World

The Press and Private Lynch The Press and Private Lynch

The Pentagon was selling a patriotic tale. It found many eager buyers.

Jun 19, 2003 / Feature / Daphne Eviatar

Probing 9/11 Probing 9/11

A bipartisan commission is at work, but how tough it will be is still unknown.

Jun 19, 2003 / Feature / David Corn

The Other Japanese Occupation The Other Japanese Occupation

When Tokyo took over Manchuria, its propagandists spoke of "liberation."

Jun 19, 2003 / Books & the Arts / John W. Dower

First Chronicles First Chronicles

With street fighting prevailing, Paul Bremer, the American administrator in Iraq, recently trotted out a new "two-sided approach," according to the New York Times.

Jun 19, 2003 / Column / Patricia J. Williams

The Ballad of Private Lynch The Ballad of Private Lynch

Preferring death to getting caught, She emptied weapons as she fought. Though shot and stabbed she didn't flinch. She battled on, did Private Lynch. Or did she?

Jun 19, 2003 / Column / Calvin Trillin

Help for Congo Help for Congo

News from the Ituri region of the misnamed Democratic Republic of Congo in recent weeks has been so grim as to make one want to turn the page or flip the TV channel in despair:...

Jun 19, 2003 / Editorial / Adam Hochschild

More Missing Intelligence More Missing Intelligence

As the Pentagon scours Iraq for weapons of mass destruction and Iraqi links to Al Qaeda, it's increasingly obvious that the Bush Administration either distorted or deliberately...

Jun 19, 2003 / Editorial / Bob Dreyfuss

The War Is Not Over The War Is Not Over

George W.

Jun 19, 2003 / Editorial / The Editors

Profits at Gunpoint Profits at Gunpoint

Unocal's pipeline in Burma becomes a test case in corporate responsibility.

Jun 12, 2003 / Feature / Daphne Eviatar

Letter From Kurdistan Letter From Kurdistan

Viewed close up, the "model" of democracy for all of Iraq is something less.

Jun 12, 2003 / Feature / Joshua Kucera

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