Showing results for: Afghanistan (page 70)
Pentagon rising: Donald Trump could be good news for the military-industrial complex
William D. Hartung
How much Donald Trump plans to spend depends on what he wants to do with foreign policy
5 things we learned from The New Yorker’s profile of Michael Flynn
Brendan Gauthier
President-elect Donald Trump's newly named national security advisor is less than fond of bureaucracy
Giving thanks for the Barack Obama we had — and imagining the one who could have done so much more
Paul Rosenberg
Our current president looks better all the time — but his errors and compromises clearly fueled the rise of Trump
No new normal: Fears and hope in the new age of Donald Trump
Rebecca Gordon
Some of the fears are national. Some are global. All are terrifying
WATCH: Suicide bomber targets Afghan mosque, killing at least 27
Matthew Smith
ISIS claimed responsibility for the attack that killed at least 27 and left 35 wounded
Donald Trump’s presidency isn’t looking any better: 6 despicable things the president-elect did last week
Janet Allon
A week and a half after the election, the horror is only mounting
On the road with our American selves, or how to feel like a jerk in Mombasa, Kenya
Mattea Kramer
The 2016 election barely mentioned the war in Afghanistan, but that doesn't mean we can ignore international issues
U.S. forces may have committed war crimes, says International Criminal Court
Ben Norton
International prosecutor in The Hague says U.S. military may have committed war crimes in Afghanistan and elsewhere
What will Donald Trump do about Hillary Clinton’s wars?
Nick Turse
If there was a politician with the ability to simply declare victory and go home regardless of facts, it's Trump
Has the American “experiment” run its course? The empire of chaos has overtaken America
Tom Engelhardt
This election reveals that the United States is not impervious to existential threats
Donald Trump will now control drone assassinations and mass surveillance, which Democrats let Obama expand
Ben Norton
Left-wing critics warned about Obama's dangerous precedent, yet Democrats attacked them. Now look what happened
The 15-year U.S. war in Afghanistan barely gets mentioned, even when NATO airstrikes massacre 30 civilians
Ben Norton
The U.S. war continues to take a heavy toll on Afghan civilians, yet Clinton and Trump never even discussed it
Without telling the public, the U.S. started and ended a new bombing campaign in Libya
Ben Norton
U.S. conducted 367 airstrikes in Libya over three months, then quietly stopped, holding no briefings or hearings
Breitbart and Donald Trump’s alt-right troll brigade attacked Chobani yogurt because its founder likes immigrants
Sophia Tesfaye
Death threats have been coming in from alt-righters believing Chobani yogurt wants to “drown the U.S. in Muslims"
Is Hillary Clinton an emailing criminal? A nonpartisan guide to national security and foreign policy issues in the presidential election (part II)
R. Jeffrey Smith
Will we be less safe during the next administration?
Why the Pentagon budget just won’t go down
William D. Hartung
This year’s Pentagon budget is roughly $600 billion: why does the DOD have such a stranglehold on tax dollars?
WATCH: Black Donald Trump supporter, mistaken for protestor, gets escorted out of rally and called a “thug” by Trump
Sophia Tesfaye
“Were you paid $1,500 to be a thug?” Trump sneered at C.J. Cary. “You can get him out. Get him out!”
Why the U.S. and western countries could be bluffing about military intervention in Syria
Vijay Prashad
Paying the price for a high-octane media push for war
California National Guard still demands troops who enlisted to pay their bonuses back
Matthew Rozsa
The California National Guard will be working with Congress to give "relief to soldiers"
Tom Hayden, famed 1960s anti-war activist, dies at 76
The Associated Press
Hayden's name is forever linked with the Vietnam protests
“Littered with bones”: Village in South Sudan is now a graveyard
Nick Turse
The remains of victims haunt Leer, South Sudan, as the town has been repeatedly attacked over the years
Apocalypse then, now, always: the truth about violence in Leer, South Sudan
Nick Turse
A 2005 U.S.-supported peace deal was supposed to put a stop to north-south slaughter, but it never quite did
Without debate, we need to talk about Afghanistan: Remember the longest-running war in our nation’s history?
Bob Hennelly
Have we really forgotten this conflict? It seems so, as the U.S. is quietly returning to its interventionist ways
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