AltWeeklies Wire

Teeing Off on President Bush, the 'Ex-Golfer'new

The fact that giving up a game is the way he decided to show "solidarity" with the families of fallen soldiers shows (as if we needed additional evidence) his utter disconnection from reality.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Marty Aussenberg  |  05-19-2008  |  Commentary

Iraq Veterans Against the War Heads to D.C. to Testify Against the Warnew

The D.C. trip is IVAW's latest action in its Winter Soldier campaign, which began just more than a month ago when the group’s members gathered in Maryland to present their personal experiences to the world via satellite and streaming video on the internet, which reached more than 30,000 viewers on each day of the conference.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  St. John Barned-Smith  |  05-19-2008  |  War

Retired Army Col. Ann Wright on War, Peace and Dissentnew

Wright joined the Foreign Service of the U.S. Department of State in 1987, and left in protest the day before the invasion of Iraq. Since then, Wright has been a leading antiwar activist and has now co-authored Dissent: Voices of Conscience.
INDY Week  |  Bob Geary  |  05-15-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

'Battle for Haditha' is Iraq Fiction Worth Seeingnew

A rare dramatic film from veteran documentarian Nick Broomfield, this film's final outcry of grief, vengeance, and injustice is a terrifying illustration of how badly we've bungled -- by creating new terrorists in attempting to eradicate established ones.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Dennis Harvey  |  05-14-2008  |  Reviews

Jim Sheeler Emerges from World of Wartime Loss With New Book and a Pleanew

Jim Sheeler's path to the Pulitzer Prize began simply enough. He was just curious about what was going on behind the scenes during the military funeral for Lance Cpl. Thomas J. Slocum, the first Coloradan to fall in the Iraq War.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Michael De Yoanna  |  05-13-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

'War, Inc.': Savage Satire Compares to Reality

The would-be comic lampoonery, about a time when all wars are outsourced, mirrors the realities of America's corporate-enabled occupation of Iraq.
Maui Time  |  Cole Smithey  |  05-13-2008  |  Reviews

The Military is Inconsistent When it Comes to Handling Desertersnew

Some, like outspoken war opponent Lt. Ehren Watada, face courts-martial and potential jail sentences, while others are allowed to quietly leave with an "other than honorable discharge" -- the military's term for a discharge that falls somewhere between honorable and dishonorable.
Seattle Weekly  |  Nina Shapiro  |  05-12-2008  |  War

Union Shuts Down West Coast Ports, But Media Misses the Historic Storynew

Workers, students, immigrants, and antiwar activists came together on May Day in San Francisco, but it was hard to tell from the next day's mainstream media coverage, which adopted its usual cynical view of the growing movement to end the Iraq War. Sure, there were articles, but each missed the main point: this was the first time in American history that such a massive job action was called to protest a war.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Steven T. Jones and Amanda Witherell  |  05-08-2008  |  Business & Labor

Who is Muqtada al-Sadr?new

Rev. Jeremiah Wright is fun for about five minutes, but the temperamental cleric about whom America should be twisting its collective panty into a knot isn't Wright. It's Iraqi Shi'ite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Andisheh Nouraee  |  05-07-2008  |  Commentary

Those Who Promise to be 'Tough on Terror' Ignore Its Root Causesnew

American intervention overseas, from never-ending sanctions on Iraq to permanent military bases on the Arabian Peninsula, is without question the primary cause for 9/11 and the current terrorist threat, a point the 9/11 Commission Report also made perfectly clear. But this is not the answer America is used to hearing from its politicians.
Charleston City Paper  |  Jack Hunter  |  05-07-2008  |  Commentary

Phil Donahue Discusses His Doc About a Paralyzed Iraq War Vetnew

Body of War puts a human face on the armed forces with the coming-home story of a 25-year-old private returning from Iraq, whose badge of courage is the scar he wears on his spine.
New Haven Advocate  |  Chandra Niles Folsom  |  05-06-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Errol Morris Casts Light on the Torture Chambers of Abu Ghraibnew

Standard Operating Procedure is perhaps the most thorough record to date of one of the lowest points of American foreign policy.
Pasadena Weekly  |  Carl Kozlowski  |  05-05-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

'Standard Operating Procedure' Deconstructs the Abu Ghraib Photosnew

Once again, Errol Morris is dealing with war at its morally foggiest.
Los Angeles CityBeat  |  Andy Klein  |  05-02-2008  |  Reviews

Think You Know John McCain?new

The Republican presidential candidate makes much of his loyalty to and support for this nation's armed forces, as well as the suffering he endured as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. So why won't he support a new and improved version of the G.I. Bill for those who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan?
Shepherd Express  |  Lisa Kaiser  |  05-02-2008  |  Politics

'Mission Accomplished' Turns Fivenew

Since Bush's photo-op on the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln, 3,917 more U.S. soldiers have died. The total number of U.S. military deaths now stands at 4,056, and an estimated 10-15 percent of soldiers have experienced traumatic brain injuries.
Shepherd Express  |  Lisa Kaiser  |  05-02-2008  |  War

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