Thursday,
September 16th, 2004
Wednesday,
September 15th, 2004
Wednesday,
September 8th, 2004
Wednesday,
September 1st, 2004
Wednesday,
February 11th, 2004
Monday,
January 5th, 2004
Wednesday,
December 31st, 2003
Scott
Ritter: How the British Spy Agency MI6 Secretly Misled A Nation Into War With Iraq
Leading Iraqi Feminist Yanar Mohammed On the Role Of Women in Occupied Iraq
Wednesday,
December 24th, 2003
Wednesday,
December 17th, 2003
Wednesday,
December 10th, 2003
Activist
Kathy Kelly 'Hogtied" & Abused By Army At SOA Protests
Journalist Bill Moyers: "Our Democracy Is In Danger of Being Paralyzed"
Wednesday,
November 26th, 2003
The
Radical Mind of Dick Cheney: An In-Depth Look at the Vice President
Wednesday,
November 19th, 2003
War
Resistance: A Growing Number of Soldiers Speak Out Against War
Report:
U.S. Casualties From Iraq War Top 9,000
London
in a State of “Virtual Siege” Ahead of Bush State Visit to UK
Tell
Us The Truth: Billy Bragg and Hip-Hop Artist Boots Riley On Music, War and the Media
Why
is President Bush Maintaining a Ban On Seeing War’s Returning Casualties?
As
Occupation Worsens, White House Tries to Blame CIA For Rejecting Iraqi Offer on Eve of War
Live
From Baghdad An Ordinary Iraqi Speaks Out: “The U.S. Has No Intention of Leaving Iraq”
16
U.S. Soldiers Killed in Missile Attack in Iraq
Pacifica
Correspondent Jerry Quickley on Iraqi Resistance and Life Under Occupation in Baghdad
Friday,
October 31st, 2003
The
Lies of George W. Bush: Mastering the Politics of Deception
Generous
New Tax Break For Bechtel and Halliburton?
Iraqis
Denied Worker Rights Under U.S. Occupation
The
War Business: Squeezing a Profit from the Wreckage in Iraq
“This
is a Resistance Movement, Whether We Like It or Not” – Robert Fisk on Iraq
Up
to 40 Killed, 200 Injured in Series of Baghdad Bombings
Instant-Mix
Imperial Democracy, Buy One Get One Free – An Hour With Arundhati Roy
Noam
Chomsky on Hegemony or Survival: America’s Quest For Global Dominance
Sen.
Kennedy Says He Will Oppose Iraq Funding
Democracy
Now! Exclusive: Retired Air Force Col. On How Bush Admin. Used Psy-Ops, Propaganda and Information Warfare In
Build-Up to Iraq Invasion
France,
Russia, Germany Drop Demands For Greater UN Role in Iraq
The
Iraqi Gold Rush: "The Privatization of U.S. Foreign Policy"
Bush
in Babylon: The Recolonization of Iraq
Clark
Under Fire In Democratic Presidential Debate
Congressman
Demands Rove’s Resignation Over Outting Of CIA Operative
8
Die in Iraq Suicide Bombing; Tensions Grow Between U.S. & Iraqi Governing Council
Peace
Group Infiltrated By Government Agent
Study
Finds Fox News Viewers Most Likely To Have Misperceptions About Iraq Invasion
Former
CIA Agent Lashes Out at White House For Blowing Colleague’s Cover
"Intimigate"
Scandal at the White House
Own
a Piece of Iraq: How U.S. Gvt. Officials Are Leaving Public Office To Cash In On Iraq
Thursday,
September 25th, 2003
Thursday,
September 18th, 2003
Wednesday,
September 17th, 2003
Thursday,
September 11th, 2003
Wednesday,
September 10th, 2003
As
Attacks on US Soldiers Continue in Iraq We Talk to Robert Fisk who Just Returned from Fallujah
Former
Congressmember Cynthia McKinney Speaks about the War Abroad and the War at Home
US
Occupation Forces Draw up New Rules for Press Censorship of Iraqi Media
Howard
Zinn and Arundhati Roy: A Conversation Between Two Leading Social Critics
“Having
invaded Iraq, Bush and his Hawks are Now Getting Ready to go for Regime Change in Tehran”
Financial
Times:
The Bush Administration Planned to Invade Iraq as Early as December
You
Back the Attack, We’ll Bomb Who We Want!
