Browse Titles - 665 results
6 Battle for the Gulf, 4 of 6, The 19th Province
in 6 Battle for the Gulf, 4 of 6 (London, England: SW Pictures, 2001), 51 mins
The Cairo conference, the diplomatic offensive, the exodus of refugees from Kuwait, the military mobilization and the Allied decision to go on the offensive on November 8th, 1990. The occupation of Kuwait, the organisation of the resistance, the military build-up of 700,000 troops and the final diplomatic rounds....
Sample
in 6 Battle for the Gulf, 4 of 6 (London, England: SW Pictures, 2001), 51 mins
Description
The Cairo conference, the diplomatic offensive, the exodus of refugees from Kuwait, the military mobilization and the Allied decision to go on the offensive on November 8th, 1990. The occupation of Kuwait, the organisation of the resistance, the military build-up of 700,000 troops and the final diplomatic rounds. The Geneva conference. The air war, the retaliatory Scud missile attacks on Israel and the ground offensive to the moment of Iraq’s s...
The Cairo conference, the diplomatic offensive, the exodus of refugees from Kuwait, the military mobilization and the Allied decision to go on the offensive on November 8th, 1990. The occupation of Kuwait, the organisation of the resistance, the military build-up of 700,000 troops and the final diplomatic rounds. The Geneva conference. The air war, the retaliatory Scud missile attacks on Israel and the ground offensive to the moment of Iraq’s surrender.
Show more
Show less
Field of Study
Global Issues
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Andrew Solomon, 1963-
Date Published / Released
2001
Publisher
SW Pictures
Series
6 Battle for the Gulf
Speaker / Narrator
Andrew Solomon, 1963-
Person Discussed
Saud Nasser Al-Saud Al-Sabah, 1944-2012, Ebraheem M. H. Behbahani, fl. 1990, Abdullah Al-Khandari, fl. 1990, Salem Al-Ali Al-Sabah, 1926-, Salem Al-Dayed, fl. 1990, Mahmoud Al-Doussari, fl. 1990, Saad Al-Salim Al-Sabah, 1930-2008, Barbara Bodine, 1948-, Salem Abdulaziz Al Sabah, fl. 1990, Tariq Aziz, 1936-2000, George H. W. Bush, 1924-2018, James Addison Baker, 1930-, Saddam Hussein, 1937-2006, No...
Saud Nasser Al-Saud Al-Sabah, 1944-2012, Ebraheem M. H. Behbahani, fl. 1990, Abdullah Al-Khandari, fl. 1990, Salem Al-Ali Al-Sabah, 1926-, Salem Al-Dayed, fl. 1990, Mahmoud Al-Doussari, fl. 1990, Saad Al-Salim Al-Sabah, 1930-2008, Barbara Bodine, 1948-, Salem Abdulaziz Al Sabah, fl. 1990, Tariq Aziz, 1936-2000, George H. W. Bush, 1924-2018, James Addison Baker, 1930-, Saddam Hussein, 1937-2006, Norman Schwarzkopf, 1934-, Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, 1929-
Show more
Show less
Topic / Theme
Iraq (1970s - Present), International sanctions, Diplomatic missions, Air raids, Iran-Iraq War, 1980-1988, History, Diplomacy, Politics & Policy, Law, British, Americans, Iraqis, Kuwaitis, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2001 SW Pictures
×
6 Battle for the Gulf, 5 of 6, A Different Kind of War
in 6 Battle for the Gulf, 5 of 6 (London, England: SW Pictures, 2001), 50 mins
The air war by the Allies begins. The Allies started jamming Baghdad’s radar defences. The jamming gave the game away. Iraqi radars were blinded, but 3,000 anti-aircraft guns and 60 missile batteries began firing wildly into the sky. Allied missiles destroyed the main telephone tower. Another laser-guided bomb h...
