Al Qaeda

Obama's foreign policy report card Obama's foreign policy report card

You'd never know it from the MSM, but he deserves high grades for his work so far in Iran, Iraq and Pakistan
  • More blowback from the war on terror

    The U.S.-backed Ethiopian military has secreted away scores of "suspects" -- including pregnant women and children -- and fueled anti-American rancor in Africa.
  • Is the U.S. putting mentally incompetent terror suspects on trial?

    At Guantánamo, bizarre proceedings with the 9/11 suspects raise questions about a prisoner's psychiatric evaluation and the murky role of the CIA.
  • Why this lifelong Republican may vote for Obama

    The party of Bush and McCain outsourced the hunt for bin Laden, failing to accomplish a vital mission since 9/11.
  • American credibility on trial

    Was one of the youngest prisoners at Guantánamo rushed to court by the Bush administration for political reasons?
  • The fall of Bush's man in Pakistan

    Despite Pervez Musharraf's despotism and double-dealing with U.S. enemies, George W. Bush, John McCain and the GOP embraced him to the bitter end.
  • Guilty in Guantánamo

    Osama bin Laden's driver has been tried and convicted. But what's the verdict for the Bush administration's tactics in the war on terror?
  • Sabotage in Guantánamo

    How the 9/11 suspects are trying to exploit the major flaws in the military commissions implemented by the Bush administration.
  • Pakistan's deal with the devil

    Beheadings, martial law, kidnappings: The Taliban is making its presence felt at the gates of one of Pakistan's biggest cities.
  • A timeline to Bush government torture

    Newly public evidence sheds greater light on Bush officials' efforts to develop brutal interrogation techniques for the war on terror.
  • Arraigning the 9/11 suspects, Guantánamo-style

    Hearings for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and others here were marred by intimidation, partial censorship and a ruling that left justice in doubt.
  • Looking for payoff in Iraq

    Winning "hearts and minds" is in some sense like a seduction. But what happens if American largesse here runs out?
  • Still silenced in Guantánamo

    After years spent here, one prisoner pins his hope on a single phone call from the outside world -- if it ever comes.
  • The forgotten kid of Guantánamo

    A teenager captured in Afghanistan and shipped to the U.S. prison remained unknown to the world for five years. Now he's being tried as an adult.
  • Inside the Guantánamo terror trials

    A bruised-up detainee rejects the proceedings, and his lawyer discovers that military officials withheld records about his client's mental health.
  • How Iraq spawned wider terrorist chaos

    As experts long warned, Islamic militants steeped in urban warfare against U.S. troops in Iraq have expanded their violent campaign beyond Iraq's borders.
  • Sizing up Petraeus on Iraq

    The top U.S. general gave Congress an upbeat assessment of the war Tuesday. Here's the reality behind the rhetoric.
  • A sickening truth at Guantánamo

    A gravely ill detainee I represent, never charged with a crime, has been neglected by military doctors. Will he be the next to die inside the notorious prison?
  • Killing ourselves in Afghanistan

    In a secret meeting with a Taliban commander, I learned how Bush administration aid to Pakistan helps fund insurgents who kill U.S. troops.
  • It's 3 a.m. Who do you want answering the phone?

    Not John McCain, say some military leaders: "I think his knee-jerk response factor is a little scary."
  • Osama bin Laden's "Second Life"

    In virtual worlds, does it take two terrorists to tango? And how much should we worry about those secret stockpiles of cartoon weapons?
Page 1 of 3    oldest ⇒

From Salon's blogs