by Umberto Pascali
A discussion with the deputy foreign minister of Croatia and a Croatian-American who is on a hunger strike to demand U.S. recognition of Croatia and Slovenia.
by Anita Gallagher
Feeding Frenzy: How Attack Journalism Has Transformed American Politics, by Larry J. Sabato.
by Rainer Apel
Eurasia’s Baltic Gate to the World.
by William Engdahl
End of “Thatcherism” in Scandinavia?
by Carlos Valdez
Ibero-American Energy Targeted.
by Suzanne Rose
No Relief from Bush.
by Geraldo Luis Zaraiva Lino
Lutzenberger Must Go!
by Carlos Wesley
Judge Denies Noriega Defense.
by Valerie Rush
Still Playing Footsie with Terrorists.
The Horror of Baker’s “Mexico Model.”
by William Engdahl
The new agreement abandons the monetarist “shock therapy” approach, leaving George Bush’s stable of free market economists increasingly out on a limb.
by Jonathan Tennenbaum
Guidelines for modernizing rail and road transport.
by Debra Hanania Freeman
Dr. Abdul Alim Muhammad, national spokesman for the Nation of Islam, describes the important new research in Kenya that is being covered up by the U.S. medical establishment.
by Marcia Merry
by Gretchen Small
by Anthony K. Wikrent
The conclusion of a series on hard times for the shipping industry.
by Axel Yougoruthen
by Marjorie Mazel Hecht
by Dr. Amadou Sakho
A speech by Dr. Amadou Sakho, an architect from Guinea.
They call it “shock therapy,” but it’s really a monetarist cult policy which destroys nations, and reduces their populations through genocidal policies modeled on those of Hitler’s Economics Minister Hjalmar Schacht. A profile of the kooks, bankers, and mobsters.
by Dr. Margit Fakhoury
The author, a pediatrician from Essen, Germany, was part of a delegation of the Committee to Save the Children in Iraq, which visited hospitals in Iraq in July and brought 30 wounded children to Germany for treatment. She presents a first-hand report of the medical catastrophe in Iraq.
by Konstantin George
In a re-run of the 1878 Congress of Berlin, the British are promoting a plan to carve up the Balkans, increasing the danger of full-scale war in Europe.
by Umberto Pascali
An interview with Michael Montillo and Antun Irek.
by Ronald Kokinda
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Dennis Small
by Ramtanu Maitra, Susan Maitra, and Mary McCourt Burdman
by Linda de Hoyos
by Jeffrey Steinberg
The post-Labor Day letdown began with the indictment of Clair George, the Reagan-era CIA director of operations. And there’s more trouble ahead for the “new world order” President.
The President says the problem with schools is parents—never mind the fact that there is no budget for paying teachers or buying erasers.
Last week’s cover photo was taken by Philip Ulanowsky. The credit line was inadvertently omitted.