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Robert Young Pelton, author of "The World's Most Dangerous Places," says the U.S. military has killed "thousands and thousands" of people in Afghanistan, al-Qaida is a myth and the WTC was brought down by a "Mickey Mouse" outfit.
By Mark Scheffler
April 23, 2002
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"Taliban" author Ahmed Rashid says the Bush administration is risking the success of its war on terror by scheming against Iraq's Saddam Hussein while Afghanistan is still in ruins.
By Anthony York
April 1, 2002
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As Ramallah burns and the Saudis and Iraqis make peace, the administration's plans for a new coalition to bomb Iraq continue to crumble.
By Joshua Micah Marshall
March 30, 2002
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Six months after al-Qaida killed more than 3,000 civilians, they'd rather bash Bush and Ashcroft than our terrorist enemies.
By David Horowitz
March 11, 2002
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It was bad enough when right-wing ideologues convinced Bush to orate about the "axis of evil." But now they want him to really do something about it.
By Scott Rosenberg
March 6, 2002
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Donald Rumsfeld wants the U.S. to stay out of peacekeeping and build a national army instead. The problem is that first you need a nation.
By Phillip Robertson
February 26, 2002
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Osama bin Laden is still at large and Afghanistan is a mess -- so why is the president in a hurry to take his anti-terror campaign elsewhere?
By David Talbot
February 26, 2002
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A Net-controlled robot reporter from MIT may be headed for Afghanistan.
By Brad Wieners
February 25, 2002
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The president has done nothing right since winning the war in Afghanistan -- and it's time for the timorous media to start saying it.
By Joan Walsh
February 21, 2002
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The killing of 21 pro-Karzai soldiers by U.S. forces illustrates how hard it can be to tell your allies from your enemies in war-torn Afghanistan.
By Phillip Robertson
February 21, 2002
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By
February 16, 2002
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Liberal intellectuals who praise Bush for prosecuting the war but still insist he's stupid are the real dummies.
By David Horowitz
February 15, 2002
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On the treacherous Kabul-Kandahar road, our correspondent falls into the hands of a gang of feral kids with Kalashnikovs.
By Phillip Robertson
February 4, 2002
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Since the Taliban fell, weddings are a time to sing and drink and party. But some things haven't changed: Nadar didn't meet his bride until their wedding day.
By Phillip Robertson
January 23, 2002
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With the al-Qaida network shattered but Osama bin Laden still at large, "Black Hawk Down" author Mark Bowden and other national security experts discuss when the U.S. will be able to declare victory over terrorism.
By Max Garrone
January 19, 2002
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Manzoor the fixer takes care of everything I need -- permits, bribes, even a bodyguard -- and then says goodbye at the Afghanistan border.
By Phillip Robertson
January 18, 2002
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Musharraf is afraid of losing a war, while Vajpayee is afraid of losing an election. It's hideous politics that makes rational people like me want to drink too many gin and tonics.
By Phillip Robertson
January 17, 2002
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The nation's most implacable critic of U.S. foreign policy argues that the war is unjust, America is the biggest terrorist state and intellectuals always support official violence.
By Suzy Hansen
January 16, 2002
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The Uzbek warlord, and Afghanistan's new interim deputy defense minister, sounds enlightened, but can he walk it like he talks it?
By Asla Aydintasbas
January 8, 2002
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He was fresh from Marin, more Catholic than the pope and the other students derisively nicknamed him Yusuf Islam (aka Cat Stevens).
By Joshua Mortensen
January 4, 2002
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From Kuwait to Kosovo to Kabul, American firepower has been on the right side of history. The odyssey of a former dove.
By David Talbot
January 3, 2002
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A trip to the front in Afghanistan turns into a nightmare after a Taliban ambush sets off a panic.
By Phillip Robertson
December 21, 2001
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The former CIA director presents himself as the Paul Revere of the terrorism age, trying to waken America to its greatest threat -- Saddam Hussein. Should we be listening?
By Asla Aydintasbas
December 20, 2001
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After I dodged a mortar shell on the front lines and met with mujahedin fighters who weren't so lucky, the Eastern Alliance declared victory -- again.
By Mark Kukis
December 17, 2001
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A stark and beautiful film traces an Afghan woman's journey across a landscape we may never understand.
By Andrew O'Hehir
December 14, 2001