A close reading of the report on the U.S. airstrike that killed scores of Syrian troops and helped Islamic State capture a key base leaves many doubts about the “mistake” explanation, writes Gareth Porter for Middle East Eye.
Warnings from the Cuban Missile Crisis
From the Archive: Fidel Castro’s death at 90 was treated more as a cultural event than a moment to reflect on the danger of thermonuclear war, a risk Don North saw up close in 1962 and described 50 years later.
The Werewolves Who Hated Castro
Why Gen. Mattis Is No Gen. Marshall
A Protest Victory at Standing Rock
The Native-American-led protest against an oil pipeline near Sioux lands in the Dakotas drew international attention and support from U.S. vets, prompting the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to seek a different route, reports Dennis J Bernstein.
Extracting Castro from the Demonization
Italy’s Voters Slap Down the Elites
Trump’s Reliance on the Military
WPost Won’t Retract McCarthyistic Smear
After publishing a McCarthyistic “black list” that smears some 200 Web sites as “Russian propagandists,” The Washington Post refuses to apologize — and other mainstream media outlets pile on, writes Norman Solomon.
New Navy Ship Leaking Tax Dollars
The Remarkable Story of Fidel Castro
Picking a War with China
Clinton’s ‘Russia Did It’ Cop-out
A Bare-Knuckle Fight Over Recounts
Slow Start to Crucial Fund Drive
A Trump Plus: Reduced Tensions with Russia
The Orwellian War on Skepticism
Trump’s Trouble with the Truth
Old Cold War Revives as Castro Dies
Official Washington’s ‘Info-Wars’
Organs of Official Washington, such as the State Department and The Washington Post, are becoming unhinged over their weakening grip on the narratives that the people are supposed to believe, as William Blum explains.