Israeli-US fighter jet deal, a breezy polo from Sunspel and ‘Thailand: The Monocle Handbook’
Monday 11/5/26
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‘Sawasdee’. The sixth instalment in our handbook series, ‘Thailand: The Monocle Handbook’, is available to pre-order now. From mountainous Chiang Rai all the way down to tropical Phuket, we head to wellness retreats, restaurants, national parks, temples and envelope-pushing culture hubs to show you why this sunny nation remains the stuff of holiday dreams. Plus, if you’re interested in a permanent relocation there, we spotlight the neighbourhoods and islands where you can make a home and profile the architects and designers to commission for the job. So pack your bags and experience this special corner of Southeast Asia afresh. For now, here’s your Monocle Minute:

THE OPINION: College commencement season comes at an opportune moment 
TRAVEL: Discover Thailand: The Monocle Handbook
IN THE BASKET: Israel’s multi-billion dollar air-defence deal with the US
DAILY TREAT: Slip into a breezy polo from Sunspel
THE LIST: Stories that you might have missed


The Opinion: society

College commencement season is upon us – now is the time to tackle big ideas

By Tomos Lewis
<em>By </em>Tomos Lewis

Commencement season at universities across the US is under way. But before this year’s graduating students hurl their mortar boards into the air, there is one final task that any self-respecting graduation ceremony will make its freshly garlanded graduates sit through – the commencement address. 
 
These speeches are the centrepiece of a university graduation – words of wisdom styled to inspire their fresh-faced audiences as they bid farewell to their classrooms and step into what was once quaintly referred to as the real world. But it is often who gives the address that captures more attention than what they say. 

 
Setting the tone: Michelle Obama delivers the commencement speech at the University of California, Merced

Michelle Obama, Mark Zuckerberg, Oprah Winfrey and Dolly Parton are all among the inductees into this who’s who of graduation speakerships past. Some think that the starrier the speaker, the more cynical the motive – that universities are keen on hitching their bandwagons to one celebrity or the next for the free publicity that their honouree will bathe their quadrangles in come graduation day.   
 
But the truth is that if you’re somebody in America, you’ll be invited to give a commencement speech. Think of it as a US answer to the UK honours system – but instead of being anointed a knight or a dame, you get to be draped in robes, crowned with a tasselled academic’s cap and give a graduation address. 
 
So, what if you’re asked what to say? Platitudes, suitably saccharine, that all of life’s wonders lie ahead of you, and so on, are most welcome here. But you might want to capture the zeitgeist in some way – as Hillary Clinton did at her alma mater, Wellesley College, the spring following her presidential election defeat in November 2016. Here, she noted not only how long walks (and big glasses of chardonnay) had steered her through tough times of late but also offered a rallying cry – that her audience’s appetite to battle on should be heartier than ever in the sting of defeat. 
 
Even US presidents – past, sitting and future – have used commencement addresses to set out their pitches and principles to the country at large, far beyond their graduation day audiences. The current governor of Illinois, JB Pritzker, a likely contender for the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination in 2028, memorably argued in 2023 that the spirit of collegiality embodied by his audience should spill out far beyond the confines of college life.
 
But it is Toni Morrison, the late US novelist and Nobel laureate, who arguably captured the mood best in 2004, when she unsentimentally reminded students that, “You are your own stories. [And] although you don’t have complete control over the narrative – no author does, I can tell you,” she quipped, “you [can] nevertheless create it.”
 
It’s in that spirit then that we doff – or toss – our caps in honour of this year’s commencement season, where the art of oratory itself would be wise for speakers to muse on. Because the language that we use to speak to each other, to communicate a big idea or to argue a case can feel far less considered than it once was, particularly in the US. It has become pretty easy to flatten language out of its richness, dimming the gleam of what we’re really trying to say. In a noisy world where cynics deploy their words as weapons, speaking clearly, thoughtfully and honestly has never felt more vital – whether you’re about to graduate this summer or not. 

