“Without nuclear power, you cannot develop the Middle East at all,” says LaRouche, in his weekly “EIR Talks” radio interview.
by Dennis Small
One of the leaders of the Nov. 27, 1992 military uprising against Venezuelan President Carlos Andrés Pérez, General Visconti gives his view of the current situation in his country.
The editor in chief of the independent Bosnian daily newspaper Oslobodenje describes how his paper has become a symbol of the resistance of Sarajevo Croats, Muslims, and Serbs alike.
by Katherine Kanter
Mr. de la Caffinière is ballet soloist at the Berlin German Opera. His interpretation traces a new frontier in ballet.
by Rainer Apel
Can Palestinians Count on German Aid?
by Silvia Palacios
Bankers Issue Ultimatum.
The Iron Is Hot.
by Mark Burdman
Palestinian and Israeli negotiators have adopted the kernel of the argument of Lyndon LaRouche, that economic development projects must underwrite any peace accord. The question now, is whether the political will exists to implement such projects rapidly enough.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
From an interview with Lyndon LaRouche.
by Marcia Merry
by William Engdahl
by John Hoefle
The Quarter of the Living Dead.
by Robyn Quijano
It is not democracy that has been set back by the demise of Carlos Andrés Pérez, but the plot to subjugate the nations of Ibero-America, on behalf of the “new world order.”
by Gretchen Small
Excerpts from EIR’s book, which, since its release in July, is becoming a bestseller in Ibero-America.
by Dennis Small
An interview with Gen. Francisco Visconti.
by Konstantin George
This latest instance of the comeback of the Soviet-era Nomenklatura, the Communist bureaucracy, contains lessons that apply far beyond Georgia.
by Frank Hahn
by Carlos Méndez and Cynthia R. Rush
by Gretchen Small
by Christopher White
Both the North American Free Trade Agreement and Hillary Clinton’s health-care plan, now the subject of hot debate in Washington, will make the problems they are supposed to deal with much worse.
by Gov. Douglas Wilder
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Leif Johnson
by Elisabeth Hellenbroich
A speech by Elisabeth Hellenbroich, executive member of the International Caucus of Labor Committees, to the ICLC’s conference on Sept. 5.
by Suzanne Rose
by William Jones
In our chronology of Mideast developments published in last week’s issue (pages 22-25), there were a number of errors. It was King Faisal who was assassinated in 1975 (apologies to King Fahd!); the Iran-Iraq war began in September 1980; and President Sadat was assassinated in September 1981.