In The News

Jonathan Steele June 14, 2004
Amidst growing international and domestic criticism of human rights abuses in Iraq, the International Committee of the Red Cross is calling on the White House to clarify the status of deposed leader Saddam Hussein. Hussein and many Iraqis who served in his government have been held without being charged for any crime since their capture by the US. According to the Red Cross, international law...
Edward Gresser June 10, 2004
The abolition of textile quotas by the World Trade Organization (WTO) in January 2005 does not bode well for all developing countries, says Edward Gresser, Director of the PPI Project on Trade and Global Markets. Although the lifting of textile quotas will be a much-awaited victory for developing countries against rich economies like the US and Europe, its benefits will be highly uneven. Come...
Jess Bravin June 10, 2004
According to a memo reviewed by the Wall Street Journal, US Secretary of State Donald Rumsfeld agreed in December 2002 to allow for a variety of harsh interrogation methods at Guantanamo Bay. "Mild non-injurious physical contact," "stress positions", and forced nudity were among the techniques approved for interrogating prisoners held at the US military installation, this...
Sook-Jong Lee June 8, 2004
Although South Korea’s legislature just approved the deployment of 3000 troops to Iraq, South Koreans’ anger about US military actions has reached a boiling point, argues Sook-Jong Lee, a Visiting Fellow at the Brookings Institution. South Koreans have become increasingly critical of the US since the 1980s, with the presence of US forces in South Korea serving as a daily reminder of the country’s...
Minxin Pei June 3, 2004
Marking the anniversary of Beijing's crackdown on the Tiananmen Square protest movement 15 years ago, China scholar Minxin Pei writes that the Chinese Communist Party's hold on power is not sustainable. The regime has been fortunate, he says, to have achieved such unprecedented economic growth and prosperity since 1989. But the party's 'neo-authoritarian' development...
George Monbiot June 1, 2004
The American 'empire' may be in denial, but it certainly doesn't need to become more assertive, says author George Monbiot. In this article in the UK's Guardian, Monbiot takes on historian Niall Ferguson to argue why American imperialism is not a good thing. When Ferguson praises the achievements of the British empire and urges the US to follow in its footsteps, Monbiot says...