Antiwar.com#Antiwar Radio
{{Short description|Online non-interventionism magazine}}
{{Infobox website
| name = Antiwar.com
| logo = Antiwar logo.png
| logo_alt = Logo of Antiwar.com depicting the word "Anti" in black text, "War" in red text below it, to the right is ".com" in tilted 90° blue text, and below all of them is the motto "Your best sources for antiwar news, viewpoints, and activities"
| screenshot = Antiwar.com screenshot April 7 2025.png
| caption = Screenshot of Antiwar.com on April 7, 2025
| collapsible = yes
| type = Advocacy journalism
| founded = 1995
| owner = Randolph Bourne Institute
| editor = Eric Garris
| url = {{URL|https://antiwar.com/}}
}}
Antiwar.com is an American political website founded in 1995 that describes itself as devoted to non-interventionism and as opposing imperialism and war. It has a right-wing libertarian perspective and is a project of the Randolph Bourne Institute. The website states that it is "fighting the next information war”.
Stance
The site's first objective, in its own words, "was to fight against intervention in the Balkans under the Clinton presidency." It says it "applied the same principles to Clinton's campaigns in Haiti and Kosovo and bombings of Sudan and Afghanistan." Antiwar.com opposed the US wars in Iraq{{Cite web|url=http://www.antiwar.com/justin/j031903.html|title=Shine, Perishing Republic, by Justin Raimondo|website=www.antiwar.com}} and Afghanistan{{Cite web|url=http://www.antiwar.com/orig/browne3.html|title=The Cycle of Violence|website=www.antiwar.com}} and generally opposes interventionism, including the US bombing of Serbia and the US occupation of Afghanistan. It has also condemned aggressive military action and other forms of belligerence on the part of other governments, as well as what contributors view as the fiscal and civil liberties consequences of war.[http://antiwar.com/who.php “Who We Are”], Antiwar.com (Randolph Bourne Institute, 2010) (April 21, 2010).{{Third-party inline|date=December 2023|reason=WP:INDY RS needed for Wikivoice}}
Wen Stephenson of The Atlantic described the site in 1999 as marked by "a decidely {{sic}} right-wing cast of thought."Wen Stephenson, [https://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/unbound/citation/wc990414.htm “Not Your Father's Antiwar Movement,”] The Atlantic (April 14, 1999) (retrieved April 21, 2010). Its founders described themselves as libertarians,[http://www.antiwar.com/faq.php “Frequently Asked Questions,”] Antiwar.com (Randolph Bourne Institute, n.d.) (April 21, 2010) and the two principal co-founders were involved in libertarian Republican politics at the time. The Guardian described it in as "libertarian, anti-interventionist" in 2016;{{cite web |last=Wilson |first=Jason |date=2016-12-30 |title=Burst your bubble: five conservative articles to read before 2016 ends |url=http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/dec/30/conservative-liberal-news-filter-bubble |access-date=2022-02-24 |website=The Guardian |quote=[Raimondo] is editorial director of antiwar.com, which runs a libertarian, anti-interventionist line on US foreign policy – as such it should be seen alongside paleoconservative “America First” outlets like Pat Buchanan’s American Conservative. Figures like Raymond have entertained high hopes about Trump’s anti-interventionist noises during the campaign season.}} James Kirchick in The Washington Post called it a "paleoconservative clearinghouse" in 2018;{{cite news |last=Kirchick |first=James |date=2018-04-18 |title=Perspective - Trump once claimed Syria could lead to 'World War III.' Good thing he wised up. |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/posteverything/wp/2018/04/18/trump-once-claimed-syria-could-lead-to-world-war-iii-that-idea-has-soviet-origins/ |access-date=2022-02-24 |newspaper=Washington Post}} and Salon.com described in 2021 it as "right-wing".{{cite web |last=Henderson |first=Alex |date=2021-08-29 |title=Kevin McCarthy's Afghanistan contradictions baffle reporters at press conference |url=https://www.salon.com/2021/08/29/kevin-mccarthys-afghanistan-contradictions-baffle-reporters-at-press-conference_partner/ |access-date=2022-02-24 |website=Salon}}Other sources describing it as "conservative" include Barbara Clare Foley in The Minnesota Review.{{cite journal | last=Foley | first=Barbara | title=Racism Redux: David Horowitz Then and Now | journal=The Minnesota Review | volume=2006 | issue=67 | date=2006-11-01 | issn=0026-5667 | doi=10.1215/00265667-2006-67-123 | pages=123–127 | url=https://read.dukeupress.edu/the-minnesota-review/article/2006/67/123/47654/Racism-Redux-David-Horowitz-Then-and-Now | access-date=2022-02-24| url-access=subscription }}
