Inside Baghdad's Brutal Battle Against ISIS
Even ISIS’s opponents are hard men who understand terror.
Even ISIS’s opponents are hard men who understand terror.
Matthieu Aikins Rolling Stone Mar 2015 25min Permalink
A French reporter went undercover as potential “caliphette” and recieved a marriage proposal from a senior ISIS commander.
Margarette Driscoll Sunday Times of London Mar 2015 10min Permalink
Searching for sanctuary with American war deserters.
Wil S. Hylton New York Feb 2015 25min Permalink
Justice isn’t so easy to come by when an American soldier stationed abroad is accused of murder.
Meredith Talusan Vice Feb 2015 25min Permalink
A leading Guantanamo interrogator was once a Chicago police detective accused of police brutality.
Spencer Ackerman The Guardian Feb 2015 20min Permalink
You can have a PhD from Yale. You can be a rising star in the State Department. And you can still find yourself being investigated by the FBI for espionage.
Peter Maass The Intercept Feb 2015 45min Permalink
Inside the world of special operations weather technicians, “the Department of Defense’s only commando forecasters.”
Tony Dokoupil NBC News Feb 2015 10min Permalink
NSA-grade spyware is up for sale, and the world’s worst dictatorships are buying.
Amar Toor, Russell Brandom The Verge Jan 2015 20min Permalink
The N.S.A. claims it needs access to all our phone records. But is that the best way to catch a terrorist?
Mattathias Schwartz New Yorker Jan 2015 35min Permalink
What one sergeant says he saw before the alleged suicides of three detainees.
Alexander Nazaryan Newsweek Jan 2015 Permalink
Untouched by Western journalists except in the presence of American troops, Afghanistan’s Korengal Valley was once the most violent part of the Afghan War.
Matt Trevithick, Daniel Seckman The Daily Beast Nov 2014 35min Permalink
A Russian soldier vanishes in Ukraine.
Joshua Yaffa New York Times Magazine Jan 2015 35min Permalink
The United States fights wars it can’t win using soldiers it doesn’t know.
James Fallows The Atlantic Dec 2014 40min Permalink
Reporting on the “American Way of Life,” two years after the end of World War II.
Martha Gellhorn New Republic Jan 1947 10min Permalink
Christopher Clayton Hutton hatched a plan to deliver Monopoly boards to British prisoners of war. The games were advertised as a diversion, but really they offered a way out.
Christian Donlan Eurogamer Dec 2014 35min Permalink
Following the money and the opium in Afghanistan.
Matthieu Aikins Rolling Stone Dec 2014 25min Permalink
An Islamic State senior commander reveals the terror group’s origins.
Martin Chulov The Guardian Dec 2014 20min Permalink
Why do we honor dead soldiers rather than the fighters who deserted and the activists who demanded peace?
Adam Hochschild In These Times Dec 2014 10min Permalink
An essay on PTSD.
Tom Ricks New Yorker Dec 2014 10min Permalink
A 2003 essay that foreshadows the emergence of the Islamic State a decade later – an insurgency incited by American policy in Iraq during the early days of the war.
Mark Danner New York Review of Books Sep 2003 15min Permalink
More than 500 Germans, including a former rapper named Deso Dogg, have joined ISIS in Syria.
Der Spiegel Nov 2014 10min Permalink
An essay, originally published over two issues, on how and why we forget war.
Lee Sandlin Chicago Reader Mar 1997 2h15min Permalink
“The Jihad route leads from Tunisia via Tripoli into Turkey and on to Syria. Thousands have followed the path into Syria, and only a few have returned.”
Mirco Keilberth, Juliane von Mittelstaedt, Christoph Reuter Der Spiegel English Nov 2014 15min Permalink
How a major American company helped bring Charles Taylor to power in Liberia.
T. Christian Miller, Jonathan Jones ProPublica Nov 2014 10min Permalink
A report from the Central African Republic, where "acts of extraordinary cruelty have become commonplace."