Sample
in 6 Battle for the Gulf, 5 of 6 (London, England: SW Pictures, 2001), 50 mins
Description
The air war by the Allies begins. The Allies started jamming Baghdad’s radar defences. The jamming gave the game away. Iraqi radars were blinded, but 3,000 anti-aircraft guns and 60 missile batteries began firing wildly into the sky. Allied missiles destroyed the main telephone tower. Another laser-guided bomb hit the headquarters controlling Baghdad’s air defences. Other pilots destroyed government ministries and a key communications tower....
The air war by the Allies begins. The Allies started jamming Baghdad’s radar defences. The jamming gave the game away. Iraqi radars were blinded, but 3,000 anti-aircraft guns and 60 missile batteries began firing wildly into the sky. Allied missiles destroyed the main telephone tower. Another laser-guided bomb hit the headquarters controlling Baghdad’s air defences. Other pilots destroyed government ministries and a key communications tower. With Baghdad’s air defence headquarters destroyed and its radar system in chaos, hundreds of Iraq’s fighters couldn’t operate. Only a few struggled into the air. With hundreds of allied aircraft flying, AWACS planes packed with computer equipment helped control the battle. On the first night the coalition armada systematically attacked Iraq’s war machine. The factories that made chemical and biological weapons, the Scud missile plants – in all over 200 different targets were hit. It was a new benchmark in the history of warfare, the first time the world had seen precision bombing on a vast scale. And defying all expectations, only one allied pilot, an American, had been killed. With air superiority established over the Iraqis, the coalition air planners were now confident enough to launch conventional aircraft on massive daylight raids. When Saddam met with his ministers after the first night’s bombing, he had already ordered action he believed would shatter the coalition of Western and Arab countries attacking Iraq. Scud missile launchers hidden in the desert fired at Israel. The Scuds were fired indiscriminately at Israel’s largest city. Saddam calculated the Israelis would retaliate and join the conflict. The Arabs in the coalition would then refuse to fight alongside Israel. The coalition would collapse and so would the war. Soon more Scuds were on the way. Israel’s nuclear forces now went on full alert. Sixty Israeli jets took to the skies. Early warning radar appeared to show Iraqi bombers headed for Israel. In the Pentagon, the defence secretary picked up the hotline to Tel Aviv. Israeli retaliation seemed inevitable. The Israeli Army reported nerve gas in the debris of one of the missiles. Israelis prepared for the worst. Ultimately, none of the eight Scuds that landed proved to have chemical warheads. After some discussion, Baghdad had decided the Israelis might retaliate against a chemical attack with nuclear weapons. The man who would decide what happened next was Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. He and George Bush disliked each other and when Bush telephoned him, Shamir angrily told the president that if America couldn’t stop the Scuds, the Israeli Air Force would. The Israeli Defence Minister, Moshe Arens, told us that Bush said to Shamir, pleaded with Shamir, tried to cajole Shamir that Israel not take any military action, that this would be injurious to the allied cause, that in the final analysis, that this would also be injurious to Israel’s cause. Shamir told us what he said to Bush – “It’s very difficult, Mr. President. It’s very difficult. I don’t know what the day of tomorrow will bring, but at this moment, we will act accordingly, accordingly with your concepts.” On February 21st, forty-eight hours before the ground attack was due, Iraq’s foreign minister, Tariq Aziz, arrived in Moscow. Saddam’s admission that he was willing to withdraw from Kuwait had led to some frantic Soviet diplomacy to save their old ally from defeat. Aziz went straight to the Kremlin. The Soviet president was waiting. Aziz told Gorbachev Saddam wouldn’t accept the U.N. resolutions that called for Iraq to recognize Kuwait’s independence and pay it compensation. But, he said, Iraq would withdraw from Kuwait. Gorbachev thought this was good enough. He called the White House. The president summoned his key advisors to discuss the Soviet offer. If Iraq withdrew, it would mean no bloody ground war, but Saddam would walk away unpunished, his war machine undefeated. At dawn the president called Gorbachev to tell him the deal was unacceptable. Bush’s carefully crafted international coalition was fragmenting. The French president, Francois Mitterrand, called to demand more time for diplomacy. As hundreds of oil wells blazed across Kuwait, the president issued a final ultimatum. Saddam ignored the warning. To obey, he believed, would have humiliated him in the eyes of the Arab world. Within a month of the air war, the ground war by the Allies began to force Iraqi troops out of Kuwait. It was a very short and comprehensive victory.
