Politica Energetica en America Latina: Presente Y Futuro
Crticas Y Propuestas de los Pueblos
The Truth About Veteran Suicides
As more vets commit suicide than die in combat, the Department of Veterans Affairs faces a class action lawsuit for allegedly systematically denying mental health care and disability benefits.
China: Superpower or Basket Case?
A military threat to the United States? An economic powerhouse? More likely a Potemkin Village.
The Iraq Supplemental: A Three Ring Circus
A complicated picture has emerged for the latest Iraq spending bill.
Strategic Dialogue on Cuba
In this second part of the exchange, Saul Landau and Samuel Farber debate the future of Cuba.
The "Surge" of Iraqi Prisoners
Amid all the talk about the U.S. military “surge” in Iraq, little has been said about the accompanying “surge” of Iraqi prisoners, whose numbers rose to nearly 51,000 at the end of 2007.
Life After Fidel
The new Cuban leadership is contemplating neoliberal economic reforms but democracy is still off the table.
Cuba: The Struggle Continues
Cubans are trying to preserve the gains of the revolution in the face of U.S. hostility.
Lessons From Iraq: Avoiding the Next War
The first step to avoid repeating the current war is to learn its lessons.
Books Not Bombs
The National Library in Sarejevo still stands in ruins, 16 years after Serbian military forces shelled the building and destroyed over 90% of its priceless contents.
Global Power Shift
In a shifting political landscape, columnist Michael Klare points out, mammoth energy reserves are increasingly more important than huge military arsenals.
Lessons From Iraq: Avoiding the Next War
The Iraq War disaster could actually have an upside of sorts. It should put quite a few policies and practices permanently off-limits. Here’s a list, to argue about.
Postcard from…Sarajevo
A new monument in Sarajevo playfully bites the hand that fed the city during the Bosnian war.
Mission Accomplished, Five Years Later
Five years after President George W. Bush declared “Mission Accomplished,” little has changed.
Zimbabwe: More than Complicity of Silence
Questions regarding international efforts to bring about regime change.
The Erased
Just recently, the stories of the Erased are starting to appear all over the Slovene capital of Ljubljana, from bus shelters to huge canvasses on the facade of a downtown building under reconstruction.
Penn State’s Frightening Defense
It’s time to question the university’s defense tactics, and not just on the football field.
Postcard from…Ljubljana
After 16 years, Slovenes may finally be coming to terms with the “erased.”
Postcard from…Ljubljana
After 16 years, Slovenes may finally be coming to terms with the “erased.”
Base-less Strategy
Ironically, the question of whether U.S. bases being built in Iraq should be, or clearly already are, permanent, is more of a U.S. domestic controversy than an issue between the United States and Iraq.
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