Hungary
Les difficultés d’Angela Merkel mettent Macron au pied du mur, par...
Madame Merkel rencontre, à l’évidence, des difficultés extrêmes pour former un gouvernement. Le Président de la république, qui en Allemagne n’a qu’un rôle honorifique,...
On the Israel Lobby | by Stephen M. Walt
That ‘Israel Lobby’ Controversy? History Has Proved Us Right
October 2, 2017
Ten years ago, John Mearsheimer and I published a controversial article and subsequent book...
Washington and Brussels: Running in Reverse (*) | By James...
The growth of authoritarian solutions in Washington and Brussels in response to self-induced political and economic decline has led to the imposition of sanctions...
Turkey, Russia and Interesting New Balkan Geopolitics
By F. William Engdahl
The geopolitical template of the entire European Union is undergoing one of its most profound changes since the collapse of the...
Who is running US Foreign Policy
Foreign policy calls rest with neocon cell in White House
By Wayne Madsen
Posted on July 3, 2017
A powerful neocon cell is calling U.S. foreign...
Israel’s War Against George Soros
JAFFA, Israel — As a Holocaust survivor, a successful financier who embraces free market capitalism and a philanthropist who champions liberal democracy, George Soros...
The Spy Who Funded Me: Revisiting the Congress for Cultural Freedom
Campaigning Culture and the Global Cold War, a new volume edited by Giles Scott-Smith and Charlotte Lerg
By Patrick Iber
Published in lareviewofbooks.org
IN 1950, a group...
Orban’s referendum – no triumph, no defeat
The Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán, has failed to convince a majority of his population to vote in a referendum on closing the door to refugees, rendering the result invalid and undermining his campaign for a cultural counter-revolution within the European Union.
Of Folk Devils And Moral Panic: Hungary’s Referendum On Mandatory EU...
For several weeks, streets in Budapest, as elsewhere in Hungary, have been awash with government-funded placards representing an overt incitement to racial and religious hatred. Far from portraying those fleeing to Europe from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and other countries as genuine asylum seekers, escaping brutal and apparently intractable civil conflicts, the
The Coming European Debt Wars
The mortgage debts in post-Soviet economies and Iceland are more explosive. Although these countries are not in the Eurozone, most of their debts are denominated in euros. Some 87% of Latvia’s debts are in euros or other foreign currencies, and are owed mainly to Swedish banks, while Hungary and Romania owe euro-debts mainly to Austrian banks. So