Show more
Show less
Field of Study
Global Issues
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Andrew Solomon, 1963-
Date Published / Released
2001
Publisher
SW Pictures
Series
6 Battle for the Gulf
Speaker / Narrator
Andrew Solomon, 1963-
Person Discussed
Tariq Aziz, 1936-2000, Anatoly S. Chernyaev, 1921-2017, James Taylor, fl. 1991, Khalid bin Sultan Al Saud, 0049-, Adi Al-Mutairi, fl. 1991, Martin Stanton, fl. 1990, Hadhim Ahmad al-Tai, 1942-, Moshe Arens, 1925-2019, Mudar Badran, 1934-, Charles A. Horner, 1936-, Neged Al-Bora'i, fl. 1991, Mustafa Hamarneh, 1953-, Mustafa Khalil, fl. 1991, Dick Cheney, 1941-, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, 1949-, Mahm...
Tariq Aziz, 1936-2000, Anatoly S. Chernyaev, 1921-2017, James Taylor, fl. 1991, Khalid bin Sultan Al Saud, 0049-, Adi Al-Mutairi, fl. 1991, Martin Stanton, fl. 1990, Hadhim Ahmad al-Tai, 1942-, Moshe Arens, 1925-2019, Mudar Badran, 1934-, Charles A. Horner, 1936-, Neged Al-Bora'i, fl. 1991, Mustafa Hamarneh, 1953-, Mustafa Khalil, fl. 1991, Dick Cheney, 1941-, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, 1949-, Mahmoud Hadary, fl. 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev, 1931-, Norman Schwarzkopf, 1934-, Bernard Shaw, 1940-, Walter Cronkite, 1916-2009, George H. W. Bush, 1924-2018, Saddam Hussein, 1937-2006
Show more
Show less
Topic / Theme
Iraq (1970s - Present), Escalation (Conflict), Military alliances, Air raids, Persian Gulf War, 1991, Political and Social Movements, War and Violence, History, Diplomacy, Politics & Policy, Law, Russians, Arabs, Israelis, Iraqis, Americans, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2001 SW Pictures
×
20 Days in Mariupol
directed by Mstyslav Chernov, 1985-; produced by Mstyslav Chernov, 1985-, Derl McCrudden, fl. 1988, Raney Aronson-Rath, fl. 1997 and Michelle Mizner, fl. 2007-2016, Frontline (Television program), Associated Press, Public Broadcasting Service and GBH Boston (Arlington, VA: Public Broadcasting Service, 2023), 1 hour 34 mins
This program contains graphic language and imagery which may not be suitable to all audiences.
The award-winning film from the last international journalists inside the Russian siege of Mariupol. An extraordinary account, seen through the lens of the AP’s Mstyslav Chernov and two colleagues documenting the atrocities and their own escape. DISCLAIMER: This program contains graphic language and imagery whic...
Sample
directed by Mstyslav Chernov, 1985-; produced by Mstyslav Chernov, 1985-, Derl McCrudden, fl. 1988, Raney Aronson-Rath, fl. 1997 and Michelle Mizner, fl. 2007-2016, Frontline (Television program), Associated Press, Public Broadcasting Service and GBH Boston (Arlington, VA: Public Broadcasting Service, 2023), 1 hour 34 mins
Description
The award-winning film from the last international journalists inside the Russian siege of Mariupol. An extraordinary account, seen through the lens of the AP’s Mstyslav Chernov and two colleagues documenting the atrocities and their own escape. DISCLAIMER: This program contains graphic language and imagery which may not be suitable to all audiences.