Tomos Lewis is Monocle’s Toronto correspondent. 

Further reading?
Monocle’s editor in chief, Andrew Tuck, explains how to prepare before speaking publicly and how to host great on-stage discussions.


 

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The Briefings

Travel: Charmkrung, Thailand

Find harmony in eclectic flavours at Bangkok’s late-night dining hotspot

Spicy, sour, sweet, salty and bitter: Thai cuisine celebrates harmony and transforms meals into experiences for the senses. Better still, a trip to this sunny nation gives visitors the opportunity to try its regional specialities. When in the north, sample authentic khao soi (noodle soup); in the centre, seek out sticky jasmine rice and refined royal cuisine; and in the south, enjoy ample seafood and bold, fiery curries. You needn’t fear going hungry at any hour – the readily available street food is unrivalled.

We cover all this and more in our latest travel guide, Thailand: The Monocle Handbook, available to pre-order now. Inside are plenty of drinking-and-dining highlights, from multicourse seafood feasts and reinterpretations of traditional fare to contemporary cafés and buzzy cocktail bars run by bright entrepreneurs. Here’s one:

Charmkrung, Bangkok
This Thai tapas bar on Charoen Krung Road is the sister restaurant of Charmgang and Charmkok, both of which are nearby. “Our menu is an eclectic mix of takes on Thai drinking snacks, old-school recipes that don’t often make it onto menus and dishes that we have fun with, such as the Thai porchetta and pani puri with a crab salad,” says Kiki Sontiyart, co-founder of Charmkrung. As its kitchen closes at 23.00, it’s the perfect spot for late-night dining.
6th floor, 839 Charoen Krung Rd

Want more dining tips? We thought we’d share a shortlist with you to celebrate the book’s launch –
take a peek here. Enjoy!


in the basket: Israel & USA

Fresh fighter squadrons are heading to Israel as deal with the US takes off

In the basket: A squadron each of Lockheed Martin F-35I and Boeing F-15IA fighter jets
Who’s buying: Israel
Who’s selling: US
Price: “Tens of billions of shekels,” per Israeli sources
Delivery date: Circa 2030 onwards

 
Sky’s the limit: Israel is bulking up its air force

These purchases amount to Israel exercising its options on a couple of earlier deals (writes Andrew Mueller). In the past few years, Israel has agreed to buy its third squadron of F-35s and its first squadron of F-15IAs from the US. This deal will bring Israel up to four squadrons of F-35s and two of F-15IAs (the Israeli Air Force also flies 66 F-15s of other variations). Israel’s current squadrons have featured heavily over Iran – demonstrating, as Israel sees it, both the potential of its extant air power and its need for more of it, however nervous it makes the neighbours.

Israel – just 15 kilometres wide at its narrowest point, with its back to the water – feels that it has little option but to pre-empt any potential belligerence from across the Middle East. But these purchases, like many of Israel’s, are clearly made with a view to long-term deterrence of the Islamic Republic of Iran, which Israel regards as the ultimate author of most of its immediate security concerns and potentially – pending the development of an Iranian nuclear weapon – an existential menace.


• • • • • DAILY TREAT • • • • •

Slip into a breezy polo from Sunspel

There’s not a lot that you can do to reimagine the polo shirt. It is, after all, simple and ubiquitous. Designers have thrown the odd striped detailing here, a logo there. But the major difficulty is that it has been perfected already.

English brand Sunspel’s Riviera Polo might just be the gold standard. Created in 1955 by Peter Hill, the great-grandson of its founder, the focus then was the same as it is now: innovating the best possible fabric and cut. This version comes in a limited-edition Sea Island cotton – supposedly the world’s finest – and is cut to the tastes of an Oscar-winning costume designer. Needless to say, it should suit you.


 

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beyond the headlines

the LIST: FROM monocle.com

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