Articles

A New Day in Madrid A New Day in Madrid

Spaniards were bewildered by the American view of their vote to kick out the ruling conservative party as a sign of weakness.

Mar 21, 2004 / Feature / Samuel Loewenberg

Letter From London Letter From London

In Labour Britain there's a deep sense of pessimism and betrayal.

Mar 21, 2004 / Feature / Maria Margaronis

One Year Later–Not Feeling Safer One Year Later–Not Feeling Safer

Local media is reporting that hundreds of thousands of antiwar protesters poured into streets around the globe on Saturday's one-year anniversary of the invasion of Iraq to deman...

Mar 20, 2004 / Peter Rothberg

Letter From Moscow Letter From Moscow

Uncle Sam hovered over the small crowd of 200 protesters gathered in Moscow today to mark the first anniversary of the US invasion of Iraq. The papier mache puppet--with dollar s...

Mar 20, 2004 / Katrina vanden Heuvel

Opposing Occupation Opposing Occupation

"I am Jewish. I am Israeli. I am a citizen of this state, and I am very upset."

Mar 20, 2004 / Feature / Ellen Cantarow

Avoiding Dean’s Mistakes Avoiding Dean’s Mistakes

Barack Obama's victory in the hard-fought Democratic primary for an open US Senate seat from Illinois has instantaneously made him a political star. CNN analysts were calling the ...

Mar 19, 2004 / John Nichols

Self-Determining Haiti Self-Determining Haiti

This essay, from the August 28, 1920, issue of The Nation, is a special selection from The Nation Digital Archive. If you want to read everything The Nation has ever published on H...

Mar 18, 2004 / Feature / James Weldon Johnson

One Year Later One Year Later

On the heels of yesterday's car-bomb attack against a central Baghdad hotel, Iraqi insurgents launched more deadly attacks today in advance of the first anniversary of the US inv...

Mar 18, 2004 / Peter Rothberg

Remembering Rachel Corrie Remembering Rachel Corrie

Why has Corrie's killing gone unchallenged by the United States?

Mar 18, 2004 / Feature / Adam Shapiro

The New Critic The New Critic

The American foreign affairs establishment seems finally to have gotten worried about the antics of the Boy Emperor.

Mar 18, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Chalmers Johnson

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