Javier Nart

[citation needed] Nart attended an Opus Dei school and was being prepared to join the Society of Jesus, something that did not suit him because he is nonreligious.

[2] In his early career Nart worked as a war correspondent in many countries, including Lebanon, Chad, Myanmar and Yemen.

He also covered the Nicaraguan Revolution that led to the 1979 ouster of dictator Anastasio Somoza by the Sandinista National Liberation Front.

One photograph he took, as he explains in an interview with Pablo Iglesias, was of a dead boy with his mother holding 10 dollars to purchase some supplies.

Unlike most of his work, it does not have war as its subject matter, and instead is a tour guide to see parts of Brazil many tourists who stick to hotspots like São Paulo or Rio de Janeiro do not visit.

Cabalgando el dragón por Tailandia, Laos, Camboya y Vietnam (Trip to the Mekong: Riding the dragon through Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam) and Viaje al desierto: de Kano a El Cairo (Trip in the Desert: from Kano to Cairo).

[4] Nart published his most recent book, Nunca la nada fue tanto (Never was nothing so much) in the summer of 2016, that seeks to explain why he participated in so many conflicts.

On 24 June 2019, Nart renounced to his role as member of the Cs' national committee, after a voting in which the later re-affirmed in its veto to negotiate with the PSOE.

[12] He explained he left the party because of the "absolute disagreement with establishing a single subjective alliance (with the PP) and objective one (with Vox)".

Nart believes that a European project that guarantees the member states peace, democracy, and social welfare is too important to allow Euroskeptics to have their way.

[15] In a joint letter with 15 other MEPs from various political groups, Nart urged the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell in early 2021 to replace the European Union’s ambassador to Cuba for allegedly siding with the country’s Communist leadership.