Andrew Stephen
Andrew Stephen was appointed US Editor of the New Statesman in 2001, having been its Washington correspondent and weekly columnist since 1998. He is a regular contributor to BBC news programs and to The Sunday Times Magazine. He has also written for a variety of US newspapers including The New York Times Op-Ed pages. He came to the US in 1989 to be Washington Bureau Chief of The Observer and in 1992 was made Foreign Correspondent of the Year by the American Overseas Press Club for his coverage.
Articles by Andrew Stephen
Results 201 to 210 of 437
World Affairs
Why Serena was booed and heckled at the French Open
- 16 June 2003
Even the suspicion of Gallic or German associations is now enough to get food, cars and drinks boycotted in America
North America
America - Andrew Stephen profiles a terrifying folk hero
- 09 June 2003
Eric Rudolph is alleged to have bombed abortion clinics, a gay club and the Olympic Games. So why do swathes of decent, hard-working Americans hail him as a folk hero?
North America
America - Andrew Stephen sees the hawks circling over Iran
- 02 June 2003
Washington hawks have turned their attention to Iran - accusing it of producing weapons of mass destruction and sheltering al-Qaeda terrorists. Sound familiar?
North America
America - Andrew Stephen on American impatience with Iraq
- 26 May 2003
The Pentagon has wrested control of postwar Iraq from the State Department, just as it took control of the war and the diplomacy that preceded it
North America
America - Andrew Stephen gets spam with everything
- 19 May 2003
This country is drowning in spam. It now accounts for nearly half of all e-mails and it is growing at the rate of 50 per cent a month
North America
America - Andrew Stephen sees little hope for the road map
- 12 May 2003
Tony Blair and John Howard, the Australian PM, may take the Middle East road map seriously, but Bush just wants to sweep it hurriedly under the carpet
North America
America - Andrew Stephen on US economic woes
- 05 May 2003
Rows of grounded airplanes, brand new libraries without any books, millions of lost jobs: the effects of recession are visible everywhere. Can Bush still triumph in 2004?
North America
America - Andrew Stephen asks when Bush will lie again
- 28 April 2003
Notwithstanding some anxious mutterings, the issue of whether weapons of mass destruction will now be found in Iraq has been swept under the carpet in Washington
Politics
A bunch of cocktail-swilling foreigners
- 21 April 2003
The United Nations is viewed with contempt in the US and only one role is envisaged for it: as a rubber stamp for American policies. From Andrew Stephen in Washington
World Affairs
And now, the next American war
- 14 April 2003
Just when you thought the horizon was cloudless, a new conflict is coming to a head. The Pentagon has drawn up some spine-chilling plans for North Korea