Field of Study
Global Issues
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
Mstyslav Chernov, 1985-, Derl McCrudden, fl. 1988, Raney Aronson-Rath, fl. 1997, Michelle Mizner, fl. 2007-2016, Frontline (Television program), Associated Press, Public Broadcasting Service, GBH Boston
Author / Creator
Mstyslav Chernov, 1985-
Date Published / Released
2023
Publisher
Public Broadcasting Service
Speaker / Narrator
Mstyslav Chernov, 1985-
Person Discussed
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, 1978-, Vladimir Putin, 1952-
Topic / Theme
Sieges, Bombardment, Death tolls (Casualties), War victims, War casualties, Invasions, Atrocities, Russo-Ukrainian War, 20 February 2014 to present, Ukrainians, Russians
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2023 The Associated Press; WGBH Educational Foundation
×
60 Minutes, Back To My Lai
produced by Tom Anderson, fl. 2001-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Mike Wallace, 1918-2012, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 1998), 13 mins
March 29, 1998 - Larry Colburn and Hugh Thompson, members of an Army helicopter crew, risked their lives in 1968 to save Vietnamese civilians from American GIs during the My Lai massacre. Now, Colburn and Thompson return to My Lai with Mike Wallace to meet the survivors.
Sample
produced by Tom Anderson, fl. 2001-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Mike Wallace, 1918-2012, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 1998), 13 mins
Description
March 29, 1998 - Larry Colburn and Hugh Thompson, members of an Army helicopter crew, risked their lives in 1968 to save Vietnamese civilians from American GIs during the My Lai massacre. Now, Colburn and Thompson return to My Lai with Mike Wallace to meet the survivors.
Date Written / Recorded
1998-03-29
Field of Study
Media Studies
Content Type
News story
Contributor
Tom Anderson, fl. 2001-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System
Author / Creator
Mike Wallace, 1918-2012
Date Published / Released
1998-03-29
Publisher
Columbia Broadcasting System
Series
60 Minutes
Person Discussed
Lawrence Colburn, fl. 1968, Hugh Thompson, Jr., 1943-2006
Topic / Theme
Vietnamese people, War, Massacres, Survivors, Vietnam War, 1956-1975, My Lai Massacre, Vietnam, March 16-18, 1968, War and Violence, Late 20th Century (1975–2000), Vietnamese, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
© 1998 CBS News
×
60 Minutes, Body Of Evidence
produced by Mary Mapes, fl. 2003 and Michael Rosenbaum, 1948-2012, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Scott Pelley, 1957-, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 1999), 13 mins
60 Minutes follows a team of FBI investigators into Kosovo where they attempt to collect evidence for war crimes trials. Scott Pelley reports.
Sample
produced by Mary Mapes, fl. 2003 and Michael Rosenbaum, 1948-2012, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Scott Pelley, 1957-, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 1999), 13 mins
Description
60 Minutes follows a team of FBI investigators into Kosovo where they attempt to collect evidence for war crimes trials. Scott Pelley reports.
Date Written / Recorded
1999-07-13
Field of Study
Media Studies
Content Type
News story
Contributor
Mary Mapes, fl. 2003, Michael Rosenbaum, 1948-2012, Columbia Broadcasting System
Author / Creator
Scott Pelley, 1957-
Date Published / Released
1999-07-13
Publisher
Columbia Broadcasting System
Series
60 Minutes
Person Discussed
Bill Rodriguez, fl. 1999, Pat Mallot, fl. 1999, Art Eberhart, fl. 1999, Nasmi Hoxha, fl. 1999, Slobodan Milošević, 1941-2006
Topic / Theme
Criminal investigations, Bodies, bones and remains, Forensics (Evidence), War crimes tribunals, War crimes, Kosovo War, 1998-1999, War and Violence, Serbians, Albanians, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
Copyright © 1999 by Columbia Broadcasting System
×
60 Minutes, Agent Orange
presented by Lesley Stahl, 1941-; produced by Andrew Tkach, fl. 2003-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Christiane Amanpour, 1958-, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 1999), 12 mins
Almost 4 decades after the Vietnam war ended the U.S. government has finally agreed to help clean up the highly toxic dioxin residue left behind at its former airfield in Danang. It was the main air base where the defoliant Agent Orange was loaded onto planes and sprayed on jungles to deny cover to Vietnamese figh...
