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Showing results for: iran (page 266)

McCain: Threatening to bomb sovereign countries is “naive”

Glenn Greenwald
The 9/11 attacks justify threats of military action against anyone in the world except for the 9/11 attackers themselves.

A new face for American diplomacy

Hooman Majd
Barack Obama is perceived by Muslims abroad like no other candidate. He would begin a presidency with tremendous potential to heal U.S. relations with much of the world.

Pakistan turns scary for Bush’s war on terror

Juan Cole
The unraveling of Pervez Musharraf's presidency has dealt a severe blow to Bush's fatally flawed policy in the region.

Getting through these dark times

Leigh Flayton
Foreign policy whiz Samantha Power sheds light on a legendary diplomat killed in Iraq, advising Barack Obama and how America can emerge from the Bush era.

Zanan silenced; outcry getting louder

Lynn Harris
Iran's women's magazine: We have not read the last page.

Quote of the day

Alex Koppelman
John Bolton supports John McCain, and you'll never guess why.

Conceding John McCain’s “toughness” on national security

Glenn Greenwald
Will Democrats follow their failed strategy of the last eight years of trying to remove national security as an issue by copying Republicans?

Obama talks hope, but not before attacking Clinton

Alex Koppelman
Speaking after Super Tuesday, Barack Obama hit his usual message about the politics of hope, but he also went hard after his opponent for the presidential nomination.

On Fox News, your morning dose of apocalypse

Alex Koppelman
The U.S. intelligence community says Iran has halted work on nuclear weapons, but on Fox, the country is still a threat to civilization itself.

Global news roundup

Lynn Harris
Feminists silenced in Iran, making noise in Mexico.

What “bipartisanship” in Washington means

Glenn Greenwald
"Bipartisanship" pleas are heavy on trite slogans and bereft of substance, except they usually entail even more Democratic capitulation to the Republican agenda.

The dismal state of George W. Bush

Walter Shapiro
In his last annual speech to Congress, the president used Osama bin Laden to justify Iraq, bravely denounced pork-barrel spending and waxed amnesiac about Iran.

Indie box office: “Juno” slammo!

Andrew O'Hehir
The season's unstoppable hit surges past $100 million. Great God, what does it mean? Also: "There Will Be Blood" booming, "4 Months" takes Manhattan.

Dead party walking

Gary Kamiya
The GOP candidates are a feeble group of Bush imitators tied to his disastrous war. And unless the surge turns into a miracle, even front-runner McCain won't beat a Democrat.

Michael Gordon “reports” on the “only serious” Iraq option: Staying forever

Glenn Greenwald
The pro-war NYT reporter lambastes the presidential candidates for failing to commit to a long-term occupation of Iraq.

“It almost seems like everything sort of leads back to Iran”

Tim Grieve
When a reporter has an agenda.

The 2008 presidential mash-up

Walter Shapiro
Is Clinton the best to beat Huckabee? Or Obama to rout Romney? How this year's race makes a mockery of voting for the most "electable" candidate.

Ask al-Qaida

Yassin Musharbash
A jihadi advice column? Osama bin Laden's second-in-command answers questions from fans of the terror group worldwide.

Roundup: Jailing Iranian feminists and more

Tracy Clark-Flory
Including: Teaching Afghan girls to sing.

The coddled “terrorists” of South Florida

Tristram Korten, Kirk Nielsen
Anti-Castro Cuban exiles who have been linked to bombings and assassinations are living free in Miami. Does the U.S. government have a double standard when it comes to terror?

Mike Huckabee gets serious in a big way

Walter Shapiro
The former Arkansas governor has finally found the idea maven -- Jim Pinkerton -- to add heft to his just-folks shtick.

The grave Iranian threat to world peace

Glenn Greenwald
One nation constantly threatens the world with war and violence.

The ghost of primaries past

Mike Madden
A Myrtle Beach debate shows Ronald Reagan is still the patron saint of South Carolina Republican politics.

The U.S. military inflicts more damage on its own credibility

Glenn Greenwald
Factually dubious claims about the Strait of Hormuz incident are part of a larger, highly destructive pattern.
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