AMERICAN SPRING?
Carthage, Tunisia.

The ruins here have a personal significance for me, as this is where Hannibal (247-181 BC) was born and raised. He grew up to be one of the greatest military geniuses in history. Everyone knows of his leading his army over the Alps with war elephants to attack Rome. That was in 218 BC.
It would be 2,197 years until elephants crossed the Alps again over the actual pass used by Hannibal - the Col du Clapier - when I led the expedition that did it in 1979.
The view from Byrsa Hill, upon which the main citadel of Carthage was built, is spectacular. The Mediterranean shimmers in cobalt blue, while the capital city of Tunisia, Tunis, rises in the distance. The extraordinary events that took place there three years ago launched what became known as the Arab Spring.
It was 190 miles to the south, however, in the obscure rural town of Sidi Bouzaid, where the initial spark occurred. As I gazed out into the distance, I thought of the connection between an impoverished street vendor in Sidi Bouzaid named Mohamed Bouazizi and a cattle rancher in Bunkerville, Nevada named Cliven Bundy.