Wars
"And ye shall hear of wars and rumours
of wars..." (Matt 24:6) |

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Vote for peaceColman McCarthy, The Baltimore Sun December 31, 2000
The U.S. military budget at $305 billion is 22 times as large as the combined spending
of the seven countries Pentagon officials label as potential attackers.
High-tech
superpower threatened by low-tech terroristsBy Michael R. Gordon, N.Y. Times News Service November 25, 2000
The U.S. is an unrivaled superpower. So instead of fighting the Pentagon on its own
terms, the nation's enemies have been looking for its Achilles' heel.
Hiroshima: The bombs
of AugustHoward Zinn, The Progressive October 15th, 2000
Was the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki an unavoidable necessity or rather a wanton
act of gargantuan cruelty?
Iraq: That was no war, it was
homicideJohn Pilger, Sydney Morning Herald September 22nd, 2000
70% of the 88,500 tons of bombs dropped on Iraq and Kuwait--the equivalent of more
than seven Hiroshimas--hit no military targets and fell in populated areas.
E-Bomb: Just a normal
town
Ian Sample, New Scientist September 22nd, 2000
You can take out a city's systems without killing anyone or destroying any buildings.
No more phones, no computers, no power, nothing.
The Kosovo cover-upJohn Barry and Evan Thomas, Newsweek August 27th, 2000
A new study shows that NATO bombs plowed up some fields, blew up hundreds of cars,
trucks and decoys, and barely dented Serb artillery and armor. The number of targets
verifiably destroyed was a tiny fraction of those claimed.
US Rogue State: A world in
denialRick Salutin, Globe and Mail (Canada) August 27th, 2000
The evidence has piled up. The rogue states of the world today include: North Korea,
Iran and Iraq and ... the United States.
US: Compassionate
killing?Kevin Kelley, Utne Reader July 2, 2000
"Defiance of international law and solemn obligations has become entirely open,
even widely lauded in the West," he writes. "Rampant lawlessness on the part of
the worlds leading nuclear power is perversely depicted new
internationalism that heralds a wonderful new age, unique in human history."
Deaths in warsAP, The Independent, State Department, Center for Defense Information, CIA, World
Almanac
Other Articles
Is the Cold War really
over?George Crile and Dan Rather,
CBS July 2, 2000
Tension between the United States and Russia is greater now than at any time since the
end of the Cold War. But about the only people who seem alarmed by it are the American
nuclear soldiersor missiliersand their Russian counterparts.
The worlds most
dangerous placeCraige McMillan,
WorldNetDaily July 2, 2000
More often, danger creeps into our life unawares. The public school classroom. The
medical research laboratory. In the minds of six-year-old killers. The real danger is not
that which lurks outside of us. The real danger lives within us.
Auto Cruise Missiles: Prowling the
skiesDuncan Graham-Rowe,
New Scientist July 2, 2000
The U.S. Air Force is now developing a cheap cruise missile that chooses its own
targets. But there are fears about having such destructive weapons flying around with no
one controlling them. After all, even NATO pilots were at times unable to
distinguish between tanks and refugees.
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