.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"742\" data-total-count=\"10754\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> What you\u2019ve just described \u2014 is it the root of your fiction? Your ability to think yourself into someone else?<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"484\" data-total-count=\"11357\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> Absolutely. I mean childhood, at my age, is no excuse for anything. But it is a fact that my childhood was aberrant and peculiar and nomadic and absolutely unpredictable. So if I was in boarding school, I didn\u2019t know where I would be spending the holidays. If my father said he was going to come and take me out, it was as likely as not that he wouldn\u2019t show up. I would say to the other boys, I had a wonderful day out, when I had really been sitting in a field somewhere.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"707\" data-total-count=\"12064\">The mixture of solitude and uncertainty fertilized the situation enormously. To which you must add the amazing cast of crooked characters who passed through my father\u2019s life. Inevitably I was making up stories to myself, retreating into myself. And then there was the genetic inheritance I got from my father. This was a man who, while still being pursued by the police, or bankrupt, or Christ knows what, who had done prison time, then boldly stands as a parliamentary candidate. He had a huge capacity for invention. He had absolutely no relationship to the truth. He would come talk to me in the morning and I would challenge him, and in the evening he would say, \u201cThat\u2019s not what I said to you.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"story-continues-6\" class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"69\" data-total-count=\"12133\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>Do you see parallels with President Trump\u2019s view of the truth?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"213\" data-total-count=\"12346\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> Exactly that. He is the most recent model. Before that it was Robert Maxwell. The parallels are extraordinary. My sister, too, we absolutely recognize the same syndrome. There is not a grain of truth there.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"62\" data-total-count=\"12408\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>Do you think the Russians really have something on Trump?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"670\" data-total-count=\"13078\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> I can tell you what the veterans of the S.I.S. [the British Secret Intelligence Service, or MI6] think, which is yes, <em>kompromat<\/em> was done on him. Of course, <em>kompromat<\/em> is done on everyone. So they end up, the theory goes, with this compromising bit of material and then they begin to release parts of it. They set up an ex-MI6 guy, Chris Steele, who is a patsy, effectively, and they feed him some stuff that\u2019s true, and some stuff that isn\u2019t true, and some stuff that is demonstrably wrong. Which means that Trump can then stand up and deny it, while knowing that the essence of it is true. And then he has a stone in his shoe for the rest of his administration.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"113\" data-total-count=\"13191\">It\u2019s important to remember that Putin is a K.G.B.-trained officer, and he thinks in the traditional K.G.B. way.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"460\" data-total-count=\"13651\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> The mentality that is operating in Russia now is absolutely, as far as Putin is concerned, no different to the mentality that drove the most exotic conspiracies during the Cold War. It worked then, it works now. As far as Trump, I would suspect they have it, because they\u2019ve denied it. If they have it and they\u2019ve set Trump up, they\u2019d say, \u201cOh no, we haven\u2019t got anything.\u201d But to Trump they\u2019re saying, \u201cAren\u2019t we being kind to you?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"477\" data-total-count=\"14128\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> And today you get this wonderful Russian lawyer woman [Natalia Veselnitskaya, who was in <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2017\/07\/08\/us\/politics\/trump-russia-kushner-manafort.html?_r=0\">the pre-election meeting at Trump Tower<\/a>with Donald Trump Jr.] who is straight out of one of our books, a character that is possibly connected to the Russian state. Who knows? They exist somewhere in that foggy, deniable hinterland. It\u2019s called <em>maskirovka<\/em> \u2014 little masquerade \u2014 where you create so much confusion and uncertainty and mystery that no one knows what the truth is.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"485\" data-total-count=\"14613\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> For Putin, it\u2019s a kind of little piece of background music to keep things going. The smoking gun might or might not be the documents exchanged about the Trump Tower in Moscow [which Trump is said to have been planning to build]. Then there\u2019s the really seedy stuff in the Caucasus. There are bits of scandal which, if added up, might suggest he went to Russia for money. And that would then fit in with the fact that he isn\u2019t half as, a tenth as rich as he pretends to be.