The site publishes opinion from a range of perspectives, publishing "critiques of American foreign policy from the far left and the far right," according to The New Yorker,{{cite magazine |author=Andrew Marantz |date=2017-10-09 |title=Birth of a White Supremacist |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/10/16/birth-of-a-white-supremacist |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171009091509/https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/10/16/birth-of-a-white-supremacist |archive-date=2017-10-09 |access-date=2022-02-24 |magazine=The New Yorker}} and featuring writers such as the paleoconservative isolationist Pat Buchanan, right libertarians such as Ron Paul, and left libertarians such as Noam Chomsky, Juan Cole,Crane, David Wade, "Linkages: Political Topography and Networked Topology" in Transmedia Frictions: The Digital, the Arts, and the Humanities, University of California Press, July 25, 2014, p. 225 and Code Pink co-founder Medea Benjamin.
History
The site was founded on 24 December 1995{{Cite web |date=2010-12-23 |title=Happy Birthday Antiwar.com - Antiwar.com Blog |url=https://www.antiwar.com/blog/2010/12/23/happybirthday/ |access-date=2025-01-14 |website=Antiwar |language=en-US}} by Justin Raimondo and Eric Garris,{{cite web |date=2019-07-01 |title=Gay rights, anti-war activist Justin Raimondo dies at 67 |url=https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/gay-rights-antiwar-activist-justin-raimondo-dies-67-64050668 |access-date=2022-02-24 |website=ABC News}} as a response to the Bosnian war. It is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit foundation, operating under the auspices of the Randolph Bourne Institute, based in Atherton, California. It was previously{{when|date=February 2022}} affiliated with the Center for Libertarian Studies and functioned before that{{when|date=February 2022}} as an independent, ad-supported website.For more historical information, see [http://www.antiwar.com/faq.php “Frequently Asked Questions”], Antiwar.com (Randolph Bourne Institute, 2010) (April 22, 2010).
In 2006, Google suspended it from its AdSense advertising network, which was then the source of a significant portion of its income, due to its hosting of explicit photos of abuses committed by United States troops at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, categorised by Google as "gore".{{cite web |last=Pareene |first=Alex |date=2015-03-19 |title=Updated: Google Suspends Site from Ad Network for Abu Ghraib Photo |url=https://www.gawker.com/google-suspends-anti-war-site-from-ad-network-for-abu-g-1692398286 |access-date=2022-02-24 |website=Gawker}}{{unreliable source?|certain=y|date=April 2022}}
= Lawsuit against the FBI =
In 2011, the site discovered it was being monitored by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.{{cite web |last=Ackerman |first=Spencer |date=2013-11-06 |title=FBI monitored anti-war website in error for six years, documents show |url=http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/06/fbi-monitored-anti-war-website-in-error-documents |access-date=2022-02-24 |website=The Guardian}} After their Freedom of Information Act request failed to produce results, they worked with the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California which in May 2013 filed a freedom of the press lawsuit for full FBI records on Antiwar.com, Eric Garris and Justin Raimondo.Ryan J. Reilly, [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/21/antiwar-com-fbi-surveillance_n_3314830.html AntiWar.com Editors Sue Over FBI Surveillance], The Huffington Post, May 21, 2013.Julia Harumi Mass, Staff Attorney, [https://www.aclu.org/blog/national-security-free-speech/sloppy-fbi-work-leads-spying-journalists Sloppy FBI Work Leads to Spying on Journalists], American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California press release, November 6, 2013. The documents received in November 2013 indicated that the FBI in San Francisco, and later in Newark, New Jersey, began monitoring the site after Eric Garris passed along to the FBI a threat to hack the Antiwar.com website. The FBI mistakenly took this as an actual threat against its own website and began monitoring Antiwar.com and its editors.