Posted by: zanshin, 2008-07-10 02:06

Story

Day 1: America's prison for terrorists often held the wrong men

Tom Lasseter, 2008-06-15 (Sunday), McClatchy Newspapers
GARDEZ, Afghanistan — The militants crept up behind Mohammed Akhtiar as he squatted at the spigot to wash his hands before evening prayers at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

They shouted "Allahu Akbar" — God is great — as one of them hefted a metal mop squeezer into the air, slammed it into Akhtiar's head and sent thick streams of blood running down his face.

Akhtiar was among the more than 770 terrorism suspects imprisoned at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. They are the men the Bush administration described as "the worst of the worst."

But Akhtiar was no terrorist. American troops had dragged him out of his Afghanistan home in 2003 and held him in Guantanamo for three years in the belief that he was an insurgent involved in rocket attacks on U.S. forces. The Islamic radicals in Guantanamo's Camp Four who hissed "infidel" and spat at Akhtiar, however, knew something his captors didn't: The U.S. government had the wrong guy.

"He was not an enemy of the government, he was a friend of the government," a senior Afghan intelligence officer told McClatchy. Akhtiar was imprisoned at Guantanamo on the basis of false information that local anti-government insurgents fed to U.S. troops, he said.

An eight-month McClatchy investigation in 11 countries on three continents has found that Akhtiar was one of dozens of men — and, according to several officials, perhaps hundreds — whom the U.S. has wrongfully imprisoned in Afghanistan, Cuba and elsewhere on the basis of flimsy or fabricated evidence, old personal scores or bounty payments.

McClatchy interviewed 66 released detainees, more than a dozen local officials — primarily in Afghanistan — and U.S. officials with intimate knowledge of the detention program. The investigation also reviewed thousands of pages of U.S. military tribunal documents and other records.

This unprecedented compilation shows that most of the 66 were low-level Taliban grunts, innocent Afghan villagers or ordinary criminals. At least seven had been working for the U.S.-backed Afghan government and had no ties to militants, according to Afghan local officials. In effect, many of the detainees posed no danger to the United States or its allies.

The investigation also found that despite the uncertainty about whom they were holding, U.S. soldiers beat and abused many prisoners.

Prisoner mistreatment became a regular feature in cellblocks and interrogation rooms at Bagram and Kandahar air bases, the two main way stations in Afghanistan en route to Guantanamo.

While he was held at Afghanistan's Bagram Air Base, Akhtiar said, "When I had a dispute with the interrogator, when I asked, 'What is my crime?' the soldiers who took me back to my cell would throw me down the stairs."

The McClatchy reporting also documented how U.S. detention policies fueled support for extremist Islamist groups. For some detainees who went home far more militant than when they arrived, Guantanamo became a school for jihad, or Islamic holy war.

Of course, Guantanamo also houses Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, who along with four other high-profile detainees faces military commission charges. Cases also have been opened against 15 other detainees for assorted offenses, such as attending al Qaida training camps.

But because the Bush administration set up Guantanamo under special rules that allowed indefinite detention without charges or federal court challenge, it's impossible to know how many of the 770 men who've been held there were terrorists.

A series of White House directives placed "suspected enemy combatants" beyond the reach of U.S. law or the 1949 Geneva Conventions' protections for prisoners of war. President Bush and Congress then passed legislation that protected those detention rules.

However, the administration's attempts to keep the detainees beyond the law came crashing down last week.

The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that detainees have the right to contest their cases in federal courts, and that a 2006 act of Congress forbidding them from doing so was unconstitutional. "Some of these petitioners have been in custody for six years with no definitive judicial determination as to the legality of their detention," the court said in its 5-4 decision, overturning Bush administration policy and two acts of Congress that codified it.

One former administration official said the White House's initial policy and legal decisions "probably made instances of abuse more likely. ... My sense is that decisions taken at the top probably sent a signal that the old rules don't apply ... certainly some people read what was coming out of Washington: The gloves are off, this isn't a Geneva world anymore."

Like many others who previously worked in the White House or Defense Department, the official spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the legal and political sensitivities of the issue.

McClatchy's interviews are the most ever conducted with former Guantanamo detainees by a U.S. news organization. The issue of detainee backgrounds has previously been reported on by other media outlets, but not as comprehensively.

McClatchy also in many cases did more research than either the U.S. military at Guantanamo, which often relied on secondhand accounts, or the detainees' lawyers, who relied mainly on the detainees' accounts.

