
The Whimsical Works of a War Criminal
Because the Western world has a “complicated” history with frustrated artists as national leaders.
Frantz Durupt is a journalist at French daily Libération.
Because the Western world has a “complicated” history with frustrated artists as national leaders.
On December 14, 2008, the Iraqi journalist Muntadhar al-Zaidi threw his black leather dress shoes at President George W. Bush during a press conference in Baghdad. It was one of the greatest athletic acts of the Iraq War.
Despite its early accomplishments, Ba‘athism was always subject to the whims of a party elite more concerned with preserving power than revolutionary transformation.
Bright Eyes front man and enfant terrible of the early aughts indie scene Conor Oberst sat down with Jacobin to discuss the Iraq War and more.
Germany likes to keep its hands clean — but its coffers full.
A power struggle in the ranks of the Sudanese security state has thrust the country into chaos.
We talk to journalist Andrew Cockburn about the Iraq invasion and the new Middle East.
A series of natural disasters has heralded the worst global rice shortage in 20 years.
In the 2000s, a generation of youth played games that were funded and aided by the US military — a connection that goes back to the very birth of video games.
A new bill in Canada takes aim at wage-fixing and no-poaching agreements among major corporations. But significant loopholes and objections from business groups underscore how even modest labor legislation faces staunch resistance from capital.
Journalist Anand Gopal on Islamism, ISIS, and the role of the United States in Iraqi politics today.
Álvaro Uribe came to power in Colombia shortly after 9/11 and declared his own war on terrorism with US support.
Ranking the most consequential libs for war of the early 21st century.
Our nation’s two most prestigious newspapers, the New York Times and the Washington Post, on the run-up to war.
When and where organized labor’s been on the move.