Sample
presented by Lesley Stahl, 1941-; produced by Andrew Tkach, fl. 2003-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Christiane Amanpour, 1958-, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 1999), 12 mins
Description
Almost 4 decades after the Vietnam war ended the U.S. government has finally agreed to help clean up the highly toxic dioxin residue left behind at its former airfield in Danang. It was the main air base where the defoliant Agent Orange was loaded onto planes and sprayed on jungles to deny cover to Vietnamese fighters. In this report producer Andrew Tkach and Christiane Amanpour examined the terrible toll dioxin may have had on U.S. servicemen an...
Almost 4 decades after the Vietnam war ended the U.S. government has finally agreed to help clean up the highly toxic dioxin residue left behind at its former airfield in Danang. It was the main air base where the defoliant Agent Orange was loaded onto planes and sprayed on jungles to deny cover to Vietnamese fighters. In this report producer Andrew Tkach and Christiane Amanpour examined the terrible toll dioxin may have had on U.S. servicemen and Vietnamese civilians.
Show more
Show less
Date Written / Recorded
1999-12-12
Field of Study
Media Studies
Content Type
News story
Contributor
Andrew Tkach, fl. 2003-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System
Author / Creator
Christiane Amanpour, 1958-, Lesley Stahl, 1941-
Date Published / Released
1999-12-12
Publisher
Columbia Broadcasting System
Series
60 Minutes
Person Discussed
George Claxton, fl. 1999, Arnold Schecter, fl. 1999, Le Diem Huong, fl. 1999, Ralph Brands, 1950-, Tran Manh Hung, fl. 1999, Larry Lay, fl. 1999, Tom Boivin, fl. 1999
Topic / Theme
Genetic and hereditary diseases, Health, War, Vietnamese people, Soldiers, Chemical warfare, Vietnam War, 1956-1975, Climate and the Environment, Disease and Health, Late 20th Century (1975–2000), Americans, Vietnamese, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
Copyright © 1999 by Columbia Broadcasting System
×
60 Minutes, The Weapon That Failed
produced by Mary Walsh, fl. 1979, Columbia Broadcasting System, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 2000), 12 mins
The air war against Serbia has been billed as the most accurate in history. The general who commanded it told Congress every weapon performed up to or beyond expectations. But CBS News Pentagon Correspondent David Martin says that although the military gets high grades for its performance in Kosovo, there is one e...
Sample
produced by Mary Walsh, fl. 1979, Columbia Broadcasting System, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 2000), 12 mins
Description
The air war against Serbia has been billed as the most accurate in history. The general who commanded it told Congress every weapon performed up to or beyond expectations. But CBS News Pentagon Correspondent David Martin says that although the military gets high grades for its performance in Kosovo, there is one exception.
Field of Study
Media Studies
Content Type
News story
Contributor
Mary Walsh, fl. 1979, Columbia Broadcasting System, David Martin, 1915-1995
Author / Creator
Scott Pelley, 1957-, David Martin, 1943-
Date Published / Released
2000-01-09
Publisher
Columbia Broadcasting System
Series
60 Minutes
Speaker / Narrator
David Martin, 1915-1995
Topic / Theme
Air raids, War, Weapons and ordnance, Kosovo War, 1998-1999, War and Violence, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2000 by Columbia Broadcasting System
×
60 Minutes, The Reckoning
produced by Shawn Efran, fl. 2004-2016, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Scott Pelley, 1957-, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 2000), 11 mins
Scott Pelley reports on the overthrow of Slobodan Milosevic.
Sample
produced by Shawn Efran, fl. 2004-2016, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Scott Pelley, 1957-, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 2000), 11 mins
Description
Scott Pelley reports on the overthrow of Slobodan Milosevic.