[https://www.theguardian.com/world/interactive/2013/nov/06/doj-fbi-monitoring-antiwar-com-document DOJ documents show FBI monitoring of antiwar.com (Documents)], The Guardian, November 6, 2013. Eric Garris demanded the FBI correct its file.Kelley Vlahos, [http://www.theamericanconservative.com/antiwar-com-editor-demands-fbi-file-fix/ Antiwar.com Editor Demands FBI File Fix], American Conservative, November 15, 2013. In September 2019, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the FBI must delete its memo documenting Garris' First Amendment activities.{{cite web |last=Egelko |first=Bob |date=2019-09-12 |title=Appeals court tells FBI it must expunge old memo on antiwar website |url=https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Appeals-court-tells-FBI-it-must-expunge-old-memo-14435806.php |access-date=2022-02-24 |website=San Francisco Chronicle}}{{Cite web |last=Mackey |first=Aaron |date=2019-09-13 |title=Victory! Individuals Can Force Government to Purge Records of Their First Amendment Activity |url=https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/09/victory-individuals-can-force-government-purge-records-their-first-amendment |access-date=2020-06-05 |website=Electronic Frontier Foundation |language=en}}
In 2013, Eric Garris, Justin Raimondo, and Antiwar.com began a lawsuit against the FBI for incorrectly identifying Garris as a national security "threat," and conducting an investigation into Antiwar.com as a potential threat. The lawsuit was conducted by the American Civil Liberties Union.Adam Klasfeld, [https://www.courthousenews.com/antiwar-com-sues-fbi-for-threat-assessment/ “Antiwar.com Sues FBI for ‘Threat Assessment’”], Courthouse News Service (May 23, 2013) The lawsuit stated that the FBI had incorrectly claimed that Garris had threatened to hack the FBI website after Garris reported a threat he received against Antiwar.com. The federal court ordered the FBI to amend their files and issue a correction to Garris.Spencer Ackerman, [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/06/fbi-monitored-anti-war-website-in-error-documents “FBI monitored anti-war website in error for six years, documents show”], The Guardian (Nov. 6, 2013) In 2017, the court ordered the FBI to give Antiwar.com access to all the records of the investigation without redaction and to pay $300,000 to the ACLU lawyers.Helen Christophi, [https://www.courthousenews.com/fbi-agrees-give-records-anti-war-reporters/ “FBI Agrees to Give Records to Anti-War Reporters”], Courthouse News Service (April 17, 2017) Antiwar.com lost the part of the case that claimed violations of the Privacy Act by the FBI. Antiwar.com and the ACLU appealed the Privacy Act claim and the appeal went to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. In 2019, the 9th Circuit three-judge panel unanimously ruled against the FBI and order them to expunge all records from the investigation.Eric Garris, [https://www.antiwar.com/blog/2019/06/12/antiwar-com-vs-fbi-appeal-hearing-in-the-9th-circuit-video/ “Antiwar.com vs. FBI Appeal Hearing in the 9th Circuit (video)”], Antiwar.com (June 12, 2019) Civil Liberties groups like the ACLU and the Electronic Frontier Foundation hailed the ruling as a victory for privacy rights of journalists and activists.Aaron Mackey [https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/09/victory-individuals-can-force-government-purge-records-their-first-amendment “Victory! Individuals Can Force Government to Purge Records of Their First Amendment Activity”], Electronic Frontier Foundation (September 13, 2019)
Personnel
Notable site personnel have included:See [http://www.antiwar.com/who.php “Who We Are”], Antiwar.com (Randolph Bourne Institute, 2010) (April 22, 2010), for a current list of staff members.
