More Bush Doctrine Fallout

You remember the Cox Committee, don’t you? It was a bipartisan commission established by Congress in 1998 to look into how a billion or so rice-farmers – aka, the People’s Republic of China – had managed to develop intercontinental ballistic missiles as well as small thermonuclear warheads, spy satellites and communication satellites to fit atop … Continue reading “More Bush Doctrine Fallout”

Bush Team Tries to Brazen It Out

WASHINGTON – “The reason I keep insisting that there was a relationship between Iraq and Saddam and al-Qaeda,” U.S. President George W. Bush told reporters Thursday, is “because there was a relationship between Iraq and al-Qaeda.” This is what logicians call a tautology, or a “useless repetition,” as the dictionary defines it, but it is … Continue reading “Bush Team Tries to Brazen It Out”

Saddam’s Enablers May Also Go on Trial

ARBIL – A year after the fall of Saddam Hussein, the mountains and plains of northern Iraq are still covered in landmines planted by the former Iraqi dictator’s regime during the 1980s. That is when he fought a decade-long war with Iran and many battles with Kurdish guerrillas. The Red Cross has made thousands of … Continue reading “Saddam’s Enablers May Also Go on Trial”

The Neoconservative Moment

So it turns out that there weren’t any links between Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein, after all, but, hey, guess what? The story has been revised and updated. Forget Iraq, we really meant to link Al Qaeda to – Iran! Yeah! That’s it! And the beat goes on…. I wonder how many months from … Continue reading “The Neoconservative Moment”

A Brawl in the Persian Gulf

DUBAI – A series of escalating spats in the Gulf waters between Iran, on one hand, and the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Oman, on the other, has cast a large shadow over relations between these countries. Officials from the three Gulf countries and many foreign diplomats are also perplexed over the recent hostile actions … Continue reading “A Brawl in the Persian Gulf”

Japan Abandoning Postwar Constitution

TOKYO – The commitment made by Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to the international community that the country’s Self Defense Forces (SDF) would join a planned multinational force in Iraq, has far-reaching implications globally. According to analysts, Japan can now be expected to play a more active role in foreign policy. “Japan has preferred to … Continue reading “Japan Abandoning Postwar Constitution”