NYTX interviews Iraqi-American political analyst Raed Jarrar: Millions of Iraqis are celebrating the U.S. withdrawal this month, in what is widely viewed as a condemnation of the U.S. military involvement in Iraq. This is especially true with the final attempt by the U.S. government to maintain troops under NATO being rejected by the Iraqis. While President Obama, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, and other U.S. officials are trying their best to make the U.S. involvement in Iraq sound like a success, the vast majority of Iraqis see the 20 years of war with the U.S. as a major disaster that has destroyed their country.
By Danny Schechter: Launched with so much bluster and zeal as a campaign - no, make that a crusade to save the world from invented WMDs - the Iraq War, we are told, is winding down. US soldiers are being shown the door amid claims that the only winner is Iraq itself. In a formal photo printed in the New York Times, President Obama, with hand over heart, poses with Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki at the Arlington National Ceremony and boasts of a "successful outcome''.
By Dean Baker: Standard economic models show that tariffs cost jobs. The reason is that they make consumers pay more money for the protected product. This ...
By Michael McGehee: In a recent article by Marlise Simons, “Gambian Will Lead Prosecution in Hague,” and published by the New York Times (NYT) is the ...