Showing results for: Afghanistan (page 10)
How Russian colonialism took the Western anti-imperialist Left for a ride
Alaric DeArment
Blindness to Russian colonialism distorts Westerners’ view of the Ukraine war
“Incandescently stupid”: Former DHS official says he had to “dumb” down classified memos for Trump
Gabriella Ferrigine
Former Homeland Security chief of staff Miles Taylor said "Trump literally can't read" a regular memo
Outlaw superpower: The United States refuses to play by the world’s rules
Igor Derysh
There's still time to bring our outlaw country back into united community of nations confronting looming horrors
The migrant boat disaster and America’s endless wars: Why we missed the real story
Andrea Mazzarino
Hundreds died in the Mediterranean while we were focused on that submersible. Looking the other way was a choice
Hunting the military extremist: How disturbed is the U.S. military?
Nan Levinson
The growth of extremism in the ranks of a military involved in a century of failed war
Thanks for nothing, DEA. Fifty years later, drugs are deadlier and more abundant than ever
Troy Farah
The Drug Enforcement Administration has spent half a century worsening public health. It should be abolished
“Soldiers Don’t Go Mad”: A stunning account of poetry, paradox and the horrors of war
Norman Solomon
The two greatest poets of World War I despised the bloody, pointless conflict — yet fought bravely. But why?
They lied about Afghanistan. They lied about Iraq. Now they’re lying about Ukraine
Chris Hedges
Russia's invasion was a war crime. That's no excuse for the disastrous, destructive path of endless war
Joe Biden’s quiet success goes much further than Bidenomics
Heather Digby Parton
If this is what happens when you have an elder as a leader maybe we ought to think about amending the Constitution
Patriotism and war: Can America break that deadly connection?
Norman Solomon
Why is patriotism linked to killing and dying on the battlefield? There are better ways to love your country
America’s “systemic racism” isn’t just domestic: Consider who dies around the world in our wars
Norman Solomon
Nearly all the people killed in U.S. wars since 9/11 have been people of color — and we almost don't notice
Russians in “Ukraine will be fighting a war on two fronts”: Rebellion means Putin is now weaker
Chauncey DeVega
War expert and novelist Elliot Ackerman on what the uprising against Putin means for Ukraine's counteroffensive
Ultimate all-American slush fund: Budget loophole could send Pentagon spending soaring even higher
Julia Gledhill, William D. Hartung
Despite debt ceiling compromise, the Pentagon will continue to prove exempt from ceilings of any sort
The US will send depleted uranium munitions to Ukraine — a health physicist explains what that means
Kathryn Higley
Depleted uranium is about 40% less radioactive than natural uranium, but it's still toxic
My visit to Mars, in NYC: Is living on a smoke-bomb planet our future?
Tom Engelhardt
That poisonous orange haze in New York was the 9/11 moment for climate change — or at least it should have been
Why Trump hoarded classified documents: More than “trophies,” they are weapons
Amanda Marcotte
The indictment hints that Trump saw the documents not just as prizes, but leverage to gain political advantage
Americans in pain: Confronting the phantom limbs of America’s foreign wars
Andrea Mazzarino
The wound of the War on Terror, up close and personal
Clinging bitterly to guns and religion: The end stage of American empire
William Astore
An iron curtain has descended on America
Seduced by war yet again: Why Washington is underwriting violence in Ukraine
Andrew Bacevich
Ukraine has battled courageously — but the U.S. proxy war with Russia has nothing to do with defending democracy
Aggression made easy: The wars we don’t (care to) see
David Barsamian, Norman Solomon
Few Americans have any sense of just how devastating (not to say unsuccessful) the war on terror has been
“We leave these places in ruins”: How the white lens on “Kandahar” reflects the human cost
Gary M. Kramer
Filmmaker Ric Roman Waugh on how Gerard Butler action film had to be rewritten when U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan
Crimes against humanity, American-style: United States continues quest to hide torture
Karen J. Greenberg
Will we ever know the full story of the horrific global torture regime U.S. established in the War on Terror?
From Fonzie to Cousineau, Henry Winkler shares his 50-year acting secret: “Cool is authenticity”
D. Watkins
The "Happy Days" actor discusses "Barry," acting fears, writing children's books and what he wants to tackle next
The army we don’t see: The private soldiers who fight in America’s name
Andrea Mazzarino
While Putin embraces private contractors, the US seldom acknowledges its own version of the privatization of war
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