God, Yahweh, also known as!Allah

Politics begins with the way we use words, George Orwell reminded us. At a precarious moment for relations between Muslims and their ‘others’ it is important to recall that Allah is not the name of the Muslim god; that God, Allah and Yahweh are different words for the same deity.

Too much champagne, not enough leadership

The draft EU constitution isn’t all that its supporters like Ben Crum claim: deep compromises on the substance are shown up in divided – or absent – leadership structures, the bifurcated presidents of Commission and Council being the most obvious example. Why not be honest about federalism?

More offensive buffoonery

Silvio says, Gerhard groans, Raffarin Raffarindes. Plus, ©Mother Teresa gets legal.

The nature of Iraqi resistance

The scale and sophistication of attacks on United States forces in Iraq reinforce the problems of American military planners and ground troops alike. Is this a pre-planned campaign, or an insurgent resistance to the occupation fuelled by the depredations of war and the failures of reconstruction?

Iraq and chemical weapons: a view from the inside


In both the United States and Britain, there is passionate contest over the legitimacy and honesty of government attempts to justify war with Iraq, especially claims of the existence of active Iraqi chemical weapons programmes. In an interview of profound insight, the man responsible for chemical weapons destruction operations in Iraq from 1991-94 talks to Anthony Barnett and Caspar Henderson of openDemocracy about the true extent of Iraq's capacity to produce, store and deliver weapons of mass destruction.

A realist security strategy for the United States

What should a National Security Strategy for the United States in the 21st century look like? Two Heritage Foundation analysts see twin dangers in Charles Pena’s focus on homeland security and Philip Bobbitt’s emphasis on alliance-building: isolationism and internationalism. The challenge for the US is to avoid both neglect and overstretch, and to pursue a realist foreign policy that can ensure its global hegemony for centuries to come.

The Estonian Genome Project: a hot media item

The Head of Information of the Estonian Genome Project Foundation replies to Tiina Tasmuth’s critique and argues that those with ‘dissenting views’ are few while the majority of Estonians support the country’s Gene Bank project.

Do the poor like globalisation?

When it comes to globalisation, where does wishful thinking end and clear-headed analysis begin?

European Islam: the return of Hagar

The arrival and settlement of significant Muslim populations in Europe’s heartlands is often met with political oppression, security obsession, and religious suspicion from its governments and media. It need not be so, says a British Muslim convert: Muslim migration could reinvigorate Europe, if the continent can learn to think globally, resist irrational reflexes, and rediscover itself in the encounter with its most significant ‘other’.

Does the CAP fit?

The European Union’s common agricultural policy is coming under sustained attack from all sides. Should it be scrapped, or reformed? An insider from the office of the commissioner for Agriculture for the EU explains some of the principles of reform – decoupling, degressivity, modulation – and argues that the reformed Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) emerging from the Doha Development Round, will lead to a fairer, and sustainable, Europe wide policy.

Poland and the CAP: snatching defeat from the jaws of victory

As the European Union initiates widespread reform of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), Krzysztof Mularczyk tells the sorry tale of Poland’s failure to prepare its huge agricultural sector to meet the challenge of accession. Is Poland set to benefit from the new CAP?

Growing insurgency in Iraq

The US administration’s relentlessly positive view of developments in Iraq is at variance with the reality on the ground. High American casualties signify well-organised resistance, while efforts at peace-building and democratisation look increasingly inadequate. On current trends, there are troubles ahead for American policy and strategy in Iraq and the wider region.

Eigen Volk Eerst!

The far-right Vlaams Blok gained ground in Belgium’s May 2003 elections on an anti-immigrant, nationalist platform. The journalist Nick Ryan spent time there with suits and skinheads. This extract from his book ‘Homeland’ tells the gripping story of their attempts to “save their identity” from “globalisation and mongrelisation” – a battle fought on the streets, in pubs and in the parliament.

Communism, Fascism or Berlusca-ism?

Silvio reigns over Europe’s parade, Mugabe meets Gaddafi, Bush heads to Africa

Reflections on China's internet boom

A persistent western narrative views the internet boom in China as a vehicle for the “opening of a closed society” that is hitherto shielded by an informational “Chinese Wall.” The impenetrable wall may always have been a fiction; in any case, the information explosion of Chinese cyberspace challenges stereotype and heralds the emergence of a new social force: public opinion.

China has been experiencing a digital explosion.

Bitter victory: June 1953 through the East German lens

The 50th anniversary of the 17 June 1953 uprising was filtered through current concerns, including a powerful ‘ostalgie’ for the progressive elements of the old German Democratic Republic. East German historians have proposed an interpretation of the uprising which puts the workers’ protest at the centre. Its achievement should be celebrated, they argue, as it compelled GDR politicians and their Soviet masters to defuse the tensions that the mass strike produced.

South Africa: no justice without reparation

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa has been widely praised as a crucial mechanism of reconciliation in the post-apartheid era. But has its reputation been gained at the cost of a collective evasion?

The challenge is not P2P but democracy and accountability

Siva Vaidhyanathan’s argument is entertaining but simplistic, argues this journalist, programmer and editor of openDemocracy’s Media & the Net theme. A democratic and open network regulated by the state, not techno-anarchism, is the only practical approach.

The 1953 revolt in East Germany: violence and betrayal

The uprising of June 1953 in East Germany revealed the true face of a state dependent for its survival on the control and surveillance of its own citizens. The tragedy is that it took three more decades for the west to understand the nature of its communist adversary and begin the process of liberating the people whose lives it had crushed.

Germany in June: the 1953 uprising in national memory

The popular revolt for freedom and reunification across East Germany in June 1953 was crushed by state violence. These convulsive events had regional, national, and international dimensions that are only now being fully registered in German historical and popular memory. Are the June days trauma or triumph, national wound or source of pride? And to whom do they belong?

This week's editor

Heather McRobie


Niki Seth-Smith is a freelance journalist and co-editor of OurKingdom.