World

‘Sorry’ Seems to Be the Hardest Word ‘Sorry’ Seems to Be the Hardest Word

Read Slate's symposium of "liberal hawks" reassessing their support for the Iraq war.

Jan 29, 2004 / Column / Eric Alterman

India Hosts the World India Hosts the World

To the beat of drums by India's Dalits (former Untouchables) and Adivasis (forest-dwelling tribes) celebrating indigenous popular movements that refuse to be subdued, the W...

Jan 29, 2004 / Praful Bidwai

Kerry’s Army Kerry’s Army

Click here for info on Bruce Shapiro's Shaking the Foundations: 200 Years of Investigative Journalism in America, recently released by Nation Books.

Jan 29, 2004 / Bruce Shapiro

Accountability on WMDs Accountability on WMDs

As an MSNBC analyst before the war, former United Nations weapons inspector David Kay often seemed more like a cheerleader for the Bush Administration's Iraq policy than he d...

Jan 29, 2004 / The Editors

Europa, Europa Europa, Europa

Considered as a subset of the road movie, the post-Holocaust, return-to-Poland documentary has been a dismayingly static genre. Most of these films are journeys in only the physi...

Jan 28, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

The Spying Game The Spying Game

The recent flap in Paris regarding five C.I.A. operatives who allegedly tried to bribe their way into the very center of government policy-making should not be interpreted as a G...

Jan 28, 2004 / Daniel Singer

Orange Alert Citizen Debriefing Form Orange Alert Citizen Debriefing Form

Jan 22, 2004 / Feature / Bruce McCall

Memo From Mars Memo From Mars

Dear Beeblebrox,

Jan 22, 2004 / Column / Patricia J. Williams

The Fog of Cop-Out The Fog of Cop-Out

My dear friend and late Nation colleague Andrew Kopkind liked to tell how, skiing in Aspen at the height of the Vietnam War, he came round a bend and saw another skier, Defense S...

Jan 22, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Alexander Cockburn

Paul O’Neill, Truth-Teller Paul O’Neill, Truth-Teller

For those with a taste for learning the inner truth about White House politics, reading Paul O'Neill's story is like eating a bowl of peanuts--difficult to stop.

Jan 22, 2004 / Books & the Arts / William Greider

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