- Justin Raimondo (1951–2019), founder and editorial director
- Eric Garris, founder, webmaster, and managing editor
- Scott Horton (born 1976), assistant editor
Notable contributors
{{Div col|colwidth=22em}}
- Praful Bidwai
- Alan Bock
- Ivan Eland
- Philip Giraldi
- Ran HaCohen
- David R. Henderson
- Justin Raimondo
- Michael Scheuer
- George Szamuely
{{div col end}}
The site syndicates columns and op-eds by such authors as:{{cn|date=April 2022}}
{{Div col|colwidth=22em}}
- Pat Buchanan
- Kevin Carson
- Noam Chomsky
- Alexander Cockburn
- Juan Cole
- Jonathan Cook
- Reese Erlich
- Robert Fisk
- Kathy Kelly
- Jack Matlock
- William Lind
- Ron Paul
- John Pilger
- Gareth Porter
- Charley Reese
- Paul Craig Roberts
- Cindy Sheehan
- Norman Solomon
{{div col end}}
Antiwar Radio
Antiwar Radio is hosted by Scott Horton and others including Charles Goyette.{{cn|date=April 2022}} It features interviews focused on war, international relations, the growth of state power, civil liberties, and related matters. Guests have included:{{cn|date=April 2022}}
{{Div col|colwidth=22em}}
- Mark Ames
- Julian Assange
- David T. Beito
- James Bovard
- Francis Boyle
- David Bromwich
- Noam Chomsky
- Patrick Cockburn
- Juan Cole
- Robert Dreyfuss
- Jeff Frazee
- Sibel Edmonds
- Ivan Eland
- Daniel Ellsberg
- Philip Giraldi
- Charles Goyette
- Glenn Greenwald
- William Norman Grigg
- David R. Henderson
- Nat Hentoff
- Robert Higgs
- Scott Horton
- Dahr Jamail
- Raed Jarrar
- Karen Kwiatkowski
- Jim Lobe
- Trevor Lyman
- Eric Margolis
- Ray McGovern
- Cole Miller
- Brandon Neely
- Robert Pape
- Ron Paul
- Gareth Porter
- Coleen Rowley
- Kirkpatrick Sale
- Michael Scheuer
- Cindy Sheehan
- Helen Thomas
- Christina Tobin
- Jesse Trentadue
- Jesse Walker
- Philip Weiss
- Andy Worthington
- Kevin Zeese
{{div col end}}
Antiwar News with Dave DeCamp
Antiwar News with Dave DeCamp, the current news editor of Antiwar.com, shares daily summaries of the top U.S. foreign policy news stories from a non-interventionist perspective.{{Third-party inline|date=March 2024}} Dave DeCamp was announced as a runner-up awardee of the 2023 Pierre Sprey Award for Defense Reporting and Analysis for delivering "a comprehensive and essential corrective to the tsunami of slanted misinformation that appears each day in our country's mainstream media".{{Cite web |title=2023 Winners {{!}} Pierre Sprey Award |url=https://www.thepierrespreyaward.org/2023-winners |access-date=2024-03-12 |website=Pierre |language=en}}{{Third-party inline|date=March 2024}}
Reactions
The Washington Post{{'}}s Linton Weeks described it "a thoughtful, well-organized site" in 1999.Linton Weeks, [https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/columns/navigator/990415.htm “Waging War on War,”] WashingtonPost.Com (The Washington Post, April 15, 1999) (April 22, 2010) Scott McConnell of The American Conservative wrote in 2010 the New York Press that Antiwar.com was "strikingly successful" and "could claim more readers than Rupert Murdoch’s Weekly Standard once the [Balkan] war began."Scott McConnell, “The New Peaceniks,” New York Press, June 22, 1999 ([http://www.antiwar.com/rep/mcconnell.html republished at Antiwar.com]) (April 21, 2010).{{better source needed|Would be good to have an independently verifiable/original version of this, not the promotional version published on their own website|date=February 2022}} When Raimondo died in 2019, Patrick Buchanan said that "In the three decades since [1991], no man in America worked harder or did more to resist the interventionist impulses of the American establishment and the wars they produced than Justin and his Antiwar website.”{{cite web | last1=Welsch | first1=Edward | last2=Gottfried | first2=Paul | last3=Gonzalez | first3=Pedro | title=In Memoriam: Justin Raimondo, 1951-2019 | website=Chronicles | date=2019-06-28 | url=https://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/article/in-memoriam-justin-raimondo-1951-2019/ | access-date=2022-02-24 |quote='I have known Justin Raimondo since we stood together to oppose the rush to war against Iraq in 1991,' Buchanan said in an email. 'In the three decades since, no man in America worked harder or did more to resist the interventionist impulses of the American establishment and the wars they produced than Justin and his Antiwar website.'}}
