While the war in Chechnya was preoccupying delegates to the OSCE summit in Istanbul last week another potential crisis was developing in the Balkans. On 14th November the small republic of Macedonia elected a new president, Boris Trajkovsky. But supporters of the...
THE FORBES DISAPPOINTMENT
Not so many years ago I really wanted to like Steve Forbes and to tell the truth, I still can't help liking him personally; I find his clumsy, crooked grin endearing and I think he's one of the more substantive candidates American politics has coughed up in...
William Appleman Williams: Premier New Left Revisionist
A PROGRESSIVE HISTORIAN Last week in a discussion of Charles Austin Beard, "isolationist" Progressive historian, I mentioned Beard's influence on a number of younger scholars, among them William Appleman Williams and Murray N. Rothbard. Williams emerged in...
HONORING VETERANS HONORABLY
It is Veterans Day today, which brings up the question of how to honor veterans of America's various wars responsibly and honorably. I submit that the most sincere honor is paid by resolving not to allow our political leaders to get us involved in wars in which...
Charles Austin Beard: The Historian as American Nationalist
A PROGRESSIVE HISTORIAN Charles A. Beard (1874-1948) was a central figure in the American historical profession in the first half of this century. Born into a substantial Midwestern family in Indiana, he studied at Spiceland Academy, a Quaker institution. He spent...
IRAQ MILITARY BUILDUP
Last week Agence-France Presse, the French news agency, reported that U.S. and British air strikes killed two civilians and injured seven in an air strike on what an Iraqi spokesman said were civilian facilities in northern Iraq. The US military said the strikes had...
Southern Critics of Intervention: Part III
As noted in a previous column, Southerners have gotten a reputation for belligerence at home and abroad. To combat this unfortunate generalization, I continue my survey of Southerners who have been critics to some degree or another of interventionist...
Some Thoughts on the Killings in Armenia Who did it and Why?
The slaying of 8 prominent politicians in Armenia on 27th October including the prime minister, Vazgen Sarkisian, and speaker of the parliament, Karen Demirchian, took the Western media completely by surprise. Experts seemed to be thin on the ground CNN...
Sudan Second Thoughts
As Cato Institute foreign policy analyst Ted Carpenter told me, "It is pleasantly surprising to see evidence of some stirring of conscience, some desire to have something resembling the truth finally come out, on the part of people both in the State Department...
Southern Critics of Intervention: Part II
POST NO BELLUMS The Confederate States of America did not last long enough as a going concern to produce a tradition in foreign affairs. The main issue facing the Confederates was self-defense against Mr. Lincolns armies. This left little time for debates about...