- A Collection of Remixed War Posters
Radiation
is 1,000 Times the Normal Levels Where US Troops Used Depleted Uranium Shells in Baghdad
Michael
Franti: On Government Surveillance and the Role of Artists in a Time of War
Gore
Vidal on the "United States of Amnesia," 9/11, the 2000 Election and the War in Iraq
Britain’s
Longest Serving MP Tam Dalyell Criticized for Calling Bush Administration a "Cabal"
U.S.
Sends Chief Weapons Search Team Home From Iraq Empty-handed
HOUR
1: "At least when Saddam was here there may not have been freedom but there was security:"
Democracy Now! producer Sharif Abdel Kouddous reports from streets of Baghdad.
"As
President Bush names a new ruler of Iraq, humanitarian groups say the US is more concerned with building an
administration than with the health and well-being of the people:
Doctors without Borders says the US is breaking international law.
Iraqi
civilians sue General Tommy Franks for war crimes:
We'll hear from their lawyer in Belgium.
U.S.
hires Christian fundamentalists to produce news for Iraqis:
The studio runs a news service "dedicated to transmitting the evidence of God's presence in the world
today."
Brutal
Crackdown On Iraqi Protesters By US Occupation Forces Is Continuing:
U.S. Troops Kill Three More Iraqis In Fallujah Bringing The Total Of The Week To 18. We Go To Fallujah To
Speak With An AFP Reporter
Jonathan
Schell, A Leading Advocate For The Abolition Of Nuclear Weapons,
Discusses How U.S. Foreign Policy Is Leading To Global Insecurity
A
Preventive Or Preemptive Attack?
Stanford Professor David Palumbo-Liu Discusses U.S. Military Policy
US
Soldiers Strip Naked Four Suspected Looters
And Parade Them Through The Streets: The Norwegian Reporter Who Broke The Story Joins Us From Baghdad
Who
Really Saved Private Jessica Lynch?
The Capture Of The American POW Might Be One Of The Most Heralded Stories Of The Iraqi Invasion But A
British Reporter Claims The U.S. Media Got The Story All Wrong
An
Exclusive Look At A U.S. Bombing In Iraq That Killed Three Family Members In Iraq:
Journalist Julia Guest Discusses The Tragedy She Came Across While Reporting In Iraq. Julia Guest
was a member of the International Peace Mission in april 2002.
Former
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz Turns Himself In
To Us Forces
Precarious
Situation In Baghdad: Report From Kathy Kelly Of Voices In The Wilderness
Mines
And Unexploded Munitions In Iraq Continue To Maim And Kill:
Sean Sutton Of The Mines Advisory Group Speaks From Northern Iraq
Pilgrimage
And Protest, The Shia Of Iraq:
We Speak To Professor Abukhalil About Shia Sentiment In Iraq
Columbia
University Professor Edward Said:
History, Colonialism And How The U.S. Is Changing The Map Of The Middle East
"My
Feeling Is That There Will Be A War - It May Already Have Begun - Against The Americans By The Iraqis":
British Journalist Robert Fisk Discusses Looting, The U.S. Targeting Of Journalists, The Possibility
Of Civil War In Iraq And Why He Feels The U.S. Will Not Attack Syria
Setbacks
In Winning Iraqi Hearts: A Report From Baghdad
By Christian Science Monitor Reporter Scott Peterson
A
Look At How The CIA Backed And Financed Saddam Hussein 40 Years Ago
In An Effort To Assassinate Iraq's Then Prime Minster
White
House Calls For Iraqi Sanctions Against Iraq To Be Lifted In Phases:
We Talk To Dennis Halliday, Former UN Humanitarian Coordinator In Iraq
Dr.
