Opinion leaders appear to be demanding that NATO ramp up the very military posturing that could bring war ever closer.
Let’s move from dangerous military posturing to serious negotiations


Opinion leaders appear to be demanding that NATO ramp up the very military posturing that could bring war ever closer.

An editorial in Haaretz discusses Israeli occupation policies in the West Bank (“Israel’s new land grab is clearly illegal,” Haaretz, 15 April 2014): The Defense …

On the 100th anniversary of World War I, we again see our leaders playing with matches.

Perspectives of peace advocates, other civil society groups, and women were dismissed at the time and continue to be under-represented in mainstream histories.

One hundred years after the start of the First World War, the world’s strongest military alliance is responding to hostilities in Ukraine by bunkering down in Europe.

A new report released by Canada’s Veterans Ombudsman, Guy Parent, claims that of the country’s 1,911 most severely wounded ex-soldiers, nearly half do not receive a government impairment allowance to compensate them for their physical and mental injuries and the resulting loss of earnings.