How They See Us
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A country seething with rage
feature What Europe thinks of the extremist views and violent rhetoric of the right.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Murdering murderers
feature How Europe reacted to the execution of Ronnie Lee Gardner, a prisoner on death row in Utah who was killed by a firing squad.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Demonizing BP and the British, too
feature Whither BP and the "special relationship"?
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Do U.S. carmakers deserve a break?
feature If the U.S. auto industry isn't bailed out, Europe will suffer, too.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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How they see us: A presidency defined by arrogance
feature “Around the world the Bush name is synonymous with arrogance, ignorance, reckless insouciance, torture, violence, and ineptitude,” said Gerard Baker in Britain’s The Times.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Plotting attacks against Iran
feature Iranians are asking themselves what role the U.S. played in the suicide bombing attack in southeastern Iran.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Backtracking on missile defense
feature Last week, the U.S. announced that it was canceling its plan to build a missile defense system in the Czech Republic and Poland to protect against a nuclear attack from Iran.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Why the U.S. is pressuring Iran
feature How the Middle East views the tension between Iran and the U.S.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Was Iranian defector a double agent?
feature Shahram Amiri, an Iranian nuclear scientist, disappeared in May 2009 and recently resurfaced at the Pakistani Embassy in Washington, D.C., claiming to have been kidnapped and tortured by the CIA.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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How they see us: So many Russian spies, so few secrets
feature The FBI’s claim that 11 Russians have been covertly spying in the U.S. for years cannot be taken at face value, said Yevgeny Shestakov in Rossiiskaya Gazeta.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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WikiLeaks reveals Pakistan’s treachery
feature The thousands of U.S. military logs published by WikiLeaks reveals that Pakistan is engaged in double-crossing the United States and Afghanistan.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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WikiLeaks exposes U.S. war crimes
feature The U.S. military logs from the Afghan conflict recently made public by WikiLeaks reveal a staggering toll of innocent lives.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Why the Swiss freed Polanski
feature French-born filmmaker Roman Polanski was freed from house arrest after a judge ruled that the extradition request was incomplete and had to be thrown out. His arrest had been a mistake in the first place.
By The Week Staff Last updated
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Did Facebook insult Islam?
feature An American cartoonist recently launched a Facebook group designating May 20 as “Everybody Draw Mohammed Day.”
By The Week Staff Last updated
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