April Hurley, Recently Back From Baghdad, Speaks About Ali Ismaeel Abbas,
The Badly-Burned Child Amputee Wounded In A Missile Strike On His House
Bechtel Group Wins First Major Iraq Reconstruction Contract.
Hour
1: U.S. forces kill at least a dozen civilians in Mosul:
Independent journalist May Ying Welsh looks at what the city looked like before the invasion.
Did
U.S. antiquities dealers plan to loot Iraq themselves?:
A debate between the American Council for Cultural Policy and the Cambrian Archaeological Association.
The
Pentagon, Propaganda & PR:
A look at Victoria Clarke & Margaret Tutwiler and Washington's public relations campaign on Iraq.
Hour
2: "A stupendous source of strategic power, and one of the greatest material prizes in world":
That's how the State Department described Iraq's oil resources in 1945 notes Noam Chomsky as he discusses
the invasion of Iraq, U.S. global dominance, oil and how Washington is helping to ignite a new arms race.
HOUR
1: The unexploded bombs of Baghdad:
Christian Science Monitor reporter Scott Peterson reveals how cluster bombs are still killing Iraqis.
"When
you add up the corruption, moral, and human costs (of war) they far out weigh the dollar costs, and the
dollar costs are astronomical":
former U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney speaks out on the unseen costs of war..
HOUR
2: U.S. Marines raid the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad:
We go to the Iraqi capital to speak with a reporter inside the hotel.
"We
believe your very public criticism of President Bush at this important -- and sensitive -- time in our
nation's history helps undermine the U.S. position, which ultimately could put our troops in even more
danger"
The Baseball Hall of Fame cancels "Bull Durham" celebration citing actor Tim Robbins' opposition
to war. Robbins joins us in our Firehouse studio.
"Democracy
is coming to Iraq and is being met with U.S. gunfire"
20,000 Shia Muslims protest against U.S. led government talks in Nasiriyah. As'ad AbuKhalil talks about the
prospect of a civil war between Sunni and Shia Muslims in Iraq.
HOUR
1: U.S. sets its eyes on Syria:
Washington diplomatically and economically threatens Iraq's neighbor as the region¹s newest "rogue
state".
HOUR
2: Did U.S. antiques collectors have plans to loot Iraq's historical artifacts themselves?:
International outrage continues at U.S. failure to protect the famous National Museum or Baghdad's National
Library and Archives.
Congressman
Jerrold Nadler on the endless war:
Is Iran & Syria next?
International
attorneys announce plans to investigate war crimes in Iraq:
A Alleged crimes by both U.S. and Iraq would be examined.
Thousands
rally in Los Angeles to protest war:
We hear from the Rev. James Lawson.
HOUR
1: For the third time in a month Israeli forces have seriously injured or killed an international activist
in the Occupied Territories:
We talk to a Jewish activist who witnessed the shooting of Tom Hurndall on Friday and the killing of Rachel
Corrie last month as well as Corrie's parents and a representative from the Israeli embassy in Washington.
Israeli
diplomats head to Washington to outline opposition to Bush's road map to peace:
We host a debate between the U.S. Israeli embassy and a chief Palestinian negotiator .
HOUR
2: Over 170,000 ancient artifacts have been destroyed or stolen from the National Museum of Iraq in Baghdad:
We will go to Baghdad and Oxford to talk about what was lost.
Who
is set to profit in post-invasion Iraq? BBC
investigative reporter Greg Palast says Madonna, record companies and free trade advocates may be
among the unexpected winners.
Hour
1: Democracy Now! v. The New York Post:
DN! Host Amy Goodman debates Post Columnist John Podhoretz on C-SPAN in a live simulcast with Pacifica. They
discuss war, the peace movement and what comes next in Iraq. And they take questions from callers.
Hour
2:Kurds pull out of Kirkuk after Turkey threatened to send in troops:
We go to northern Iraq for a report.
Congress
considers bill to grant automatic citizenship to some immigrant soldiers fighting in Iraq:
But there is a catch, the law would only apply to soldiers who die in combat.
