by Josefina Menéndez
The spy that went out of the fold.
by Valerie Rush and Carlos Wesley
Colombia wins battle against terrorists.
by Pierre Beaudry
The beam fight is going strong.
The punctum saliens.
by David Goldman
A Brazil debt crisis has at best been postponed until March. What Washington needs to understand is that the means by which a crisis has been staved off “have merely extended the bankruptcy of the developing sector to most of Europe, and sections of the Persian Gulf and Asia.”
by David Goldman
by Mark Sonnenblick
by David Goldman
How to provoke a dollar crisis.
by Kathy Burdman
Locked into blocked accounts?
by Leif Johnson
A corporatist package.
by Marcia Merry
How the international grain cartel is running the food crisis, and what must be done
by Cynthia Parsons
The European Community’s new agricultural budget means bankruptcy for millions of farmers.
by Sylvia Brewda
Productivity of European farms has made great progress, but now the crisis has hit.
by Thierry Lalevée
Under KGB control, a pool of several thousand would-be kamikaze terrorists has been put together for deployment in the Middle East and the advanced sector.
by Umberto Pascali
by Rachel Douglas
by Mark Burdman
by Luba George
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Judith Wyer
by Susan Maitra
by Cynthia Rush and Dennis Small
by Susan Kokinda
Reagan Republicans on Capitol Hill, as well as Kissinger assets and “Andropov Democrats” are being pressured not to provide for the national defense.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Richard Cohen
The “strategic alliance” with Israel may be seen in Moscow as a fear of using anything but proxy forces in the region.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
The light-operetta general is once more mustering his bureaucratic forces in Washington to attempt to undercut LaRouche’s crash beam-weapons development proposal.
by M.T. Upharson
What Was Henry Really Doing in Mexico? — In Hong Kong, He Dropped the Pretense.