by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
Hitherto-secret documents recently released by the German government tell only part of what really happened during the fateful years 1989-90. Helga Zepp-LaRouche tells the rest of the story, analyzing how the historic opportunity of the century was missed.
by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
A chronology, including letters to and from leading German political figures, in which Helga Zepp-LaRouche sought to shift the momentum of German reunification toward the concept of the Productive Triangle and Eurasian development.
by Hartmut Cramer
The necessity for developing-sector debt moratoria and for a worldwide concert for economic development was put on the table in 1976 by the Non-Aligned Movement, and eagerly greeted by Italy, France, and even U.S. President Ford—until the British sabotaged the effort.
by Michael Liebig and Jonathan Tennenbaum
As early as the late 1970s, Lyndon LaRouche proposed a ballistic missile defense policy based on “new physical principles”—the program later adopted by President Reagan, and called the Strategic Defense Initiative.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
He told a Berlin press conference: “Under the proper conditions, many today will agree, that the time has come for early steps toward the reunification of Germany, with the obvious prospect that Berlin might resume its role as the capital.”
by Rüdiger Rumpf
Deutsche Bank Chairman Alfred wanted a reunited Germany to be a locomotive to reanimate the failing economies of East Europe. The financial oligarchy had him silenced.
by Angelika Beyreuter-Raimondi
In December 1989, LaRouche launched the concept of “corridors of development” extending out from the triangle encompassed by Paris, Berlin, and Vienna.
by Elisabeth Hellenbroich
The British did everything in their power to prevent German reunification—to create a strategic entente with France, and act as guardian for Eastern Europe. Once it became obvious that British attempts to forestall German reunification had failed, they attacked Germany’s economic strength as a “Fourth Reich.”
by Elke Fimmen
The Franco-British Entente deployed Serbian dictator Milosevic to undermine any possible Grand Design for economic development of Eurasia.
by Konstantin George
by Rachel Douglas
by Mary Burdman
The new Silk Road project has the potential to revolutionize the world economic and political situation.
by Jonathan Tennenbaum
by William Engdahl
by John Hoefle
But it’s not the sort of “correction” that the Wall Street pundits are expecting.
by Jonathan Tennenbaum
The disastrous floods along the Yangtze River underscore the need for a dirigist approach to national economic development—and a solution to the international financial breakdown crisis.
by Linda de Hoyos
The cease-fire announced by the Sudanese government is forcing a reassessment of the policy put forward by Washington, for war “to bring down the Khartoum government.”
by Debra Hanania-Freeman
The House voted up the language of the Citizens Protection Act, in a victory for supporters of Lyndon LaRouche.
Documentation: Excerpts from the floor debate.