by Jeffrey Steinberg
If the President plunges ahead into war with Iraq, he will have squandered the last opportunity to avert an even more grave military confrontation on the Korean Peninsula.
by Jonathan Tennenbaum
by Kathy Wolfe
by Richard Freeman
Armando Falcon, director of the U.S. Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, was forced to resign, after issuing a report showing the underlying weakness of the U.S. housing market and financial system.
by Paul Gallagher
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
An interview with Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. by Jack Stockwell, on Salt Lake City’s KTKK “K-Talk” radio March 3. “Especially under the Cheney Administration,” said LaRouche, “which is the best way of describing the current policy, the United States has ignored what every competent commander, flag officer, in military service, in Europe or the United States or elsewhere, was trained in. That is the lesson of the Peloponnesian War. And what the United States under Bush, or under Cheney, shall we say, under Cheney’s overreaching influence, is doing, is violating the lesson of the collapse of Greek civilization as a result of a decision to launch the Peloponnesian War, which is exactly what the United States policy is now.
by Hussein Askary
All over the Arab world, EIR’s analysis of Mideast developments is headline news, and Lyndon LaRouche has become a “household name.”
by Mark Burdman
The increasingly desperate British Prime Minister is said to be considering a radical maneuver to save his political hide, on the model of James Ramsay MacDonald, who, as Labour Party Prime Minister in 1931, formed a “national unity” government, together with Conservative and Liberal Party opposition figures, so as to impose vicious austerity on Britain’s Depression-wracked population.
by Elisabeth Hellenbroich
by David Cherry
by Rubén Cota Meza
by Michael Billington
by Michael Billington
An interview with Sen. Francisco S. Tatad.
by Allen Douglas
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
On the current crisis of the Democratic National Committee.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
A speech at a town hall meeting in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, on Feb. 23, and discussion with the audience.
by Mark Calney
by Nancy Spannaus
by Lawrence K. Freeman
by Carl Osgood
Senator Francisco “Kit” Tatad is one of the senior statesmen of the Republic of the Philippines. He was Majority Leader to five Senate Presidents, and also served as a Cabinet Minister (1969-80) and Senator (1992-2001). He is the author of several books on political affairs.
“Presidential Prayer” vs. Religion.
“Africa Unites Against Iraq War,” in EIR, March 7, should have stated that the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) does not belong on the U.S. State Department’s list of terrorist organizations. The army of Ugandan President Museveni—in carrying out a campaign of murder and mayhem in Acholiland in northern Uganda—provoked a response. The LRA’s murder and mayhem is that response.