The very idea of America has been whittled down in our schools and institutions—“deconstructed,” some might say—in favor of a kind of cacophonous tribalism. It’s time to restore the values and ideals that keep us together.
S vremena na vreme u domaćim medijima se pojavljuju dramatične priče o tome da deca u Srbiji sve više obolevaju od raka, naročito nakon NATO bombardovanja. Izvor za te tvrdnje je uglavnom preliminarno istraživanje koje sprovodi skupštinska Komisija za ispitivanje posledica NATO bombardovanja, a prema kome je 2016. godine od raka kod nas obolelo 336 dece, što je navodno duplo više od evropskog proseka. Podatke su, kažu, dobili od Instituta Batut. Iako broj obolelih od raka generalno raste i kod nas i u svetu, prema informacijama koje je Raskrikavanje dobilo od ovog instituta, to se ne odnosi i na decu do 19 godina. U Srbiji se, naime, broj obolele dece nije značajno menjao u poslednjih 15 godina.
Alphen, Netherlands. 17 July. This month’s first delivery to Turkey of the advanced Russian S-400 air defence missile system is to some a sign that Ankara is leaving the Western Alliance. Washington has even threatened sanctions under the Countering American Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA). In fact, Turkey is not in Russia’s pocket, as one headline suggested, but Ankara has been alienated from the West. Here is why.
Interview with Robert Pszczel, Senior Officer for Russia and the Western Balkans in NATO’s Public Diplomacy Division, where we discussed NATO engagement in the Western Balkans, Serbia-NATO cooperation, role of KFOR in Kosovo and the NATO perspective of Bosnia and Herzegovina.