All Aboard the McCain Express
Rick Perlstein : The conservative noise machine is coming around to support him--if it can keep its stories straight.
Patrick Cockburn on Muqtada al-Sadr, Nir Rosen on the surge, Calvin Trillin on the Democrats.
Rick Perlstein : The conservative noise machine is coming around to support him--if it can keep its stories straight.
Aram Roston : Lobbyist Charles Black, now embroiled in controversy as a senior advisor to John McCain, was among those who aided Ahmed Chalabi's deceptive campaign for war in Iraq.
Nir Rosen
:
The US occupation has torn Iraq into fragments, and sectarian militias
are on the rise.
Readers weigh in on our endorsement of Obama, our coverage of terrorism and our grammar.
Patrick Cockburn
:
To the humiliation of the US and Iraqi governments, the cleric's forces
have faced down the Iraqi Army and are in control of Basra and half of
Baghdad.
: New revelations of political interference in the prosecution of Gitmo prisoners shows Team Bush scrambling to keep one step ahead of history--and of criminal charges.
John Nichols : As Clinton rewrites the history of her support for NAFTA, Obama needs to prove he understands what's wrong with global trade pacts.
:
Henry Paulson's pitiful reform; Michelle Bachelet, bedeviled by Opus
Dei; Pentagon follies; and indecency in Indiana.
Alice Kaplan : Five books explore the sorrows and moral complexity of Irène Némirovsky and others who suffered Nazi persecution in France.
Matt Steinglass : Revisionist histories of the Vietnam War challenge the notion that the South Vietnam government was a dysfunctional pseudo-state.
Calvin Trillin
:
The race is theirs to lose.
Patricia J. Williams : To view education as a profit-making business is to attack the lifelong love of learning.
Katha Pollitt : In Nicholson Baker's cut-and-paste history, the "good war" is bad.
R.H. Lossin : Five years ago this week, US troops stood by as mobs sacked Iraq's revered National Library and Archives. Despite little outside help, a cultural treasure soldiers on.
Robert Scheer : By urging lawmakers to stay the course in Iraq, General David Petraeus remained loyal to his President, but failed the American people.
Mary Beth Norton : Two new books examine the history of the first women's rights campaign.
Bill Moyers : Journalism can still make a difference, but the truth matters more. And if you can't get to the truth through journalism, there are other ways to get there.
Aziz Huq : The new film by Dutch politician Geert Wilders is the latest in a series of stunts aimed at humiliating and scapegoating Muslims.
Barbara Ehrenreich : Hard hit by rising costs and the threat of losing their rigs, truckers are staging protests, calling for a bailout and lower fuel prices. What if the rest of us joined them?
Gary Phillips : This week's episode: Dieter Countryman reminisces about the good ol' days of selling the first Gulf War; Connie Waller gets his freak on in Vegas.
Jeremy Scahill : An Iraqi translator is prosecuted and Blackwater has its contract renewed for another year, armed and dangerous in Baghdad.
Karen Houppert : In the wake of Jamie Leigh Jones's highly publicized charges, a woman comes forward with new allegations of a brutal sexual assault and cover-up at a KBR camp in Iraq.
Cover illustration by Victor Juhasz; cover design by Gene Case & Stephen Kling/Avenging Angels