by Jeffrey Steinberg
The Synarchist movement, born in France in the 19th Century, sought to create a one-world tyranny, modeled on the reign of Napoleon Bonaparte. Synarchism was alive and well in Vichy France, and continued after World War II through financial elites like Hjalmar Schacht and Carl Schmitt, and through such “philosophers” as Alexandre Kojève, the propagandist of “purgative violence” and his friend Leo Strauss—godfather of the neo-conservatives in the Bush Administration.
by Dennis Small
Mexico’s Cristero War in the late 1920s pitted “right-wing” Catholic masses against the “left-wing” anticlerical government—with both sides being ideological Synarchists and their dupes.
by Paul Gallagher
Twenty-eight Italian Senators have submitted a resolution demanding that the Italian government convene the “New Bretton Woods” monetary conference Lyndon LaRouche has campaigned for since 1997.
Documentation: Text of the Senate resolution; chronology of the fight for a New Bretton Woods.
by Marcia Merry Baker
by Linda Everett
by Marcia Merry Baker
An interview with Dr. Hal B.H. Cooper, Jr.
by Pierre Beaudry
The 1648 Westphalia Peace only succeeded because of an economic policy of protection and directed public credit—dirigism—aimed to create sovereign nation-states, and designed by France’s Cardinal Jules Mazarin and his great protégé Jean-Baptiste Colbert. Colbert’s dirigist policy of fair trade was the most effective weapon against the liberal free trade policy of central banking maritime powers of the British and Dutch oligarchies.
A transportation engineer, Dr. Cooper is based in Seattle, and has consulted for many years on the LaRouche “Land-Bridge” development corridor perspective.
by Nancy Spannaus
Alexander Hamilton, A Life, by Willard Sterne Randall.
by Rainer Apel
Walking a Tightrope.
No Controlled Descent for Dollar.
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
Iraq’s internal situation is characterized by the “Catch-22”—that the Iraqis will not accept occupation, and the occupiers will not allow an independent sovereign government.
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
A report from a symposium at the Center for Asian Studies at the Cairo University.
by Kathy Wolfe
“Korea is a land of surprises,” as wise men say. So too, apparently, is the United States.
by Michael Billington
by Gerardo Terán Canal
The strategic choices facing Argentina’s new President.
by Michele Steinberg
There is tremendous anger in Washington against the neo-conservative coup put into place after Sept. 11, 2001. The mass resignations from military and government posts foreshadow what Lyndon LaRouche forecast would be a “countercoup.”
by Scott Thompson
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Edward Spannaus
by Carl Osgood and Edward Spannaus
by Carl Osgood
by Scott Thompson and Michele Steinberg
by Carl Osgood
In “Problems of U.S. Policy on Radiation Protection,” by Zbigniew Jaworowski and Michael Waligórski, EIR, May 16, p. 20, there was a misplaced decimal point in the report of cancer incidence in the Kiev region. The correct figure is 0.005%.
In “LaRouche’s Youth Movement: ‘A Second American Revolution,’” EIR, May 9, p. 49, the name of a speaker in the discussion period was misspelled. He is Andrei Kobyakov, the editor of the Russian economic monthly Russky Predprinimatel.