by Jonathan Tennenbaum
The hostage-taking at Moscow’s Melnikova Street theater was intended to be a devastating strategic blow against Russia and against Putin’s Presidency in particular. The operation had nothing essential to do with the Chechnya issue per se, but very much to do with the global strategic context, including Russia’s opposition to war against Iraq, and its reinvigorated diplomacy with respect to Eurasia and the Arab world.
Even before the new President’s inauguration, Brazil’s international creditors are demanding that he repudiate the mandate upon which he was elected.
by Silvia Palacios
by Lorenzo Carrasco
by Marcia Merry Baker
by Richard Freeman
by Rainer Apel
by Marsha Freeman
The international economic collapse, compounded by Bush Administration technological apartheid, has shrunk nations’ space programs and their great potentials of only a decade ago.
by Ramtanu Maitra
Cooperation among China, India, and Russia will advance in the coming months—not against the United States, but to share responsibilities along with the United States, the European Union, and other nations.
by Christine Bierre
by Dean Andromidas
by Michael Billington
by Michael Billington
by Dean Andromidas
by Michele Steinberg
Mexican officials are scratching their heads at the President’s bizarre performance at the Los Cabos meeting, and U.S. columnists are writing that the Boy Emperor is “going off the deep end.”
by Edward Spannaus
by Mark Burdman
by William Jones
Racing for the Bomb: General Leslie Groves, The Indispensable Man, by Robert Norris; and The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb, by Gar Alperovitz.
Moongate Eclipses Chinagate, Koreagate.