by Fiorella Operto
The Chaldean Catholic primate of Baghdad, in Rome organizing to end the Middle East war, insists “already too many lives have been sacrificed.”
by Cynthia R. Rush
The History of the South Atlantic Conflict, The War for the Malvinas, by Rubén O. Moro.
by Warren J. Hamerman
The Feast of Faith, by Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger.
by Richard Sanders
The Conquest of Paradise, by Kirkpatrick Sale.
by Scott Thompson
Ever wonder where the uniformly identical slanders against LaRouche come from? The trail leads back to the CIA’s involvement in the creation of the rock-drug-sex counterculture, under the direction of British Secret Intelligence, via the “salons” of Wall Street investment banker John Train.
Will Bush Revive World Communism?
by Silvia Palacios
Vulnerability to Bush’s War.
Who Will Save France’s Honor?
by Carlos Cota Meza
Mexican Oil for Bush’s “New Order.”
by Andrea Olivieri
Gaviria’s Narco-Pact Is a Sham.
by Carlos Wesley
What If the U.S. Defeats Iraq?
When the Truth Comes Out.
by Christopher White
Whether in depression or in war, the White House wants the Group of Seven to pay.
by Kathleen Klenetsky
Documentation: French author supports Bush starvation policy.
by Anthony K. Wikrent
Say it was the economic downturn, say it was higher oil prices; but it was “flea market economics” that shot down PanAm and Eastern.
by Lydia Cherry
Prime Minister Mahathir is building for regional economic integration, unencumbered by the British Commonwealth countries and the U.S. “free trade” disasters.
by Marcia Merry
“Farmer-Friendly” Bill To Kill Farmers.
by John Hoefle
How Big Will Bank Bailout Be?
Lyndon LaRouche looks at an unstable world and the potential for Bush’s Iran military action to revive dangers that should have been dispelled by the 1989-90 freedom movements in Eastern Europe.
by Rainer Apel
Germans increasingly fear that Moscow’s military hardliners will make policy.
by Linda de Hoyos
Both Israel and the U.S. are meddling in crises in Sudan, Ethiopia, Chad.
by Mary McCourt Burdman
by Lydia Cherry
by Susan Maitra and Ramtanu Maitra
by Joseph Brewda
by Joseph Brewda
U.S. news media are still covering it up, but George Bush’s New World Order has been initiated with a bloodbath—and the end is not soon in sight.
by Hartmut Cramer
Lithuania was forced at gunpoint to agree to a referendum of its citizens on Feb. 9.
by Carlos Wesley
Our southern neighbors are still smarting from the invasion of Panama, and angered at the betrayal of the Baltics.
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
The mass opposition in continental Europe may be one phenomenon Bush did not pre-discount.
by Cynthia R. Rush
Kissinger’s Lawrence Eagleburger put pressure on Menem, and ministers whom the White House deemed “questionable” were removed.
by John Howard
by Nancy Spannaus
As LaRouche foresaw, 18 months after the world’s mass freedom movements began in Tiananmen Square, U.S. citizens are responding to the superpower agreements to bolster each others’ collapsing empires, by joining a peace movement liberally seeded with LaRouche’s program to get out of the depression.
by Christopher White and Scott Thompson
A Report on the “British Israelite” Cult.
by Kathleen Klenetsky
by Leo Scanlon
The U.S. industrial base is in no condition to support a production surge.
by H. Graham Lowry
by Steve Komm and Jeffrey Steinberg
by Warren J. Hamerman
A fact sheet on the kangaroo-court trial of Paul Gallagher, Anita Gallagher, and Laurence Hecht—three political organizers who each face sentences of 40-plus years for the “crime” of soliciting political loans.
by William Jones