Carol Gould is the Philadelphia-born author of Don’t Tread on Me: Anti-Americanism Abroad, Spitfire Girls, and A Room at Camp Pickett, a play about her mother’s experiences as a WAC in World War II; she has just completed films about black GIs and GI babies. Carol has been a panelist on BBC's Any Questions?, hosted by Jonathan Dimbleby, and is a commentator on Sky News, Press TV, the BBC World Service, and Five Live.
Despite clawing their way up the ladder, women remain all but invisible at many conferences on business, finance, and foreign affairs.
If part of the British population rejects one of the country’s most sacred traditions, how can we ever “integrate”?
Moore's comments in a recent interview with Sean Hannity sound even more foolish in the aftermath of Fort Hood.
Peace Prize winners Begin, Peres, and Rabin are erased from a list published by the increasingly anti-Semitic paper.
If people like me do not appear on Iran's controversial Press TV, how will Muslim viewers ever hear a pro-Western, pro-Israeli voice?
A prominent British conservative scoffs at the notion of a "special relationship" with the U.S.
Does the lack of commemoration of World War II anniversaries reflect growing embarrassment about the great Allied victory?
Neither one of them will get the laudatory farewell that Ted Kennedy received — even though they both deserve it.
A wave of public anger has shaken the British government and shows no signs of abating anytime soon.
In their epic clash over the president's Israel policy, Dershowitz is right to give Obama the benefit of the doubt.