Saying
no to war by saying no to the IRS:
With the deadline for filing income tax four days away, thousands of Americans are refusing to pay federal
"war" taxes.
HOUR
1: Iraq regime disintegrates as fighting and looting continues in Baghdad:
May Ying Welsh reports live from the Iraqi capital.
Spanish
journalists protest death of colleague who was killed by U.S. forces.
Kaveh
Golestan 1950-2003:
A look at the life of the Pulitzer Prize winning Iranian photojournalist who was one of 10 international
journalists killed in Iraq.
HOUR
2: U.S. occupies an Arab capital for the first time in history as Hussein's regime falls:
British reporter Andrew Buncombe joins us from Baghdad.
Turkey
sends military observers into Kirkuk while U.S. prepares to install a new government:
A look at what happens after the invasion ends with writer Dilip Hero and Iraqi American Salam Al-Rawi.
Hour
1 Looting breaks out near Baghdad as the presence of the Iraqi government diminishes:
We talk to AFP reporter Ezzadin Said in the Palestine Hotel.
80
dissidents arrested in Cuba in most widespread political crackdown since the 1960s:
A debate between the Cuban embassy and the wife of a jailed journalist.
Hour
2: CIA reports INC leader Ahmad Chalabi would be ineffective leader to replace Saddam Hussein:
A discussion with Lamis Andoni.
US/UK
military forces risk committing war crimes by depriving civilians of safe water:
A look at humanitarian aid demands in post-invasion Iraq.
Hour
1: U.S. bombs Al Jazeera and Abu Dhabi TV offices in Baghdad killing one:
We talk to Jihad Ballout from Al Jazeera.
A
president, viceroy, governor or sheriff? A
look at Jay Garner, the U.S. general and defense contractor who is slated to versee post-war Iraq.
Over
1,000 protest in Northern Ireland where Blair & Bush hold war summit.
U.S.
forces shell Palestine Hotel in Baghdad where most of the unembedded international reporters were staying,
at least one journalist is killed:
We got to Baghdad to speak with independent journalist May Ying Welsh.
Colorado
court convicts three nuns for anti-war action:
Plowshare activists had broken into U.S. missle silo to protest war.
Police
fire rubber bullets, wooden pellets and concussion grenades at anti-war protestors and dockworkers yesterday
in Oakland:
In New York 100 arrested at peaceful protest outside of Carlysle Group.
Hour
1: U.S. forces reportedly enter Saddam Hussein¹s palaces after thousands of Iraqis die are killed:
We go to Baghdad for a report from May Ying Welsh.
Israeli
forces shoot and seriously injure U.S. peace activist:
We talk with an eyewitness in Jenin.
Justice
Department detains computer engineer and jails him in solitary confinement while barring his attorneys from
discussing the case:
A former Intel Vice President creates website to highlight the "disappearance" of his former
co-worker.
Hour
2: With the number of casualties in Baghdad soaring, hospitals are forced to stop counting:
The International Red Cross responds to the humanitarian crisis.
Roundtable
on Iraq:
Katrina vanden Heuvel of The Nation, Alexander Cockburn of Counterpunch, Michael Albert of Z Magazine and
AFP reporter Nayla Razzouk in Baghdad discuss the invasion of Iraq.
Hour
1: The United States is "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today"
We hear from Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on the 35th anniversary of his assassination and talk with the Rev.
James Lawson on MLK & war.
"We
don't do body counts" says Gen. Tommy Franks:
To counter the Pentagon's refusal to track civilian casualties we talk with the founder of
iraqbodycount.net.
Saying
no to war:
Stephen Funk becomes one of the country's first conscientious objectors since the Iraq invasion.
Don't
fight in this illegal war:
British MP George Galloway explains why he is telling soldiers to resist orders in Iraq.
