Cold War

AP photos The un-American way of life

A controversial new history of Communism suggests that most everything we think we know about it is wrong
  • Farewell to the American Century

    Americans have perpetuated a mythic version of the past that never even approximated reality and today has become downright malignant.
  • SaladShooters and real bullets

    Many makers of familiar products used to make weapons for the U.S. military. In tough times, the practice could be making a comeback.
  • McCain has his own unsavory links

    In the 1980s, the Republican presidential nominee sat on the board of a group that was involved in Iran-Contra and had ties to neo-Nazis.
  • Joe Lieberman, ideological turncoat

    The senator's indictment of the Democratic Party is just as dishonest as his failure to discuss his own evolution as an ally of McCain's.
  • Obama/Kennedy vs. McCain/Goldwater

    This year's presidential contest is shaping up as the 1964 campaign that never happened
  • Why Ronald Reagan didn't completely suck

    In "The Age of Reagan," liberal historian Sean Wilentz reckons with the enormous, ongoing influence of the teflon president.
  • Alan Greenspan on the mortgage crisis: "I didn't do it!"

    The end of the Cold War is the real villain, declares the Maestro. Now the U.S. no longer controls its own financial destiny
  • The fate of the Earth, the Bush years

    Jonathan Schell: "Everybody who has ever marched against nuclear weapons should dust off their boots and get back in the fray."
  • America is not Bush

    The damage the president has done to our country's reputation can be rebuilt -- by those who uphold our Founding Fathers' ideals.
  • Boisterous Boris

    Bill Clinton, Billy Graham, Helen Thomas and others recall Russian President Yeltsin's confidence, rough charm and liberal ways with drink.
  • I was a Commie rock star from Colorado

    A fascinating biography of Dean Reed, the "Johnny Cash of Communism," tells a particularly strange tale of East meeting West.
  • Addicted to war

    "House of War" author James Carroll says the Pentagon is out of control, the Cold War was unnecessary -- and it's good that we're failing in Iraq.
  • Iraq: The big lie

    Bush and Rumsfeld robotically repeat their Iraq talking points, ignoring the fact that their ambassador and generals are contradicting them.
  • Did Reagan win the Cold War?

    John Lewis Gaddis' history succinctly captures the long faceoff that shaped our world. But his analysis is marred by Reagan worship.
  • The mafia, the coup and the murder

    The authors respond to David Talbot's review of "Ultimate Sacrifice."
  • The long march of Dick Cheney

    For his entire career, he sought untrammeled power. The Bush presidency and 9/11 finally gave it to him -- and he's not about to give it up.
  • Imagining a world without nuclear weapons

    Historian Richard Rhodes talks about the atomic bombing of Japan 60 years ago, today's global arms race -- and the only way to stop a nuclear attack by terrorists.
  • Auf Wiedersehen, Uncle Sam?

    Washington and Berlin are going through a painful breakup -- and this time, it may be permanent.
  • Generation Bomb

    Once again, a clutch of new books on the atomic bomb get the history and intrigue right. But where's the guilt, dread and helplessness of living under the cloud of nuclear annihilation?
  • How they learned to love the bomb

    Bush is talking tough about nukes in Iran and North Korea. But critics say by illegally testing and building nuclear weapons, the U.S. is fueling a new arms race.
  • Mr. Magoo goes to the World Bank

    The problem with Paul Wolfowitz isn't that he's an evil genius. It's that he has been consistently, astonishingly, unswervingly wrong about foreign policy for 30 years.
  • Welcome to the new cold war

    It's Chirac vs. Cheney, SUVs vs. minicars, and pommes frites vs. freedom fries in the new transatlantic culture war. But here's what you don't know: In the global conflict for moral and economic supremacy, Europe is winning.
  • Dissecting Cheney

    The vice president's fantasy of world domination via control of oil stems from his formative years in the shadow Cold War.
  • Not just a socialite, but a gritty survivor

    Susan Mary Alsop, who died last month, faced a personal crisis when the KGB tried to smear her influential columnist husband, Joseph. A friend recalls her courage in the face of that ordeal.
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