The Pentagon declined to discuss the findings. It issued a statement Friday saying that military policy always has been to treat detainees humanely, to investigate credible complaints of abuse and to hold people accountable. The statement says that an al Qaida manual urges detainees to lie about prison conditions once they're released. "We typically do not respond to each and every allegation of abuse made by past and present detainees," the statement said.

LITTLE INTELLIGENCE VALUE

The McClatchy investigation found that top Bush administration officials knew within months of opening the Guantanamo detention center that many of the prisoners there weren't "the worst of the worst." From the moment that Guantanamo opened in early 2002, former Secretary of the Army Thomas White said, it was obvious that at least a third of the population didn't belong there.

Of the 66 detainees whom McClatchy interviewed, the evidence indicates that 34 of them, about 52 percent, had connections with militant groups or activities. At least 23 of those 34, however, were Taliban foot soldiers, conscripts, low-level volunteers or adventure-seekers who knew nothing about global terrorism.

Only seven of the 66 were in positions to have had any ties to al Qaida's leadership, and it isn't clear that any of them knew any terrorists of consequence.

If the former detainees whom McClatchy interviewed are any indication — and several former high-ranking U.S. administration and defense officials said in interviews that they are — most of the prisoners at Guantanamo weren't terrorist masterminds but men who were of no intelligence value in the war on terrorism.

Far from being an ally of the Taliban, Mohammed Akhtiar had fled to Pakistan shortly after the puritanical Islamist group took power in 1996, the senior Afghan intelligence officer told McClatchy. The Taliban burned down Akhtiar's house after he refused to ally his tribe with their government.

The Americans detained Akhtiar, the intelligence officer said, because they were given bad information by another Afghan who'd harbored a personal vendetta against Akhtiar going back to his time as a commander against the Soviet military during the 1980s.

"In some of these cases, tribal feuds and political feuds have played a big role" in people getting sent to Guantanamo, the intelligence officer said.

He didn't want his name used, partly because he didn't want to offend the Western officials he works with and partly because Afghan intelligence officers are assassinated regularly.

"There were Afghans being sent to Guantanamo because of bad intelligence," said Helaluddin Helal, Afghanistan's deputy interior minister for security from 2002 to early 2004. "In the beginning, everyone was trying to give intelligence to the Americans ... the Americans were taking action without checking this information."

Nusrat Khan was in his 70s when American troops shoved him into an isolation cell at Bagram in the spring of 2003. They blindfolded him, put earphones on his head and tied his hands behind his back for almost four weeks straight, Khan said.

By the time he was taken out of the cell, Khan — who'd had at least two strokes years before he was arrested and was barely able to walk — was half-mad and couldn't stand without help. Khan said that he was taken to Guantanamo on a stretcher.

Several Afghan officials, including the country's attorney general, later said that Khan, who spent more than three years at Guantanamo, wasn't a threat to anyone; he'd been turned in as an insurgent leader because of decades-old rivalries with competing Afghan militias.

Ghalib Hassan was an Interior Ministry-appointed district commander in Afghanistan's Nangarhar province, a man who'd risked his life to help the U.S.-backed government. Din Mohammed, the former governor of that province and now the governor of Kabul, said there was no question that local tribal leaders, offended by Hassan's brusque style, fed false information about him to local informants used by American troops.

The Pentagon declined requests to make top officials, including the secretary of defense, available to respond to McClatchy's findings. The defense official in charge of detainee affairs, Sandra Hodgkinson, refused to speak with McClatchy.

The Pentagon's only response to a series of written questions from McClatchy, and to a list of 63 of the 66 former detainees interviewed for this story, was a three-paragraph statement.

"These unlawful combatants have provided valuable information in the struggle to protect the U.S. public from an enemy bent on murder of innocent civilians," Col. Gary Keck said in the statement. He provided no examples.

Rear Adm. Mark H. Buzby, until recently the commanding officer at Guantanamo, said that detainees had supplied crucial information about al Qaida, the Taliban and other terrorist groups.

"Included with the folks that were brought here in 2002 were, by and large, the main leadership of al Qaida and the Taliban," he said in a phone interview.

Buzby agreed, however, that some detainees were from the bottom rung.

"It's all about developing the mosaic ... there's value to both ends of the spectrum," he said.

Former senior U.S. defense and intelligence officials, however, said McClatchy's conclusions squared with their own observations.

"As far as intelligence value from those in Gitmo, I got tired of telling the people writing reports based on their interrogations that their material was essentially worthless," a U.S. intelligence officer said in an e-mail, using the military's slang for Guantanamo.