Hour2:
"Perhaps your listeners do expect a 50-50 balance at this stage over whether there ought to be a war or
not, but in my view it is just not the relevant question":
We spend the hour with CNN's Aaron Brown who discusses the network's coverage of the anti-war movement, the
sanitization of the war in Iraq and why he feels this is an inappropriate time for reporters to ask
questions about war..[read
transcript]
Hour
1: U.S. forces close in on Baghdad from two directions:
We go to the Iraqi capital to talk with umembedded reporter May Ying Welsh.
Kesbeh
family arrives in Jordan after being deported from Houston:
We talk with them from a refugee camp where the family of nine now lives near penniless in a single bedroom.
Green
you go, yellow you are questioned and red you don't fly:
As Deltaprepares to rate the terror threat of every passenger, we host a debate on privacy and security.
Hour
2: Over 60 people dead after US bombs impoverished Iraqi neighborhood in Hilla:
We talk to the AFP reporter who saw cluster bomblets there. [read
transcript]
Send in giant, armored bulldozers, Israeli military advises US troops poised to invade Baghdad: But when confronted by peace activists, retired Israeli General admits Israeli army makes "many mistakes" and calls for withdrawal from Occupied Territories.
Hour 1: "Until this administration it had been possible to believe that by upholding the policies of my president I was also upholding the interests of the American people and the world. I believe it no longer:" Former U.S. diplomat John Brady Kiesling on why he resigned from the State Department.
Civilian casualties mount in Iraq: We talk with Iraq Peace Team member Cliff Kindy who just left Baghdad.
"Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't Tell You": A discussion with media critic Norman Solomon.
Democrats accuse House Republicans of slashing $15 billion in veterans benefits in favor of tax cuts for the rich: We look at the new House budget.
Fragging returns to the frontlines: A U.S. Army Sgt. kills two fellow soldiers in grenade attack in first fragging case since Vietnam.
Hour 2: US troops shoot and kill at least 7 Iraqis including women and children: We go to Baghdad for a report from unembedded journalist May Ying Welsh.
Rumsfeld ignored advice on top Pentagon generals on Iraq: Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Seymour Hersh on the war, Richard Perle's resignation, Gen. Barry McCaffrey & more.
"Don't mess with my soldiers. Don't mess with them because they are trained like dogs to kill. And they will kill you if you try again": U.S. military detains and beats foreign journalists in Iraq. We'll talk to Israeli reporter Dan Scemama. [read transcript]
Hour 1: The prince of darkness resigns: A look at the controversial businesses dealings of Pentagon adviser and war hawk Richard Perle.
What will a U.S. occupation of Iraq look like: A speech by Asla Bali of the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee.
Hour 2: Six journalists still missing in Iraq including two from Newsday: We talk to Newsday editor Les Payne and Pacifica's unembedded reporter Jerry Quickley who was expelled from Iraq last week.
War Secretary Donald Rumsfeld reportedly rejected advice from top Pentagon planners on how to attack Iraq: Former Marine & UN Weapons Inspector Scott Ritter explains why the U.S. may lose the war.
A U.S. B-2 stealth bomber drops two bunker busters on Baghdad: We go to the Iraqi capital for a report from May Ying Welsh.
"Time's Up!": Academy Award winning director Michael Moore tells the White House comment line with thousands of cheering supporters.
"This has been one long Orwellian week": Michael Moore on the corporate media war coverage.
Hour 1: Live from Baghdad: 14 killed in a Baghdad market,as Iraqi clerics call for jihad against US invasion forces.
The Pentagon knows large percentages of "smart" bombs malfunction and civilian deaths are a certainty: A discussion on how "smart" the bombs really are.
Iraqi families sue Powell, Cheney, and Bush, Sr. over bombing of civilian shelter in 1991 that killed over 400 people: but the Belgian parliament passes a law that could prevent the lawsuit from moving forward.
Shi'ites warn US troops will face armed resistance if they occupy Iraq after the invasion: this, as coalition hopes of uprising in Basra evaporate.
Hour 2: U.S. bombs Iraqi Television again: International Federation of Journalists condemns attack as a violation of the Geneva conventions.
