A Few Words on the Northern Alliance A Few Words on the Northern Alliance
Nov 8, 2001 / Column / Calvin Trillin
Hooked on Narcomyths Hooked on Narcomyths
Peter Schrag reviews Robert J. MacCoun and Peter Reuter's Drug War Heresies.
Nov 8, 2001 / Books & the Arts / Peter Schrag
Letter From Ground Zero: November 8, 2001 Letter From Ground Zero: November 8, 2001
The "war on terror" is causing an escalation of retaliatory thinking.
Nov 8, 2001 / Jonathan Schell
Dems Back in the Game Dems Back in the Game
The win in Virginia of Democrat Mark Warner is one sign of welcome political change.
Nov 8, 2001 / John Nichols
History Lessened History Lessened
Attorney General John Ashcroft misunderstands Robert Kennedy's legacy--and my book.
Nov 8, 2001 / Victor Navasky
Press Watch Press Watch
Opinion journalism is pushing the conversation about war to the right.
Nov 8, 2001 / Michael Massing
The Jewish Cossack The Jewish Cossack
John Leonard reviews The Complete Works of Isaac Babel, edited by Nathalie Babel.
Nov 8, 2001 / Books & the Arts / John Leonard
The Bend in Their Rivers The Bend in Their Rivers
Amitava Kumar reviews Salman Rushdie's Fury and V.S. Naipaul's Half a Life.
Nov 8, 2001 / Books & the Arts / Amitava Kumar
In Fact… In Fact…
STRANGE BOARDFELLOWS Eric Scigliano was intrigued by the announcement that United Airlines, caught up in post-September 11 woes, tapped John Creighton Jr. as its new CEO. Creighton, retired president of the timber giant Weyerhaeuser, has also sat on the board of the California-based oil multinational Unocal since 1995--the period in which Unocal became the main US corporate suitor seeking to do business with the Taliban, alleged protectors of Osama bin Laden, alleged mastermind of the terrorist plot that resulted in the September 11 crashes of two United planes. In 1995 Unocal conceived a pipeline from Turkmenistan through Afghanistan and Pakistan to the Arabian Sea and enlisted Saudi, Pakistani, Japanese, Korean and Indonesian partners. In December 1997 Unocal hosted Taliban delegates in Texas, and even took them to the beach. It also gave nearly $1 million to a job-training program in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar, out of up to $20 million it spent on the pipeline effort. After the Taliban took Kabul in 1996 and women's groups protested its increasingly intolerant policies, Unocal hung on. Finally, in the wake of Osama bin Laden's fatwa on the United States, of embassy bombings and US missile reprisals, it withdrew from the pipeline project (for more details: www.thenation.com). GOD'S SIDE The copious references to God in public life these days leave the Rev. Peter Laarman of the Judson Memorial Church in New York City unimpressed. He sent us what he calls "Among the Reasons God May Temporarily Be Unavailable to Bless America." Among them: (1) because God has had it up to here with the assumption that prayers for national exemption from pain and tragedy deserve an answer; (2) because God is too busy processing Americans' prayers for their high school football teams; (3) because God takes for granted that the bombs falling on Kabul are America's real prayers; (4) because such a tasteless and lurid efflorescence of red, white and blue (including flags wrapped around church steeples) gives God a massive headache. YOU READ IT HERE FIRST "Even more damning is the Saudi terrorist link. According to a New York Times story, US officials have concluded that 'much of the financial support for terrorists who attack Americans... comes from wealthy individuals from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf allies of the United States.' Moreover these same officials concede that the principal problem is not state-sponsored terrorism, which the United States continues to target, but the emergence of sophisticated privately financed networks of terrorists" (Sherle Schwenninger, The Nation, October 7, 1996). NEWS OF THE WEAK IN REVIEW Call him irresponsible. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on civilian casualties caused by US bombing: "Responsibility for every single casualty in this war, be they innocent Afghans or innocent Americans, rests at the feet of the Taliban and Al Qaeda."
Nov 8, 2001 / The Editors
Dressed Down Dressed Down
Gerald Howard reviews Paula Fox's Borrowed Finery.
Nov 8, 2001 / Books & the Arts / Gerald Howard