Why the 1648 Westphalian Treaty Must Be Defended as a Remedy to the Unipolar ‘Rules-Based Order’

Why the 1648 Westphalian Treaty Must Be Defended as a Remedy to the Unipolar ‘Rules-Based Order’

The Peace of Westphalia, just like the American Revolution that it inspired, and the UN Charter that served as its continuation is like garlic to the Vampires of today’s Wall Street and City of London. The fact is that the Peace of Westphalia, just like the American Revolution that it inspired, and the UN Charter…

The Nakba and the Polish Law

The Nakba and the Polish Law

Israel seems upset by a new Polish law that sets a 30-year deadline for Jews to recover seized property. The legislation is yet to be approved by Poland’s senate, yet Israeli officials already refer to it as the “Holocaust law.” They insist that it is ‘immoral’ and ‘a disgrace.’ Last week Israeli Minister of Foreign…

The Multipolar Alliance as the Last Line of Defense of the UN Charter

The Multipolar Alliance as the Last Line of Defense of the UN Charter

The question should be asked: was FDR’s intention to dismantle the British Empire only a ruse to create the Anglo-American special relationship in a new US-led reconquest of the world, or was his plan genuine? “They who seek to establish systems of government based on the regimentation of all human beings by a handful of…

Stalin’s Soviet Union Defeated Germany – We Should Not Forget

Stalin’s Soviet Union Defeated Germany – We Should Not Forget

Historic events are facts that should not be manipulated according to the latest political fashions. Being angry at Moscow for mucking about in Ukraine does not in any way lessen the glory, admiration and thanks owed to the Russian people for their heroism during World War II. Americans and Canadians like to believe they won…

On Nasser’s Fight for Arabic Independence and a Free Palestine

On Nasser’s Fight for Arabic Independence and a Free Palestine

Nasser became the catalyst for an Arab Revolution for independence, a revolution that remains yet to be finished, Cynthia Chung writes. In the 1950s the so-called enemy of the West was not only Moscow but the Third World’s emerging nationalists, from Gamal Abdel Nasser in Egypt to Mohammed Mossadegh in Iran. The United States and…