Tag Archives: Arab revolt

HAW Notes 3/18/11: Links to recent articles of interest

Recent articles recommended by Historians Against the War:

“Revealed: US Spy Operation That Manipulates Social Media”
By Nick Fielding and Ian Cobain, The Guardian, posted March 17
On a Pentagon contract for the creation of false on-line identities, known as “sock puppets”

“Korean War Coverage Was Distorted and Suppressed”
By Sherwood Ross, OpEdNews, posted March 17
Based on interviews with Korean War historian Bruce Cumings of the University of Chicago

“How the Japanese Learned about ‘Nuclear Safety’”
By Lawrence S. Wittner, History News Network, posted March 17
On the 1954 “Lucky Dragon” nuclear incident; the author is an emeritus professor of history at SUNY Albany

“Smoking Out Vietnam War Truths”
By Nick Turse, Asia Times Online, posted March 12

“The Mythic Lure of the ‘No-Fly Zone’”
By Ira Chernus, History News Network, posted March 14

“Fissures in the Arab Revolt”
By Vijay Prashad, CounterPunch.org, posted March 11
Historical background on Libya and especially Bahrain; the author teaches South Asian history at Trinity College

“The Shameful Abuse of Bradley Manning”
By Daniel Ellsberg, The Guardian, posted March 11

The Arab Spring”
By Rashid Khalidi, The Nation, March 21 issue, posted March 6
The author teaches the history of the modern Middle East at Columbia University

“The Long History of Labor Bashing”
By Nelson Lichtenstein, The Chronicle Review, posted March 6
The author teaches history at the University of California Santa Barbara

“The Middle East Revolutions in Historical Perspective: Egypt, Occupied Palestine, and the United States”
By Herbert P. Bix, Asia-Pacific Journal, February 21
The author is a former Pulitzer Prize-winning historian who now teaches at Binghamton University

New articles recommended by Historians Against the War

“What Governor Walker Won’t Tell You”
By Stanley Kutler, Truthdig.com, posted February 21
The author is a professor emeritus of history at the University of Wisconsin

“They’re Doing It Without Us”
By Andrew Bacevich, Los Angeles Times, posted February 20
The author teaches history and international relations at Boston University

“Lessons for Wisconsin from the Flint Sit-Down Strikes of 1936-37”
By Mark Naison, History News Network, posted February 21
The author teaches history at Fordham University

“The Great Arab Revolt”
By Juan Cole, The Nation, posted February 17
The author teaches Middle East and South Asian history at the University of Michigan

“Twenty-Eight Hours in Tahrir”
By Mark LeVine, Aljazeera.net, posted February 11
The author teaches history at UC Irvine

“Pox Americana: Driving Through the Gates of Hell and Other American Pastimes in the Greater Middle East”
By Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch.com, posted February 7

“The Myth of Stability vs. Democracy in U.S. Foreign Policy”
By Ira Chernus, History News Network, posted February 7

“Arab Dictatorships under Fire in the New Information Age”
By Stuart Schaar, Economic and Political Weekly, posted February 5
The author is a professor emeritus of Middle East and North African history at Brooklyn College

“Why Egypt 2011 Is Not Iran 1979”
By Juan Cole, Informed Comment blog, posted February 2

“Popular Uprisings in Egypt’s Recent History”
By Robert Tignor,” History News Network, posted January 31
The author is a professor emeritus of history at Princeton University