John Pilger; When Saddam hanged a British journalist in 1990, MI5 had the journalist smeared in the Sun, and the Mail agreed he was a spy. What did Blair say? I can find nothing, New Statesman, 03 March 2003, pp. 11-12.
Paperbacks; What happens when society stops making sense; The New Rulers of the World; By John Pilger, The Independent on Sunday, 20 April 2003, p. 19.
John Pilger; Something deeply corrupt is consuming journalism. A war so one-sided it was hardly a war was reported like a Formula One race, as the teams sped to the chequered flag in Baghdad, New Statesman, 28 April 2003, pp. 11-12.
John Pilger; The official version is that Britain's foreign policy is basically benevolent: that it promotes democracy, peace and human rights. The truth is that Britain supports terrorism, New Statesman, 26 May 2003, pp. 11-12.
ns cover story; American terrorist; Forget Hutton. He will not reveal what the US and UK authorities really don't want you to know: that radiation illnesses caused by uranium weapons are now common in Iraq, New Statesman, 12 January 2004, pp. 18-20.
John Pilger; The war correspondent James Cameron was smeared as a "dupe of communism". "When they call you a dupe," he told me, "the're really complaining that you are not their dupe", New Statesman, 09 February 2004, pp. 15-16.
John Pilger; When even Gavin Esler eulogises Ronald Reagan, we're in trouble. Here is a list of books that offer New Statesman readers an antodote to their hagiographies of power, New Statesman, 28 June 2004, pp. 11-12.
John Pilger; Aboriginal children today have the same life expectancy as white children in 1900. Yet most Australians can't understand why there was an uprising in Sydney this year, New Statesman, 12 July 2004, p. 11.