Why Did Feith Resign?

The headline of this New York Sun article by Eli Lake on the progress of the case [.pdf] against Lawrence A. Franklin, a Pentagon analyst accused of handing over sensitive information to Israel, has got to take the cake for sheer gall: "Pentagon Analyst In Israel Spy...

read more

The Pipeline From Hell

George W. Bush's arrival at the Moscow commemoration of V-E Day was preceded and followed by open provocations. The stopover in Riga, Latvia's capital, was a stinging reminder to the Russians that this former Soviet satellite state, conquered by Stalin as a result of...

read more

The Franklin Affair:
A Spreading Treason

The vagaries of U.S. involvement in the Middle East were surely brought home to First Lady Laura Bush on her recent trip to Israel, on a tour of Jerusalem's holiest sites. At the Wailing Wall, where she placed a note in the Western Wall – as is the custom...

read more

Our Uzbek Problem, and Theirs

A week after Uzbekistan's dictator Islam Karimov crushed a protest in the eastern town of Andijan – ordering riot police to fire directly into a crowd, killing as many as 1,000 – the death toll is rising and the reaction is growing. Inside the country,...

read more

Uzbekistan: The Revolution Betrayed

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't believe the United States government would react with anything but unmitigated outrage if 500 to 750 demonstrators in, say, Russia, had been mowed down in cold blood by government troops. Yet here we have in Uzbekistan the biggest...

read more

Karimov’s American Fan Club

Divert, deny, defame – that's the strategy of the War Party as the consequences of their policies reap piles of dead bodies worldwide and increase the threat of terrorism against Americans. It doesn't matter that the now-famous Newsweek story about U.S....

read more

Uzbekistan’s Nightmare:
Made in Washington

Why is Washington standing by Uzbekistan's dictator Islam Karimov, even as he massacres his own people – 500 of them so far? "They shot at us like rabbits," says one Uzbek who escaped the carnage in Andijan, where Uzbek troops fired directly into a crowd of...

read more

Iraq Falls Apart

There was panic in the streets of Washington, the Capitol emptied, and Congress scattered in fear – all because a small plane had entered the airspace over the Imperial City. "Run, run, run!" It was, of course, nothing to laugh or gloat about. All of us remember...

read more

America’s Global Fifth Column

Four nations in five days – not a lot of time for the president of the United States to meet and greet all those diplomats and dignitaries lining up for a handshake. Just enough time, perhaps, to incite the Latvians in Riga, stir up trouble in the Caucasus, and,...

read more

Commemorating a World War

That the commemoration of the end of World War II is being used to announce the commencement of World War IV is just another one of those little ironies that the Bush administration seems to delight in. The president's five-day four-nation journey, which takes him to...

read more