U.S. government pressures UN nations (again) not to oppose Iraq attack:
Could the war cost $800 billion?: A discussion on the cost of the Iraq invasion and what it means to the American public.
Under surveillance from the military and under pressure from MTV: Hip hop star Michael Franti talks about the pressure caused by speaking out against war. [read transcript]
Hour 1: The Arabic CNN comes under fire for its Iraq coverage: An Al Jazeera producer discusses the broadcast of the POW footage, the network’s banning from the NYSE & NASDAQ and the launching (and hacking) of an English-language site. [read transcript]
U.S. escalates Iraq war in Kurdish-controlled area: We go to northern Iraq for a report from Christian Science Monitor reporter Cameron Ward
Turkey considers sending forces into Northern Iraq in coordination with U.S.
Hour 2: How oil interests obscured the U.S. Government's focus on Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship: A look at the role of Bechtel and Halliburton.
UK/USA, what it means to me, United to Kill Us All: An ordinary Iraqi citizen, Ghazwan Al-Mukhtar, speaks out on the war from Baghdad near where U.S. forces bombed a busy market today killing 15. [read transcript] Ghazwan's interview starts after 1hr 19min.35sec
Hour 1: US and British warplanes begin intense bombardment of Republican Guard positions outside the Iraqi capital: We go to Baghdad for report from May Ying Welsh.
Kurdish officials say 150 killed by U.S. bombing, scores of Iraqi civilian casualties elsewhere: British writer Milan Rai analyzes the opening days of the U.S. invasion.
From broadcasting images of POWs to distributing propaganda leaflets to embedding reports in the military: a review of the Pentagon's psychological operations.
U.S. military has been quietly refueling its B-52s over Spain: Protesters fear a reoccurrence of the 1966 disaster when a B-52 bomber carrying nuclear weapons crashed with an aerial tanker over Spain.
Live From Iraq, an Un-Embedded Journalist: Robert Fisk on Washington’s ‘Quagmire’ in Iraq, Civilian Deaths and the Fallacy of Bush’s ‘War of Liberation’ [Read transcript]
Veteran war correspondent Robert Fisk says debating whether it's really Saddam detracts from the issue what the Iraqi President actually says: Part 2 of the interview.
When the British were fired upon from Delhi and in Northern Ireland, they did not use artillery. But here, apparently, it is ok to use artillery on a crowded city. What on Earth is the British army doing in Iraq firing artillery into a city?: Part 3 of the interview with journalist Robert Fisk.
Hour 1: Red Cross says humanitarian crisis is looming in Basra: TV networks are preoccupied with action footage from reporters embedded with U.S. military.
US says Iraq's treatment of American POWs breaks Geneva Convention: Legal experts call Bush administration hypocritical, citing US treatment of Taliban prisoners and the invasion of Iraq.
A report from Baghdad during the "Shock And Awe" bombing: Independent journalist Mei Ying Welsh reports from Baghdad.
Millions protest around the world, hundreds of thousands protest in NYC: We go to the streets of NYC.
Hour 2: Up to 209 civilians killed in early days of U.S. invasion: Kathy Kelly of Voices in the Wilderness joins us from from Baghdad.
11 members of Congress vote to oppose war: We talk to Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA).
U.S. reportedly fires DU shells in Basra: Despite evidence of health and environmental effects, Pentagon denies DU is dangerous.
"We are against this war, Mr. Bush. Shame on you, Mr. Bush!": Michael Moore wins an Oscar and joins others calling for peace.
Hour 1: Tens of thousands of US troops race through southern Iraq seizing oil installations as the bombing of Baghdad continues: a report on civilian casualties from Baghdad.
Former CIA officials call for intelligence officers to leak documents that challenge Bush Administration propaganda: we'll talk to 27-year CIA veteran Ray McGovern.
US attack plans for Iraq are modeled on Hiroshima and Nagasaki: a discussion of "Shock and Awe."
Hour 2: "Bridge to Baghdad": on this second day of war, students in Baghdad talk with students in New York.
