Showing results for: iran (page 321)
Letters
Salon Staff
Donna Minkowitz responds to letters about an American nun tortured in Guatemala, and readers respond to "Oriana Fallaci Declares War on Radical Islam."
Fearing the U.S. — but hating Saddam more
Michelle Goldberg
Many of the millions of Iraqi exiles welcome war and hope Saddam will be ousted. That doesn't mean they trust the United States.
Democrats: Wrong in Iraq
Joshua Micah Marshall
The opposition party not only failed to articulate a good case against war -- it ducked the hard question of what to do about a dangerous dictator.
The moral case for war
Michelle Goldberg
Bob Kerrey, ex-senator, Vietnam vet and Bush critic, tells Salon why liberals should support ousting Saddam.
The powder keg
Michelle Goldberg
The U.S. helped build the Islamic fundamentalist movement threatening to take over Pakistan. Now can it rescue the world from the deadly consequences?
Letters
Salon Staff
Readers respond to the Christopher Hitchens interview, "How the Left Became Irrelevant."
How the left became irrelevant
Edward W. Lempinen
Christopher Hitchens talks about his beef with the Nation, the "filthy menace" of Saddam Hussein, and how the left ceded its moral credibility by opposing the war against Islamic fascism.
Partying while Afghanistan burns
Phillip Robertson
While Westerners dance at end-of-the-world raves, the country slips back toward anarchy -- and the Bush administration does nothing.
Joe Conason’s Journal
Salon Staff
Bush's North Korea conundrum: So why the focus on Saddam? Plus: A post-chest thumping security plan.
“I’m not sure which planet they live on”
Eric Boehlert
Hawks in the Bush administration may be making deadly miscalculations on Iraq, says Gen. Anthony Zinni, Bush's Middle East envoy.
Sept. 11 and wars of the world
William M. Arkin
Osama and Saddam pose real threats, but the Bush administration may be too incompetent -- and too arrogant -- to stop them.
In their own words
Salon Staff
Why Sens. Hillary Clinton, Tom Daschle, Chuck Hagel, Dianne Feinstein and John Kerry voted for Bush's war resolution -- and why Robert Byrd voted against it.
Letters
Salon Staff
Readers respond to Gary Kamiya's essay on why a U.S. invasion of Iraq could be our riskiest military intervention since WWII.
“Regime change” — and then what?
Michelle Goldberg
Bush and his supporters speak earnestly about "democratizing Iraq." Many experts aren't nearly as optimistic.
Bush vs. the CIA
Robert Scheer
As the president plays up the threat Saddam Hussein poses to America, the CIA plays it down.
The imperialism canard
Andrew Sullivan
The far right and far left find agreement on the Iraq war. And couldn't be more wrong.
Hail Caesar!
Gary Kamiya
Yes, leaving Saddam in power is risky. But Bush's neo-imperalist war plans carry even more dangers for the U.S.
What should the world do about Saddam?
Bill Clinton
Bill Clinton electrifies a British Labor Party conference with a more sweeping vision for global peace and progress than the current president has been able to muster.
The truth about American foreign policy
Robert Scheer
Let's call the Bush Doctrine what it really is: Imperialism.
“Not with anger …”
Charles Taylor
An international director stands up for Abbas Kiarostami, the Iranian master denied a visa for the New York Film Festival.
A New York state of mind
Peter Catapano
Salman Rushdie talks about why he was banished by Bush I, the light and dark sides of Islam, and his new life in Manhattan.
Bush doctrine makes waves overseas
Anthony York
International reaction to new policy of preemptive strikes casts a suspicious eye on "imperialist" designs.
Bush to Arab world: Drop dead
Ian Williams
Driven by right-wing ideologues and his own zeal, President Bush has taken Ariel Sharon's side in the Middle East even while plotting a war with Iraq. Foreign policy experts say that's a dangerous combination.
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