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| Contents of Other Recent Issues |
Australia
backs Indonesia against the IMF.
Downhill
from Tokyo to Maastricht.
BJP's
ascent to power worries reformers.
Samuel
Ruiz caught with his cassock up.
Free
trade is anti-American.
Lyndon
H. LaRouche, Jr. situates Dr. Sergei Glazyev's new study of Russia in its
global context. LaRouche writes that Glayzev's "most urgent practical
recommendations, as we may observe in this instance, are so compelling, by
their combined nature and competence, that no rational person should consider
his proposed key remedies as subjects for dilution by today's customary
diplomatic (i.e., irrational) form of political compromise."
A
paper by Dr. Sergei Glazyev, doctor of economic sciences, and head of the
Information and Analysis Department for the Federation Council of the Russian
Federation, Russia's upper chamber of parliament.
Not
in decades has the intensity of criticism of the International Monetary Fund
been heard from as many heads of state and senior ministers as in recent weeks.
And, the worst is yet to come, because of conditions imposed by the IMF.
The
Japanese Economic Planning Agency announced that economic growth for the fourth
quarter of 1997 was -0.2%, which is shaking up the entire political-economic
landscape.
In
a speech to an EIR seminar in Washington, D.C. on March 18, Lyndon
LaRouche outlined the strategic approach to restoring the world economy to
health, and the type of leadership required to implement a New Bretton Woods
system. "The customary objection will be, that such a sudden and radical
approach is `politically impossible,' " LaRouche writes. "Let those
political leaders who lack the will to carry out the measures I have proposed,
get out of the way, and pass the authority to act to those among us who are
willing and able to enact these measures, and do so suddenly."
A
call by Schiller Institute Chairman Helga Zepp-LaRouche and Ukrainian Member of
Parliament Dr. Natalya Vitrenko.
With
the demise of the Mideast peace process, Jordan has become a tinderbox, and the
jailing of the country's leading opposition figure can only result in the
further destabilization of the Hashemite Kingdom and the region as a whole.
Kathleen
Willey, who the media claimed was a witness "beyond reproach," turns out to be
just as sleazy as all the rest of the President's accusers.
From
the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidency through the first decades of the Cold War,
a group of American historians attempted to revive the American System foreign
policy tradition of President John Quincy Adams, the author of the Monroe
Doctrine.
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