World

War Comes Home to Iowa War Comes Home to Iowa

The absence of a definitive antiwar candidate has divided the state's peace activists.

Nov 29, 2007 / Feature / Ari Berman

Citi’s Mexican Cronies Citi’s Mexican Cronies

As megabanks seek a subprime bailout, take a lesson from Mexico. Taxpayers of the world, hold on to your wallets.

Nov 29, 2007 / Editorial / Jeff Faux

Spectacle at Annapolis Spectacle at Annapolis

A lame-duck President's halfhearted diplomacy yields much hypocrisy and few results. But at least the leaders will keep talking.

Nov 29, 2007 / Editorial / Roane Carey

Battle of the Surge Battle of the Surge

Don't believe the GOP triumphalists: the decline in violence in Iraq does not mean the surge is working.

Nov 29, 2007 / Editorial / The Editors

Pakistan’s Bomb: Have It Your Way Pakistan’s Bomb: Have It Your Way

Thanks to globalization, the 'Islamic bomb' turns out to be a little bit American, Canadian, Swiss, German, Dutch, British, Japanese and even Russian.

Nov 28, 2007 / Feature / Douglas Frantz and Catherine Collins

A Good Week for the Saudis A Good Week for the Saudis

Their boy Nawaz Sharif's back in Pakistan, oil prices are soaring and the Bushies continue to do their bidding.

Nov 28, 2007 / Column / Robert Scheer

Mexico Floods, America Shrugs Mexico Floods, America Shrugs

Massive floods cause widespread devastation; while other nations rush in with aid, Mexico's closest neighbor has barely responded.

Nov 28, 2007 / Feature / Florencia Soto Nino-Martinez

Kevin Rudd, Agent of Change? Kevin Rudd, Agent of Change?

He's greener and less hawkish than his predecessor, but is Australia's next prime minister really all that different?

Nov 27, 2007 / Feature / Antony Loewenstein

The Soldier and the Student The Soldier and the Student

Today's military members face red tape, false advertising and multiple deployments. What happened to the promises of the original GI Bill?

Nov 27, 2007 / Feature / Aaron Glantz

The Nijinsky of Ambivalence The Nijinsky of Ambivalence

During a Vietnam War protest, Norman Mailer blustered and banged a generation's experience through his prodigious ego.

Nov 21, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Morris Dickstein

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