David Bernstein included it in 2012 among "far left anti-Israel sites that have ties to the anti-Semitic far-right or are known for playing footsie with anti-Semitism".{{cite web |last=Goldberg |first=Jeffrey |date=2012-01-19 |title=Is the Term 'Israel-Firster' Anti-Semitic? (Updated) |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/01/is-the-term-israel-firster-anti-semitic-updated/251630/ |access-date=2022-02-24 |website=The Atlantic}} Antisemitism scholar David Renton in 2021 gave the website as an example of how "ideas [which] started in the American far right... migrated into British left-wing circles without people having any idea where they began."{{cite web |author=Shane Burley |date=2021-08-27 |title=Britain's Labour Antisemitism Controversy, Revisited |url=https://jewishcurrents.org/britains-labour-antisemitism-controversy-revisited |access-date=2022-02-24 |website=Jewish Currents |quote=In my book I give examples like the website AntiWar.com, which gets picked up in the British left-wing antiwar movement because it’s such a high-profile source of information about Iraq, and some of the people who write for it are on the left, but its founders come from the libertarian right. There are a lot of these radical right-wing figures who get shared by the left based on their positions on individual issues.}} Anti-fascist researcher Matthew N. Lyons describes the "paleocon-sponsored" website as an example of left-right alliance.{{cite journal |last=Lyons |first=Matthew N. |year=2003 |title=Fragmented Nationalism: Right-Wing Responses to September 11 in Historical Context |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/20093658 |journal=The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography |publisher=Historical Society of Pennsylvania |volume=127 |issue=4 |pages=377–418 |issn=0031-4587 |eissn=2169-8546 |jstor=20093658 |access-date=2022-02-24}}
In 2019, researchers from The Open University found that the crowdsourced MyWOT program labeled Antiwar.com as "trustworthy", while the OpenSources evaluator tagged the website as "conspiracy, clickbait and bias".Mensio, Martino and Alani, Harith (2019). [http://oro.open.ac.uk/62771/ News Source Credibility in the Eyes of Different Assessors]. In: Proceedings of the Conference for Truth and Trust Online 2019.
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [http://antiwar.com Antiwar.com]
- PBS Newshour with Jim Lehrer, “[https://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/europe/jan-june99/dissent_5-24a.html Voices of Dissent],” May 24, 1999
- New York Press, Scott McConnell, “[http://www.antiwar.com/rep/mcconnell.html The New Peaceniks],” June 22, 1999.
- The Atlantic Online, “[https://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/citation/wc990414.htm Not Your Father's Antiwar Movement],” April 14, 1999
- [http://www.sfweekly.com/2003-12-10/news/intrepid-antiwarriors-of-the-libertarian-right-stake-their-rightful-claim-to-power/full “Intrepid Antiwarriors of the Libertarian Right”], San Francisco Weekly, December 10, 2003.
{{anti-war}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Antiwar.Com}}
Category:American political websites
Category:Criticism of neoconservatism
Category:Internet properties established in 1995
Category:Libertarian publications