Toward a Community of Principle. Strategic Studies
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. responds to “a ranting piece of bar-room-style ‘tough talk’ about missile defense,” by James H. Anderson, Ph.D., a research fellow at the Heritage Foundation. “You should be happy to know, that neither that author, nor the Heritage Foundation he represents, will be a candidate for any of the military or intelligence appointments to be made by this present candidate for next President of the U.S.A.,” writes LaRouche. “Strategy is too sensitive a profession, to be consigned to baboons.”
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
A chronology of articles published in 1999 by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., along with important interventions by him, his wife Helga Zepp-LaRouche, and their associates, and some of the most significant international press coverage of his work.
by William Engdahl
“In its present form, the European Union can not survive,” says Lyndon LaRouche. “There will have to be a renegotiation, so that you will have something to supersede Maastricht, and this should have the provision for adapting to” the collapse of the global financial system.
by Carlos Cota Meza
If Mexico is to participate in a new international economic order, and it must do so if it wants to survive, it will do so through construction of its own development projects. A re-elaboration of infrastructure development projects originally proposed for the postwar period, but which were archived or stripped down for the explicit purpose of preventing Mexico from ever becoming an industrialized country.
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
On Christmas eve, a group of so-called Islamist terrorists hijacked an Indian Airlines plane, which some might have shrugged off as “just another terrorist act.” Not so. The drama that has unfolded in Afghanistan has the potential of igniting a brush fire, that will spread far and fast, possibly escalating into general conflagration.
by Madhu Gurung and Ramtanu Maitra
In 1995, EIR profiled the “afghansi” mujahideen apparatus behind the destabilization of the Indian subcontinent, including a dossier on Harkat-ul-Ansar, the group which hijacked the Indian Airlines plane.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Jonathan Tennenbaum
by Rainer Apel
Germany’s political life is heading for a process of decomposition, which resembles the beginning phase of the scandals that destroyed the entire postwar political system of Italy, during the early and mid-1990s. Scandals are aimed predominantly against the Christian Democracy and longtime CDU party chairman and former Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
by David Ramonet
by Linda de Hoyos
by Michael O. Billington
Singapore President Goh Chok Tong told reporters, “Indonesia’s a huge anchor. If it begins to break up, we are going to have general instability in the whole region for many years to come.”
by Michael O. Billington
by Claudio Celani
Truth is stranger than fiction. The stories involving Prodi and the murder of Italian leader Aldo Moro are discussed in two books recently published in Italy, by former Sen. Sergio Flamigni (The State Safehouse—96 Via Gradoli and the Moro Murder), and by former prosecutor Ferdinando Imposimato (High-Speed Corruption: Travel in the Invisible Government).
by Carlos Cota Meza
UN High Commissioner on Human Rights Mary Robinson and her allies tried to turn her visit to Mexico into a lynching of Mexico’s national institutions, on behalf of the Zapatista National Liberation Army and its secessionist plans in the southeastern state of Chiapas.
by Marianna Wertz
While his rivals prate endlessly about so-called “hot issues,” LaRouche is demanding that citizens face up to the impending financial collapse and do what is required to put him in a position to direct the reordering of the world economy.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
On Dec. 22, more than 30 journalists from around the world, including 10 from the United States, participated in a press conference with Democratic Presidential primary candidate Lyndon LaRouche, conducted live on the Internet.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Scott Thompson
by Nancy Spannaus
LaRouche Democrats in Loudoun County, Virginia have appealed the outcome of the Dec. 9, 1999 reorganization of the Loudoun County Democratic Committee, to the Virginia Democratic Party’s 10th District Committee. According to the appeal, the reorganization “was riddled, from top to bottom, with fraudulent, racist, intimidating tactics.”