An Armenian Member of Parliament and chairman of the Association of Armenian Constitutional Law, on his nation’s fight for independence.
by Nancy Spannaus
The Commanders, by Bob Woodward.
Departments
by Carlos Cota Meza
Cholera Has Arrived.
by Carlos Wesley
New Proof of U.S. Agents’ Drug Ties.
by Rainer Apel
German-Bashing Alliance in Action.
The First World War—and the Third.
by Ramtanu Maitra
Once freed from the British yoke, India’s population grew rapidly, prompting a scientific revolution in food production, and leaving the malthusians grinding their teeth.
A round-up on the environmentalists and their opponents.
by Lorenzo Carrasco
Just as the Anglo-Americans are poised to carve up the Brazilian Amazon, powerful nationalist groups in Brazil have mobilized to fight back. Now, the fur is really going to fly.
by Silvia Palacios and Lorenzo Carrasco
Report on a conference of Brazil’s Army Command and General Staff School.
Documentation: From the presentations to the symposium by EIR’s correspondents.
by Silvia Palacios
by Lorenzo Carrasco
by Mary McCourt Burdman
It was the International Monetary Fund’s policies which pushed Yugoslavia over the brink toward civil war. What will be the effects if the bankers get their way on the vast Indian subcontinent?
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Kathy Wolfe
First of two parts.
by William Engdahl
by Lydia Cherry
by Mary McCourt Burdman
by Angelika Beyreuther Raimondi
A speech delivered to the Schiller Institute’s May 25 conference in Prague.
by Linda Everett
by Anno Hellenbroich
An on-the-scene report. The deportation of Armenians living in Azerbaidzhan, which was carried out with the help of Soviet troops, buttressed the belief of most Armenians that Moscow was seeking any pretext to uphold the last remaining communist regime in Transcaucasus, and to weaken the independence-minded Armenian republic.
by L. Ter-Petrossian
An interview with Hrant Kachatrian.
by Levon Ter-Petrossian.
A report by Armenia’s President.
by Nancy Spannaus
With the United States, U.S.S.R., and European Community as a whole lined up on the side of the Serbian-dominated army, there is little to prevent an escalation to outright war.
by Nancy Primack
by Andrea Olivieri
by H. Graham Lowry
In what the Bush Administration calls the “post-recession” period, nine states are lacking final agreements on their budgets as the deadline passes, and things are moving politically in the direction of rule by decree to enforce budget cuts.
by Herbert Quinde
The Commission to Investigate Human Rights Violations filed this petition with the Secretary-General of the United Nations, demanding action to reverse the travesty of justice in the case of imprisoned statesman LaRouche and associates.