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Cockburn: 'The Civil War In Iraq Has Already Begun': Politician Claims Conflict Has Started And Warns It Will Be ‘Worse Than Syria’
Znet Article, May, 07 2013
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Iraqi leaders fear that the country is sliding rapidly into a new civil war which “will be worse than Syria”
Cockburn: Iraq 10 Years On: from Death to Dollars - How Kurds Struck It Rich
Znet Article, March, 11 2013
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Iraqi Kurdistan was the scene of Saddam’s greatest crime. It is also the home of the country’s newest oil fields, which present both an opportunity – and a threat – to its people
Cockburn: A Government of Institutionalize Klepocracy
Znet Article, March, 09 2013
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Why is the corruption in Iraq so bad? The simple answer: “UN sanctions destroyed Iraqi society in the 1990s and the Americans destroyed the Iraqi state after 2003”
Cockburn: The West's Strange Bedfellows
Znet Article, January, 21 2013
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
It is a ferocious war waged by assassination, massacre, imprisonment and persecution that has killed tens of thousands of people
Cockburn: How Julian Assange's Private Life Helped Conceal The Real Triumph Of Wikileaks
Znet Article, July, 03 2012
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Thanks to WikiLeaks, more information has become available about what the US and allied states are doing and thinking than ever before
Cockburn: Exclusive Dispatch: Assad Blamed For Massacre Of The Innocents
Znet Article, May, 30 2012
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
The war in Syria escalates with the brutal killing of 32 children
Cockburn: The Attempt to Topple President Assad Has Failed
Znet Article, March, 28 2012
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
The EU travel ban serves to show how impotent the outside world is in its dealings with Syria
Cockburn: Sanctions Can Only Deepen the Iran Crisis
Znet Article, February, 01 2012
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Israeli and US hawks are more interested in regime change than the country's nuclear programme
Cockburn: Compared to Syria, the Fall of Libya was a Piece of Cake
Znet Article, November, 23 2011
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Gaddafi's removal affected only one country. If the Assad regime is ousted, the reverberations will be felt across the Middle East for decades to come
Cockburn: Greece in a State of Shock
Znet Article, October, 31 2011
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Up close, the most striking feature of the reforms being forced on Greece by its international creditors is their destructiveness and futility
Cockburn: Greece Crippled as its People Say No to Poverty
Znet Article, October, 20 2011
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
A nation – from youth and unions to middle classes – unite in strikes against cuts
Cockburn: The Middle East Turned Upside-Down
Znet Article, September, 27 2011
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
The political world has turned upside down in the Middle East since the Arab Awakening erupted
Cockburn: Qaddafi Has Lost; But Who Has Won?
Znet Article, August, 25 2011
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
While it is clear Colonel Muammar Gaddafi has lost power, it is not certain who has gained it
Cockburn: Bombing Libya
Znet Article, March, 25 2011
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
In the next few weeks Colonel Muammar Gaddafi is likely to lose power.
Cockburn: Echoes of El Salvador in Tales of US-Approved Death Squads
Znet Article, October, 25 2010
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
The Iraqi documents released by Wikileaks produce significantly more detail on US actions in the war in Iraq, but do they produce anything that we did not know already?
Cockburn: Is Pakistan Falling Apart?
Znet Article, October, 10 2010
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Is Pakistan disintegrating? Are the state and society coming apart under the impact of successive political and natural disasters? The country swirls with rumors about the fall of the civilian government or even a military coup.
Cockburn: Toxic legacy of US assault on Fallujah 'worse than Hiroshima'
Znet Article, August, 05 2010
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
The shocking rates of infant mortality and cancer in Iraqi city raise new questions about battle
Cockburn: Iraq: Paralyzed, Dejected, Corrupt
Znet Article, May, 31 2010
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Seven years after the US and Britain invaded Iraq the country remains highly unstable and fragmented. So divided are parties and communities that no government has emerged from the general election three months ago, which was intended to be a c...
Cockburn: Crushing Haiti, Now as Always
Znet Article, January, 16 2010
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
The US-run aid effort for Haiti is beginning to look chillingly similar to the criminally slow and disorganized US government support for New Orleans after it was devastated by hurricane Katrina in 2005. Four years ago President Bush was famously ...
Cockburn: Walking Into the Al-Qaeda Trap
Znet Article, December, 31 2009
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Yemen has always been a dangerous place. Wonderfully beautiful, the mountainous north of the country is guerrilla paradise with well-defended villages and towns clinging to every peak. The Yemenis are exceptionally hospitable, though this has its ...
Cockburn: A Dysfunctional State
Znet Article, October, 27 2009
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Bombs Will Go Off in Baghdad, Whether the US is There or Not
Cockburn: The Truth About The Afghan Election
Znet Article, August, 23 2009
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
In Iraq and Afghanistan American and British forces became participants in civil wars which their own presence has exacerbated and prolonged. The US and UK governments persistently ignore the extent to which foreign military occupation has destabi...
Cockburn: Elections Shake Kurdistan
Znet Article, July, 27 2009
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
The surprisingly strong showing by a reformist party in Kurdistan elections is shaking the power structure in what has long been the most stable part of Iraq.
Cockburn: Who Killed 120 Civilians? The US Says It's Not a Story
Znet Article, May, 10 2009
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Herat is cut off from the rest of the planet. This was once one of the great cities of the world, an imperial capital drawing its wealth from trade along the Silk Road with Iran, the rest of Afghanistan and central Asia. Above the 800-year-old mos...
Cockburn: The Present State of Iraq
Znet Article, February, 11 2009
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
An assessment of the election and other recent developments in Iraq
Cockburn: Fatah fears Gaza conflict has put Hamas in the ascendancy
Znet Article, January, 27 2009
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Palestinian party created by Yasser Arafat suffers sharp decline in support...
Cockburn: Keep Out... A Message for Foreign Leaders
Znet Article, December, 17 2008
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Official press conferences of any kind seldom produce real news, but the worst are usually those given by foreign leaders on trips abroad in which they and their local ally suggest that they are in control of events and all is going according to p...
Cockburn: It's All Spelled Out in Unpublicized Agreement
Znet Article, December, 12 2008
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
On November 27 the Iraqi parliament voted by a large majority in favor of a security agreement with the US under which the 150,000 American troops in Iraq will withdraw from cities, towns and villages by June 30, 2009 and from all of Iraq by Decem...
Cockburn: Iraq – Violence is down – but not because of America’s ‘surge’
Znet Article, October, 25 2008
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Ongoing violence is down, but Iraq is still the most dangerous country in the world.
Cockburn: Iraq's Nationalist Surge
Znet Article, August, 08 2008
Patrick Cockburn
Cockburn's ZSpace page
Barack Obama was lucky in the timing of his visit to Iraq. He arrived just after the Iraqi prime minister Nouri al-Maliki had rejected a new Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) institutionalizing the US occupation. The Iraqi government is vague a...