Guantanamo authorities periodically sent analysts at the U.S. Central Command "rap sheets on various prisoners and asked our assessment whether they merited continued confinement," said the analyst, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject. "Over about three years, I assessed around 40 of these individuals, mostly Afghans. ... I only can remember recommending that ONE should be kept at GITMO."

'WAR COUNCIL' REWRITES DETAINEE LAW

At a Pentagon briefing in the spring of 2002, a senior Army intelligence officer expressed doubt about the entire intelligence-gathering process.

"He said that we're not getting anything, and his thought was that we're not getting anything because there might not be anything to get," said Donald J. Guter, a retired rear admiral who was the head of the Navy's Judge Advocate General's Corps at the time.

Many detainees were "swept up in the pot" by large operations conducted by Afghan troops allied with the Americans, said former Army Secretary White, who's now a partner at DKRW Energy, an energy company in Houston.

One of the Afghan detainees at Guantanamo, White recalled, was more than 80 years old.

Army Spc. Eric Barclais, who was a military intelligence interrogator at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan from September 2002 through January 2003, told military investigators in sworn testimony that "We recommended lots of folks be released from (Bagram), but they were not. I believe some people ended up at (Guantanamo) that had no business being sent there."

"You have to understand some folks were detained because they got turned in by neighbors or family members who were feuding with them," Barclais said. "Yes, they had weapons. Everyone had weapons. Some were Soviet-era and could not even be fired."

A former Pentagon official told McClatchy that he was shocked at times by the backgrounds of men held at Guantanamo.

" 'Captured with weapon near the Pakistan border?' " the official said. "Are you kidding me?"

"The screening, the understanding of who we had was horrible," he said. "That's why we had so many useless people at Gitmo."

In 2002, a CIA analyst interviewed several dozen detainees at Guantanamo and reported to senior National Security Council officials that many of them didn't belong there, a former White House official said.

Despite the analyst's findings, the administration made no further review of the Guantanamo detainees. The White House had determined that all of them were enemy combatants, the former official said.

Rather than taking a closer look at whom they were holding, a group of five White House, Justice Department and Pentagon lawyers who called themselves the "War Council" devised a legal framework that enabled the administration to detain suspected "enemy combatants" indefinitely with few legal rights.

The threat of new terrorist attacks, the War Council argued, allowed President Bush to disregard or rewrite American law, international treaties and the Uniform Code of Military Justice to permit unlimited detentions and harsh interrogations.

The group further argued that detainees had no legal right to defend themselves, and that American soldiers — along with the War Council members, their bosses and Bush — should be shielded from prosecution for actions that many experts argue are war crimes.

With the support of Bush, Cheney and then-Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, the group shunted aside the military justice system, and in February 2002, Bush suspended the legal protection for detainees spelled out in Common Article Three of the 1949 Geneva Convention on prisoners of war, which outlaws degrading treatment and torture.

The Bush administration didn't launch a formal review of the detentions until a 2004 Supreme Court decision forced it to begin holding military tribunals at Guantanamo. The Supreme Court ruling last week said that the tribunals were deeply flawed, but it didn't close them down.

In late 2004, Pentagon officials decided to restrict further interrogations at Guantanamo to detainees who were considered "high value" for their suspected knowledge of terrorist groups or their potential of returning to the battlefield, according to Matthew Waxman, who was the deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs, the Defense Department's head official for detainee matters, from August 2004 to December 2005.

"Maybe three-quarters of the detainees by 2005 were no longer regularly interrogated," said Waxman, who's now a law professor at Columbia University.

At that time, about 500 men were still being held at Guantanamo.

So far, the military commissions have publicly charged only six detainees — less than 1 percent of the more than 770 who've been at Guantanamo — with direct involvement in the 9-11 terrorist attacks; they dropped the charges in one case. Those few cases are now in question after the high court's ruling Thursday.

About 500 detainees — nearly two out of three — have been released.

During a military review board hearing at Guantanamo, Mohammed Akhtiar had some advice for the U.S. officers seated before him.

"I wish," he said, "that the United States would realize who the bad guys are and who the good guys are."

HOW FOOT SOLDIERS, FARMERS GOT SWEPT UP

How did the United States come to hold so many farmers and goat herders among the real terrorists at Guantanamo? Among the reasons:

After conceding control of the country to U.S.-backed Afghan forces in late 2001, top Taliban and al Qaida leaders escaped to Pakistan, leaving the battlefield filled with ragtag groups of volunteers and conscripts who knew nothing about global terrorism.