1,500 arrested in San Francisco as millions more take to the streets around the globe: We hear the voices of dissent from around the country.
The "new" Afghanistan? US launches a major attack in Afghanistan and is outfitting militias: We speak with an Afghan-American woman in Kandahar who is investigating why 19 members of her family were killed in US bombing.
Inside Baghdad: Democracy Now! correspondent Jeremy Scahill reports on what Iraqis fear
Hour
1: U.S. begins invasion of Iraq in an attempt to assassinate Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein: We hear from President Bush, Hussein and
go live to Baghdad to speak with Kathy Kelly of Voices in the Wilderness.
Hundreds of thousands take to the streets to protest war starting just hours after the war starts: We go Sydney, London and Washington.
Talk-back to war: Listeners tell us what they're doing in this time of war.
Hour 2: Iraqi people speak out against the U.S. invasion: We go live to Baghdad.
Booker
Prize-winning author Arundhati Roy slams US invasion as protests
intensify: U.N. Security Council members voice their opposition.
Burning
the "Bridge to Baghdad": As war begins, the media
censors the
voices of ordinary Iraqi people.
Talk-Back
to War: More Listeners Tell US What They're Doing in This Time of War
Is
War Against Iraq Legal Or Not? a Debate Between Roger Normand and Ruth Wedgewood
Iraq
Journal: The Ghosts of Safwan, a Report From the Iraq/Kuwait Border
International
Human Shields Prepare for War in Iraq: We Talk to John Ross and Kathy Kelly in Baghdad
Wednesday,
February 26th, 2003
Wednesday,
February 19th, 2003
Wednesday,
February 12th, 2003
Democracy
Now! Obtains Top Secret U.N. Documents Revealing the U.N.'s Plans for a Post-War Iraq
Can
President Bush Be Impeached? Former US Attorney General Ramsey Clark Makes His Case
Live From the United Nations: A Report From U.N. Correspondent Andreas Zumach
PART
2 OF OUR DISCUSSION ON DEPLETED
URANIUM, WITH
THE SCIENTIFIC SECRETARY WITH THE EUROPEAN COMMITTEE ON RADIATION RISK, AND A U.N. HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYER
(31/1/2003)
DR. ASAF
DURAKOVIC GIVES
A RARE INTERVIEW ABOUT DEPLETED URANIUM IN IRAQ: HE WAS THE FIRST MILITARY DOCTOR TO TEST GULF WAR VETERANS
FOR RADIATION EXPOSURE AND WAS TERMINATED FOR HIS WORK
(30/1/2003)
THE
U.S. IS THINKING THE UNTHINKABLE: IT IS PREPARING FOR THE POSSIBLE USE OF NUCLEAR
WEAPONS AGAINST IRAQ (30/1/2003)
FORMER
U.N. HUMANITARIAN COORDINATOR HANS
VON SPONECK TALKS
TO US FROM BAGHDAD ABOUT A NEW REPORT ON THE HEALTH AFFECTS OF WAR
(30/1/2003)
UN
ESTIMATES A US ATTACK ON IRAQ WILL CAUSE 500,000 IRAQI CASUALTIES IN THE INITIAL STAGES Denis Halliday
6/1/2003
TALK-BACK
TO WAR: PEOPLE CALL IN TO DEMOCRACY NOW!'S ANSWERING MACHINE (10/12/2002)
75
PEOPLE PROTEST IN FRONT OF THE PENTAGON: SOME THROW BLOOD ON THE PENTAGON AND ARE ARRESTED (30/12/2002)
HOWARD
ZINN ON THE HISTORY OF THE US GOVERNMENT AND CIA 'CHANGING REGIMES' AROUND THE WORLD (28/11/2002)
U.S.
IS MONITORING THOUSANDS OF IRAQIS, IRAQI-AMERICANS AND 'IRAQ SYMPATHIZERS' (22/11/2002)
PROFESSOR
NOAM CHOMSKY EXPLORES THE CURRENT RHETORIC OF "TERROR" AND "TERRORISM" (24/10/2002)
