A year after the street protests that shook Iran, residents whisper that the regime has won. Global Post, May 17, 2010 |
|
Iran's Nuclear Deal
The Guardian, May 17, 2010 Brazil and Turkey have brokered a deal with Iran over its nuclear programme that shows the two countries are a new global force. |
Obama's Deadbeat Diplomacy The Daily Beast, May 8 2010 (link) When Obama appointed George Mitchell as Mideast Special Envoy, observers hoped he would be the game-changer in the Middle East. But as Stephen Kinzer reports, Mitchell’s mission has thus far been a big failure. |
Boston Globe, April 14, 2010 The US use of Kyrgyzstan as a military staging ground has caused it to turn a blind eye to conflict. |
No Apology? Mitt Romney is Wrong The Guardian, March 18, 2010 Mitt Romney's new book title suggests the US owes 'No Apology', but every nation, like every human being, has sinned. |
Two Guardian Columns on Turkey-Armenia Genocide Vote Harms US-Turkey Ties The Guardian, March 5, 2010 Was the 1915 killing of Armenians genocide? The question is debatable, but it's not for the US Congress to decide. Turkey Should Pause Before a Mirror The Guardian, March 5, 2010 Amid the finger-pointing, let's recall how Turkey helped push the US Congress committee toward its vote on Armenian genocide. |
The Limits of Free Speech in Rwanda The Guardian, March 2, 2010 The country's president claims that laws against disseminating 'genocide ideology' are necessary to stop a return to violence. |
Martin Savidge hosts journalist and author Stephen Kinzer and human rights activist Noel Twagiramungu (audio link) |
February 26, 2010 The World's Marco Werman interviews Stephen Kinzer about his forthcoming book "Reset: Iran, Turkey, and America's Future" |
Clinton Clings to Bush Ideals on Iran The Guardian, February 16, 2010 The US policy of engagement with Iran never got off the ground and now Hillary Clinton has resorted to Bush-era sabre-rattling |
Chicago Amplified - WBEZ Chicago (audio link)
Prolific author, former New York Times bureau chief and correspondent and Northwestern University lecturer Stephen Kinzer speaks on Iran Turkey and the U.S.: Power Triangle of the 21st Century. He discusses this new "power triangle" and explains how it could help calm crises from Palestine to Iraq to Afghanistan--if only the US would break out of what he calls "the prison of old policies, assumptions and alliances." Recorded Tuesday, January 26, 2010 at Film Row Cinema, Chicago |
Protests In Iran Mark 31 Years Since Revolution The Takeaway - February 11, 2010 (audio link) |
Boston Globe, February 16, 2010
Visiting any country after an absence of 25 years naturally offers a host of then-and-now contrasts. |
The Guardian, January 22, 2010 With a social safety net but fewer freedoms, is life better in Cuba than in its capitalist Caribbean basin neighbors? |
An evocative new film, The Desert of Forbidden Art, about a treasure trove of art gathered at a museum in the Central Asian steppe, features commentary by Stephen Kinzer. |
Stephen Kinzer argues that it shares strategic and democratic interests with the U.S. Philadelphia Inquirer, Jan. 21, 2010 |
|
|
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next > End >>
|
Page 5 of 8 |