If the New York Times wants true diversity on its Op-Ed pages, it should hire foreign policy realists, not ideologues.
By Stephen M. Walt Jan 16, 2008
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His personal journals unveil the glory and corruption of postwar presidents with emotional truth and power. Alas, the age of the great historian is over.
By Sidney Blumenthal
October 18, 2007
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Read letters sent to a judge on behalf of Scooter Libby by some of his most prominent defenders, including Donald Rumsfeld, John Bolton and Henry Kissinger.
June 5, 2007
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The building tycoon and reality TV star is not a pop-culture hero. He's a bully with a combover.
By Joan Walsh
December 22, 2006
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A former associate of Allende's remembers Pinochet -- and wonders what's in store for the North American enablers who are now under international scrutiny.
By Marc Cooper
December 11, 2006
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As Iraqis and U.S. soldiers continue to die, Bush says he's waiting to hear more before making any decisions.
By Tim Grieve
November 20, 2006
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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.
By Sidney Blumenthal
November 24, 2005
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He was a fine journalist and a decent man but to stay atop journalism's establishment, even he had to make a deal with the devil.
By Fred Branfman
November 23, 2005
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Heroic statesman or war criminal? America's most legendary living foreign-policy wonk takes another stab at molding his legacy.
By Stanley I. Kutler
September 30, 2003
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Family members of victims of the terror attacks say the White House has smothered every attempt to get to the bottom of the outrageous intelligence failures that took place on its watch.
By Eric Boehlert
June 18, 2003
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While "No blood for oil!" echoes in the streets, analysts say oil companies actually dread war in Iraq.
By Dan Baum
February 25, 2003
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Last week was enough to make you believe that the voice of the people can make a difference.
By Arianna Huffington
December 20, 2002
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The administration that came to power talking about humility has become gallingly arrogant and drunk with power.
By Arianna Huffington
December 12, 2002
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By naming Iran-contra rogue Elliott Abrams its top policy advisor on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the White House is signaling a hard
pro-Sharon line that could prove disastrous.
By Gary Kamiya
December 10, 2002
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My astonishing interview with the man who knows where the bodies are buried.
By Stephen Talbot
December 5, 2002
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The media elite are reviewing Henry Kissinger's latest tome with their usual fawning gullibility. Best not to mention those bony hands reaching out from the grave.
By Todd Gitlin
July 3, 2001
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The sex goddess chats about her loves, kissing Tony Curtis and her friendship with Henry Kissinger and the Kennedys.
By David Thomson
June 1, 2001
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If Henry Kissinger isn't guilty of war crimes, no one is. A Vietnam War whistleblower on Christopher Hitchens' case against the former secretary of state.
By Fred Branfman
May 18, 2001
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A leading military scholar talks about what caused the world wars, why Kissinger was a true peacemaker and whether peace is incompatible with human nature.
By Suzy Hansen
April 12, 2001
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Dick Cheney is relying on our cultural amnesia to wipe away his record on South Africa.
By Joe Conason
August 1, 2000
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Give me a ralphing Pilgrim, a dolphin porn movie and sex-shy turtles over some reheated Broadway operetta any day.
By Cintra Wilson
March 2, 2000
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The man who broke the story of Vietnam's My Lai massacre is still the hardest-working muckraker in the journalism business.
By David Rubien
January 18, 2000
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After 33 years of throwing punches, William F. Buckley Jr. hangs it up.
By Amy Reiter
December 16, 1999
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Talkin' trash about Talk; Chris Rock & Tyson cry the blues in the bosom of fame; did Bernstein's son cough up Deep Throat's identity? Plus: Gotti on Clinton.
By Amy Reiter
August 4, 1999
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As another Woodward bombshell hits Washington, the daggers come out for one of America's most famous journalists.
By Jake Tapper
June 18, 1999