The majority of the detainees taken to Guantanamo came into U.S. custody indirectly, from Afghan troops, warlords, mercenaries and Pakistani police who often were paid cash by the number and alleged importance of the men they handed over. Foot soldiers brought in hundreds of dollars, but commanders were worth thousands. Because of the bounties — advertised in fliers that U.S. planes dropped all over Afghanistan in late 2001 — there was financial incentive for locals to lie about the detainees' backgrounds. Only 33 percent of the former detainees — 22 out of 66 — whom McClatchy interviewed were detained initially by U.S. forces. Of those 22, 17 were Afghans who'd been captured around mid-2002 or later as part of the peacekeeping mission in Afghanistan, a fight that had more to do with counter-insurgency than terrorism.

American soldiers and interrogators were susceptible to false reports passed along by informants and officials looking to settle old grudges in Afghanistan, a nation that had experienced more than two decades of occupation and civil war before U.S. troops arrived. This meant that Americans were likely to arrest Afghans who had no significant connections to militant groups. For example, of those 17 Afghans whom the U.S. captured in mid-2002 or later, at least 12 of them were innocent of the allegations against them, according to interviews with Afghan intelligence and security officials.

Detainees at Guantanamo had no legal venue in which to challenge their detentions. The only mechanism set up to evaluate their status, an internal tribunal in the late summer of 2004, rested on the decisions of rotating panels of three U.S. military officers. The tribunals made little effort to find witnesses who weren't present at Guantanamo, and detainees were in no position to challenge the allegations against them.

(c) McClatchy Newspapers 2008

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Afghanistan,   Bush,   Cheney,   CIA,   Cuba,   Energy,   Jihad,   military,   Pakistan,   Taliban,   Terrorism,   Torture,   USA,  

