The secretary general of the Peruvian Bishops’ Conference refutes the malthusians’ population-control policy.
by Laurent Murawiec
Reviews The Soviet Military by E.S. Williams, and Le chef de l’Armée Rouge, Mikail Toukhatchevski by Pierre Fervacque.
by Jonathan Tennenbaum
Reports on the most critical threat which the West must now meet from Soviet Marshal Nikolai Ogarkov’s technological war build-up.
by Warren J. Hamerman
by Mary Lalevée
Africans Move on the Debt Front.
by Liliana Celani
Austerity Menus To Prevail in Venice?
by Susan Maitra
India Joins the Race for New Materials.
by Yves Messer
French Take Leadership against Terror.
by Valerie Rush
Narco Coup Brewing in Colombia.
by Silvia Palacios
Project Democracy Gang in Brasilia.
Ambassador Richard Burt: A Soviet Asset.
by Kathleen Klenetsky
by Ronald Kokinda
by Ronald Kokinda
by David Goldman
He decided not to be on hand for the recriminations, when the foreign credit of the United States collapses.
by Cynthia R. Rush
No longer is it the well-behaved debtor, boasting of its special status.
by Mark Burdman
by Marcia Merry
Reports on the crisis condition of a U.S. shipping and shipbuilding industry that has been entirely dependent on military orders that are no longer enough.
by Christopher White
by John Hoefle
Termination with Extreme Prejudice.
by Marcia Merry
Judge Stays Foreclosure Actions.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche takes on the dangerously incorrect view, recently expressed by the prominent Italian industrialist Carlo De Benedetti, that the United States will be replaced by the Soviet Union as the world’s dominant economic power: “I intend to become the next President of the United States.... Under those conditions—presuming you had not already given irreversible concessions to Moscow before then—the financial disaster which Sr. De Benedetti foresees will be conquered, and the world will move rapidly into the greatest scientific, technological, and economic growth in the history of mankind.”
by Konstantin George
The light plane’s unimpeded progress to Moscow can only aid the progress of the Red Army marshal’s pre-war mobilization.
Documentation: Who is Dmitri Timofeyevich Yazov?
by Susan Welsh
by Rainer Apel
by Joseph Brewda
by Linda de Hoyos
by Fiorella Operto Filipponi
The 'Third Rome' mystics in Moscow cannot be pleased with the Schiller Institute’s release of Prof. Jiří Maria Veselý’s Grideranno le pietre (The Stones Shall Cry Out), revolving around the figures of the sainted brothers Cyril and Methodius.
by Konstantin George
by Kathleen Klenetsky
His first major policy statement on AIDS is an important first step, if only that, toward an effective policy for dealing with the AIDS disaster.
by Joseph Brewda
The man EIR has exposed as a kingpin in the Contra cover-up is exposed on the witness stand as “either incompetent or a liar.”
by Nicholas F. Benton
Oil Rep Warns of Persian Gulf Cutoff.
by Kathleen Klenetsky
Gore Hits the Campaign Trail—in Moscow.
by Ronald Kokinda