The assistant to the director of the Institute for Developing Economies’ Economic Cooperation Department in Tokyo, Japan. Mr. Imai has studied the Chinese economy for many years. The IDE does much of the work on economic programs for the Third World for Japan’s Foreign Ministry.
The grand mufti of Bosnia calls on the West to stop its cowardly refusal to stop Serbia’s aggression. If it does not, the war will surely spread.
by Gabriele Liebig
Moscow intends to compensate for the lack of coherence in its economic policy by being all the more ruthless toward the other republics of the former Soviet Union. Tajikistan is a case in point—the civil war there has already claimed 100,000 casualties.
by Konstantin George
by Rainer Apel
Are Jobs a “Dying Species”?
by Carlos Méndez
Venezuelan Sovereignty Still At Issue.
by Susan Maitra
Hope for Indian Rocketry Program.
The Federal Reserve and the New Age.
by Peter Rush
The financial raiders are trying to keep the world monetary system afloat with a new speculative binge, while placing the region’s raw materials under foreign financial control.
by Linda Everett
by David Hammer
by Adam East
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Kathy Wolfe
by Kathy Wolfe
An interview with Kenichi Imai.
by Robert L. Baker and Marcia Merry
Not Enough Corn for Export.
by Richard Freeman and Christopher White
Citibank has been meeting secretly with representatives of the Federal Reserve for the past two years, to plan out the banking provisions of the North American Free Trade Agreement. But they won’t tell Congress what they discussed!
by William Jones
Two experiments with “revolution from above”—Gorbachov’s and Yeltsin’s—have failed, and now we’re facing the “revolution from below,” warns the former head of German military intelligence in a briefing at the National Press Club.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Konstantin George
by Rachel Douglas
by Joseph Brewda
by Paolo Raimondi
Archbishop Vinko Puljic speaks to the press in Milan.
by Mark Burdman
by Mark Burdman
by Valerie Rush
by Kathleen Klenetsky
What the Clinton Administration has produced in the way of a “new” strategic doctrine, after months of allegedly intense study, is a warmed-over version of the insane strategy of the Bush Administration.
by Katherine Notley
Casinos in the Capital.
by William Jones
Last week’s article on the press conference of international dignitaries in Washington calling for freedom for Lyndon LaRuche (p. 58) omitted the names of two speakers: Laurence Hecht and Donald Phau, both defendants in the Virginia “railroad” prosecution of associates of LaRouche. The two have been sentenced to outrageous prison terms of 33 and 25 years, respectively, and will begin serving those sentences soon.