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Previously in JPost UpFront Section
  • 05.11.2004 - PICKING UP THE PIECES
  • 29.10.2004 - The new allies
  • 22.10.2004 - The Beduin threat
  • 15.10.2004 - The morning after
  • 08.10.2004 - The other Jewish state
  • 01.10.2004 - Spirited away
  • 24.09.2004 - Sins of 5764
  • 15.09.2004 - Inside the Iraqi insurgency
  • 10.09.2004 - Ariel Sharon's bottom line
  • 03.09.2004 - Who is this man?
  • 27.08.2004 - A nation in overdraft
  • 20.08.2004 - The new haredim
  • 13.08.2004 - Is Bibi ready?
  • 06.08.2004 - Conversations with my killer
  • 30.07.2004 - Danced all night
  • 23.07.2004 - Guns over Gaza
  • 16.07.2004 - The decline of shame
  • 09.07.2004 - After Mubarak
  • 02.07.2004 - New day in Iraq
  • 18.06.2004 - Key to destruction
  • 11.06.2004 - To divide a city
  • 04.06.2004 - Why can't anyone lead the right?
  • 28.05.2004 - Under the fire
  • 21.05.2004 - Prophet of doom
  • EDITORIAL: Overpromised, underdelivered
    Of all the mistakes President Bush made on the road to Baghdad and in the 15 months thereafter, surely the gravest - if also the most forgivable - was to set the bar for success too high.

    MATTHEW GUTMAN: Fighting ghosts in Baghdad
    The war may be over for Paul Bremer and the rest of the civil administration, but it isn't for the GIs

    ERIK SCHECHTER: Yes, prime minister
    Twenty-six years ago, an axe-wielding hit man sent by Saddam Hussein tried to hack Dr. Iyad Allawi to death as he lay asleep in his Surrey home outside of London

    MAX BOOT: The inevitable rise of neo-imperialism
    The end of the US occupation of Iraq has prompted many windy sum-up pieces in the American press.

    MAX SINGER: Judging success in Iraq
    After the arrow has hit, the bowman's success is in the hands of whoever decides where to paint the target

    AMOTZ ASA-EL: Coming home
    Naomi Shemer's work transcended geography and embraced history, as she captured the moments that shook Israel, whether because they were elating, testing or shocking.

    ANSHEL PFEFFER: Behind the lines
    The Mazuz-Arbel dispute is not yet over, but behind the scenes the lines are being drawn for the next battle over the future of the legal system.

  • HERB KEINON: Diplomacy
  • GIL HOFFMAN: Politics
  • JANINE ZACHARIA: Washington
  • DOUGLAS DAVIS: Europe
  • MELISSA RADLER: Washington
  •