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"563\" data-total-count=\"15176\"><em>Throughout the lunch, le Carr\u00e9 and Macintyre discussed spies they knew personally, or knew of: Russian spies, MI6 spies, double agents and old retired spies who have a habit of looking up le Carr\u00e9 when they visit Britain. Macintyre brought up Kim Philby, the subject of his 2014 book, \u201cA Spy Among Friends,\u201d and one of the notorious group of double agents in the 1950s known as the Cambridge Five. On his first trip to Russia, in the late 1980s, le Carr\u00e9 was told he could meet with Philby, who had defected and was living in Moscow. (Philby died in 1988.)<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"231\" data-total-count=\"15407\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> It was before the wall came down and our ambassador had interceded with Raisa Gorbachev. I met a lot of people like Kim Philby\u2019s Russian minder and other spies. That was when I was offered the chance to go and meet Philby.<\/p>\n<p id=\"story-continues-7\" class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"135\" data-total-count=\"15542\">And I refused to do so. I felt a spurt of hatred. I felt, \u201cIf he wants me he can\u2019t have me.\u201d I didn\u2019t want to give him comfort.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"54\" data-total-count=\"15596\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> Do you regret it now, David? Do you wish you had?<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"242\" data-total-count=\"15838\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> Out of human curiosity. But I feel now, as I expect you do, that I have a very clear portrait of him. He was much more intelligent and charming than was reasonable, and also wicked. He loved what he was doing. Betrayal was his element.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"53\" data-total-count=\"15891\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>And now, David, have you said goodbye to Smiley?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"360\" data-total-count=\"16251\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> He\u2019s steadied me through my writing life. He\u2019s been a kindly hand and a wonderful writing companion. I think he holds the conventional key to me. I think all of us, whether writing fiction or nonfiction, have to identify with our central character, but with Smiley it seems like a dialogue. But he\u2019s said all he has to say. Also, he\u2019s about 120.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"34\" data-total-count=\"16285\"><strong>B.M.<\/strong> He\u2019s earned his retirement.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"125\" data-total-count=\"16410\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>You\u2019re doing an interview with the German news media after the Royal Festival Hall event. What will you do after that?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"316\" data-total-count=\"16726\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> I really think that it will be my last performance in public. And I will be 86 by that time, so I should look at reality. I may have one more novel in me. And if it\u2019s not good, I have a whole team of unkind selectors who will tell me. I always thought that Graham Greene, for instance, went on for too long.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"68\" data-total-count=\"16794\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>But it\u2019s hard not to write, if you\u2019re a writer, isn\u2019t it?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"103\" data-total-count=\"16897\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> It\u2019s the only thing you can do, in a way. I cannot stand idleness. I cannot stand not writing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"85\" data-total-count=\"16982\"><strong>S.L.<\/strong> <em>Do you feel you\u2019ve come full circle or closed the door on a part of your life?<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"story-body-text story-content\" data-para-count=\"134\" data-total-count=\"17116\" data-node-uid=\"1\"><strong>J.L.C.<\/strong> I guess this is, for me, some sort of celebration. I feel that I\u2019m just about grown up enough to face the truth about myself.<\/p>\n<footer class=\"story-footer story-content\">\n<div class=\"story-meta\">\n<div class=\"story-notes\">\n<p>Sarah Lyall is a writer at large for The Times.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2017\/08\/25\/books\/review\/john-le-carre-ben-macintyre-british-spy-thrillers.html?hpw&amp;rref=books&amp;action=click&amp;pgtype=Homepage&amp;module=well-region&amp;region=bottom-well&amp;WT.nav=bottom-well\">The New York Times<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/footer>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/div>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Sarah Lyall, Sunday Book Review, In Conversation, Aug. 27, 2017 BRISTOL, England \u2014 Their subject is spying. Their obsessions are secrecy and betrayal. They are Englishmen of a certain background, old friends and admirers of each other\u2019s work. One writes novels; the other, nonfiction. They speak in practically perfect sentences. Conversations between John le [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1001004,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[53],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1968"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1001004"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1968"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1968\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1969,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1968\/revisions\/1969"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1968"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1968"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1968"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}