Date Written / Recorded
2000-10-24
Field of Study
Media Studies
Content Type
News story
Contributor
Shawn Efran, fl. 2004-2016, Columbia Broadcasting System
Author / Creator
Scott Pelley, 1957-
Date Published / Released
2000-10-24
Publisher
Columbia Broadcasting System
Series
60 Minutes
Person Discussed
Milan St. Protić, 1957-, Vogislav Koštunica, 1944-, Slobodan Milošević, 1941-2006
Topic / Theme
War, Genocide, Government, War crimes tribunals, War crimes, Democracy, Heads of state, Revolutions, Kosovo War, 1998-1999, War and Violence, Political and Social Movements, 21st Century in World History (2001– )
Copyright Message
© 2000 CBS News
×
60 Minutes, To Be Continued
produced by Joel Bernstein, fl. 2003-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Bob Simon, 1941-2015, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 2000), 12 mins
Children on the frontlines in The Middle East. When 12-year-old Mohammed al-Durah was shot and killed by Israeli soldiers as he lay cradled in his father's arms, the entire world was appalled. As 60 Minutes Correspondent Bob Simon found out, there are no signs that it's about to stop.
Sample
produced by Joel Bernstein, fl. 2003-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Bob Simon, 1941-2015, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 2000), 12 mins
Description
Children on the frontlines in The Middle East. When 12-year-old Mohammed al-Durah was shot and killed by Israeli soldiers as he lay cradled in his father's arms, the entire world was appalled. As 60 Minutes Correspondent Bob Simon found out, there are no signs that it's about to stop.
Date Written / Recorded
2000-10-24
Field of Study
Media Studies
Content Type
News story
Contributor
Joel Bernstein, fl. 2003-2015, Columbia Broadcasting System
Author / Creator
Bob Simon, 1941-2015
Date Published / Released
2000-10-24
Publisher
Columbia Broadcasting System
Series
60 Minutes
Person Discussed
Hanan Ashrawi, 1946-, Benny Gantz, 1959-, Marwan Barghouti, 1959-
Topic / Theme
Attacks (Battles), Civilian war casualties, Children, War, Second Intifada, September 2000-2005, First Intifada, Palestine, December 1987-1993, Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, 1993-, War and Violence, Palestinians, Israelis, 21st Century in World History (2001– )
Copyright Message
© 2000 CBS News
×
60 Minutes, Saddam (Part One)
produced by Jim Murphy and Ana Real, fl. 2009-2014, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Dan Rather, 1931-, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 2003), 15 mins
Saddam Hussein is interviewed by Dan Rather prior to the invasion of Iraq by the coalition forces, March 2003. Saddam Hussein says that Iraq does not have weapons of mass destruction, that he wants to debate Mr. Bush, and that he will not set fire to the oil fields.
Sample
produced by Jim Murphy and Ana Real, fl. 2009-2014, Columbia Broadcasting System; interview by Dan Rather, 1931-, in 60 Minutes (New York, NY: Columbia Broadcasting System, 2003), 15 mins
Description
Saddam Hussein is interviewed by Dan Rather prior to the invasion of Iraq by the coalition forces, March 2003. Saddam Hussein says that Iraq does not have weapons of mass destruction, that he wants to debate Mr. Bush, and that he will not set fire to the oil fields.
Date Written / Recorded
2003-02-26
Field of Study
Media Studies
Content Type
News story
Contributor
Jim Murphy, Ana Real, fl. 2009-2014, Columbia Broadcasting System
Author / Creator
Dan Rather, 1931-
Date Published / Released
2003-02-26
Publisher
Columbia Broadcasting System
Series
60 Minutes
Person Discussed
Saddam Hussein, 1937-2006, Osama Bin Laden, 1957-2011, George Walker Bush, 1946-
Topic / Theme
Terrorism, Disarmament, War, Heads of state, Biological weapons, International relations, September 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001, Political and Social Movements, War and Violence, 21st Century in World History (2001– )
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2003 by Columbia Broadcasting System
×