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Showing 1 - 7 of 7

OPINION

After 66 years, Cuba's regime faces reckoning

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 21/02/2026

» Fidel Castro and his communist band of brothers have had a good long run in power (66 years), but they have run out of road.

OPINION

Beware of rogue presidents (this time in Korea)

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 07/01/2025

» Turning yourself from a democratically elected president into a dictator is a tricky operation, and most people who try it fail. It's called a "self-coup", from the Spanish auto-golpe, and to try it without first gaining the support of the armed forces is sheer lunacy. Yet, from time to time, an elected president tries to do exactly that.

OPINION

Artificial intelligence for dummies

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 13/11/2023

» I'm sorry that I didn't get my article on artificial intelligence in last week during the "AI Safety Summit" at Bletchley Park, the historic Second World War decoding centre in England. I got distracted by some other stuff that was happening in the Middle East.

OPINION

The impact of Russia's latest war atrocities

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 11/04/2022

» Four years after the Soviet Army fought its way into Berlin in 1945, Moscow built a huge memorial in Treptower Park to the 80,000 Russian and other Soviet soldiers who died taking the city. (5,000 of them are actually buried in the park.) And Berliners instantly took to calling it the "Tomb of the Unknown Rapist".

OPINION

South Korea's gender politics getting ugly

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 10/03/2022

» Gender is not the only issue in this week's election in South Korea, but it's the hot-button topic. It's not clear if there was ever a successful sexual revolution in the country, but the counter-revolution is definitely doing well. The 'F-word' (feminism) is being used a lot by both major parties, and not in a good way.

OPINION

Belarus: The beginning of the end?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 05/08/2020

» 'Stop calling me a mustachioed cockroach," said Alexander Lukashenko. "I am still the president of this country." But that doesn't sound very presidential, does it?

OPINION

Pakistan's army a state above a state

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 25/07/2018

» 'Look, we have no other choice," Pakistan's former prime minister Nawaz Sharif said last May. "These games have gone on too long. Something has to change." Then he left to be with his wife Kulsoom, who is on life support while receiving treatment for cancer in England. But last week he and his daughter Maryam returned to Pakistan to begin serving the jail sentences imposed on them by a Pakistani court.