Professor Dr. Abdelhamid Brahimi is a former Prime Minister of Algeria (1984-88). He is now director general of the Maghreb Center for Islamic Studies in London.
by Rainer Apel
When Will Germany Finally Grow Up?
by Silvia Palacios
A New “Special Relationship”?
Buy, Buy, Buy.
by Joseph Brewda and Jeffrey Steinberg
Presents explosive new evidence of a conspiracy to kill President Kennedy. The case hangs around the role of New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw and his relationship to British intelligence operative Louis Mortimer Bloomfield.
by Doug Mallouk
Senator Pothole: The Unauthorized Biography of Al D’Amato, by Leonard Lurie.
by William Engdahl
European heads of state will deliberate on 14 priority projects, the core of a development program for the continent.
by William Jones
The first in a series of worldwide conferences under the rubric, “Development Is the New Name for Peace.”
by Ramtanu Maitra and Susan Maitra
by Mary Burdman
by Ramtanu Maitra
Without nuclear energy, Asia cannot avert an economic breakdown crisis, as more and more governments in the region are beginning to realize. The Clinton Administration’s breakthrough agreement with North Korea on this issue shows the way to go.
by Ramtanu Maitra
The idea of having a nuclear power plant be the center of an agro-industrial complex has been on the drawing boards for decades, but now it should be implemented.
by Ramtanu Maitra and Susan Maitra
A country-by-country survey.
by Michael Liebig
With the Serbian attack on Bihac, the strategy of the British-steered Triple Entente has reached a decisive phase.
by Ulf Sandmark
by Javier Almario
by Maximiliano Londoño and Javier Almario
A television broadcast by two leaders of the Ibero-American Solidarity Movement.
Excerpts from an explosive report by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
by Mark Burdman
by Paolo Raimondi
An interview with Abdelhamid Brahimi.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Great Britain’s outrageous behavior in Bosnia is showing signs of triggering an outcry against “Perfidious Albion” on both sides of the congressional aisle.
A performance of selections from Amelia Boynton Robinson’s play about the journey from slavery to freedom, inaugurates the Schiller Institute’s “Exhibit A,” a project to revive literacy and Classical culture in the nation’s capital.