Links to Recent Articles of Interest
By Juan Cole, TomDispatch, posted March 9
Written  in advance of the 20th anniversary of the Iraq invasion (March 20,  2003). “Who remembers anymore that, in 2003, we were Vladimir Putin?”  The author teaches Middle East history at the University of Michigan.
By David Swanson, World Beyond War, posted March 8
This is a response by a longtime activist to the news (shared at Common Dreams earlier this month)  that Daniel Ellsberg has inoperable pancreatic cancer with an estimated  three to six months to live). The author, among many other antiwar  connections, is executive director of World Beyond War.
 By Ted Galen Carpenter, Responsible Statecraft, posted March 6
On  the trajectory of public-opinion polling in the US on Ukraine and on  past wars in Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. The author is a  senior fellow for defense and foreign policy studies at the Cato  Institute.
By Alan J. Singer, History News Network, posted March 5
Uses the story of  Caroline Ann Trow Lohman, also known as Madame Restell, to challenge Justice Alito's claim that  “an unbroken tradition of prohibiting abortion on pain of criminal  punishment persisted from the earliest days of the common law until  1973.” The author is a historian who teaches in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Technology at Hofstra University.
By Tera W. Hunter, The Nation, posted March 3
“The  top educational priorities in the Sunshine State were apparently  reading, writing, and anti-communism.” A historical article linking to  the present policies of Ron DeSantis. The author teaches history and  African American Studies at Princeton University and is a former  public-school student in Florida.
By Alfred W. McCoy, TomDispatch, posted March 2
 “Reviewing recent developments in the Asia-Pacific region raises a  tried-and-true historical lesson that bears repeating at this dangerous  moment in history: when nations prepare for war, they are far more  likely to go to war.”
The author teaches history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and among his books is In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power (Haymarket Books, 2017).
The author teaches history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and among his books is In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power (Haymarket Books, 2017).
By Timothy Snider, Reader Supported News, posted March 2
A  complex history of Crimea and its relation to nearby nations and  empires, countering claims of.a deep historical connection tieing Crimea  to Russia. The author teaches history at Yale University, specializing  in the modern history of Eastern and Central Europe. 
By Andrew J. Bacevich, Foreign Affairs, posted February 28
“To  reflect on the conduct and the consequences of American wars (and  sundry covert interventions) since 1950 is to confront an appalling  record of recklessness, malfeasance, and waste.” The author is a former  US Army colonel and a professor emeritus of history and international  relations at Boston University.
By Dan Royles, Black Perspectives, posted February 27
Reflections  on the 1923 destruction by a white mob of an entire African American  community in Florida. Thinking about Rosewood, “it’s hard not to also  think about the way that lawmakers in Florida and a  handful of other states are trying to skew the teaching of history away  from any topic that might undermine the idea that we have ever been  anything but great.”
The author teaches history at Florida International University.
The author teaches history at Florida International University.
A  personal note. Since 2009 I've been putting out these occasional  article lists on behalf of Historians Against the War and, since 2017,  Historians for Peace and Democracy. In the case of this particular  e-mailing, “occasional” would be a euphemism, since for no good reason  it's the first one since early November. I thank (and apologize to) the  anonymous reader who's been sending me suggestions for articles the  whole time! Jim O'Brien