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2007-12-29His Toughness Problem — and Ours
2008-04-05Oil, Geopolitics, and the Coming War with Iran
2008-03-24Chalmers Johnson: “Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic”
2008-03-24It Wasn't On Oprah or Fox News -- How Could Hillary Have Known?
2008-02-23The Two Faces of Saudi Arabia
2008-02-26Fitzgerald: Islam for Infidels, Part Two
2008-04-24A Dissenter’s Guide to Foreign Policy
2008-04-23Religious Extremism: Muslim Challenge And Islamic Response
2008-04-29The Man Between War and Peace
2008-05-04Rush Interviews Andrew McCarthy
2008-05-17Planned US Israeli Attack on Iran: Will there be a War against Iran?
2007-12-10Moment of Reckoning
2007-12-10Timeline: the al-Qaida tapes
2007-12-07Jacob's Jottings: NIE Madness
2007-11-17U.S. Secretly Aids Pakistan in Guarding Nuclear Arms
2007-11-22The United States’ new backyard
2007-11-13The Deadly Embrace
2007-11-02Remarks by the Vice President to the Heritage Foundation
2007-10-12The Iconoclast
2007-10-03Why the United States Invaded Iraq and is Now Thinking About Invading Iran
2007-09-24Pakistan backs off Al Qaeda pursuit
2007-09-17Why We're Losing the War on Terror
2011-03-02Tomgram: Chris Hellman, $1.2 Trillion For National Security
2009-08-10Crisis As A Way To A Global Totalitarian State
2009-07-20"Watch What We Do, Not What We Say"
2009-02-12Obama’s Prime-Time Press Briefing -- Transcript
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 3: State Sponsors of Terrorism
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 --
2009-05-21The American Way: In Defense of George W. Bush
2009-06-01Obama's Cairo Speech
2009-04-04Can Pakistan Be Governed?
2009-05-08A Leadership Review of the Barack Obama Administration
2008-11-22You're Scaring Me, Obama: Let the Bush Years Die
2008-11-16Pakistan, U.S. have tacit deal on airstrikes
2008-11-17Clinton Is The WorId's Leading Active War Criminal
2008-12-03Right at the Edge
2008-11-30Attacks Imperil Delicate U.S. Role Between Rivals
2008-12-06Obama's War Cabinet
2008-12-07Pak on track to being named terrorist state
2008-12-15Pakistan’s Balkanization
2008-12-18Senate Armed Services Committee Inquiry Into The Treatment Of Detainees In U.S. Custody
2008-12-27Barack Obama: The Naked Emperor
2009-01-14NYT: Obama unlikely to probe Bush policies
2007-08-29Making America Safer by Defeating Extremists in the Middle East
2007-09-07Bin Laden says U.S. vulnerable in new video
2007-09-09No Refuge Here: Iraqis Flee, but Where?
2007-09-15Sept. 10 in Waziristan -- What Will Be Done About al-Qaeda's Camps?
2007-06-08Political Islam
2007-06-11Sudan is secret partner of U.S
2007-06-08Secret Prisons in 2 Countries Held Qaeda Suspects, Report Says
2007-06-06Nato’s Islamists
2007-05-30The Arabian candidate
2007-05-30Russia, U.S. spar on Kosovo, missile shield
2007-05-31The Case for Bombing Iran
2007-06-01The Importance of Being Lucid
2007-06-22When Lawyers Go to War -- Book Review
2007-06-19Comparing US & Palestine homicide rates
2007-06-19CNN LATE EDITION WITH WOLF BLITZER
2007-07-01Democratic Realism -- An American Foreign Policy for a Unipolar World
2007-07-13Press Conference by the President
2007-07-08Bin Laden's Fatwa
2007-07-05'The Secret Way to War': An Exchange
2007-07-10The general in his labyrinth
2007-08-08Obama right on target in war on “errorism”
2007-08-07Pakistan Forces Destroy Militant Hideout
2007-08-07President Bush Participates in Joint Press Availability with President Karzai of Afghanistan
2007-08-06Pakistan Criticizes Obama on Comments
2007-08-05The End of Cowboy Diplomacy
2007-07-31The American Empire is Failing – A Good Thing for America and the World -- An Interview with Terry Paupp
2007-07-29Al-Qaida: the unwanted guests
2007-07-16The Lose-Lose War
2007-07-16Will Iran Be Next?
2007-07-17A world wide web of terror
2007-07-17Why Bush Will Be A Winner
2007-07-18Prediction: Bush, Cheney NOT Leaving Office After 2008 Election
2007-07-24Highlights in the History of U.S. Relations With Russia, 1780-June 2006
2007-07-26Bush ties Al Qaeda in Iraq to Sept. 11
2007-07-27Imagining Defeat -- What happen if America retreats from Iraq?
2007-07-27The Rendition of Abu Omar
2007-08-24A Hegemonic Hubris -- More War on the Horizon
2007-08-14The Role of Military Intelligence - Priests Expose Secret Cycle of US Torture
2007-08-16Text: President Bush Addresses the Nation
2007-08-17U.S. urges Musharraf, Bhutto to consider cooperating
2007-05-10A Reporter At Large: In The Party Of God (Part II)
2007-05-03National Security Briefing == Presented to then-Governor Bush
2007-05-01Attack on Iran is the next step in divide and conquer of Middle East
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Briefing on Release of 2006
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: South and Central Asia Overview
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Western Hemisphere Overview
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 3 -- State Sponsors of Terrorism Overview
2007-05-28Unrepentant Neocon - Norman Podhoretz stands IV-square for the Bush doctrine
2007-04-10Cheney Says Grave Threats Require Pre-emptive Action
2007-04-04Breaking Ranks -- What turned Brent Scowcroft against the Bush Administration?
2007-04-06It Doesn't Stay in Vegas
2007-04-02Reaction From Around the World
2007-04-27President Presents Medal of Freedom
2007-01-23Crusading in the Arc of Instability - George Bush's Crusading Scorecard (2001-2007)
2007-01-23The Committee for the Liberation of Iraq: PR Spinning the Bush Doctrine
2007-01-16PM finally calls for Guantanamo to close
2006-05-01‘The Enemy at Home’ - First Chapter
2007-01-30Pyongyang Watch -- Nukes And Missiles: The Pakistan Connection
2007-02-10Q&A: Neocon power examined
2007-02-19Hating America
2007-02-26Military Commissions Act of 2006 – Turning bad policy into bad law
2007-02-26New U.N. secretary-general says U.S. should close prison at Guantanamo Bay
2007-02-26Legal Issues in the War on Terrorism
2007-02-28The Pentagon’s Power to Arrest, Torture, and Execute Americans
2007-03-14Timeline of events in the Cold War
2007-03-05HOW BRITAIN'S ARMAMENTS FUEL WAR AND POVERTY
2007-03-04The Leadership of George W. Bush: Con & Pro
2007-03-19Made in USA
2007-03-20'I've Got Nothing to Lose'
2007-03-21Andrew Cockburn’s Rumsfeld Revelations
2007-03-21Chris Hedges: The Christian Right’s War on America
2007-03-24Is the American Empire on the Brink of Collapse?
2007-03-27FACTBOX: Australia's Hicks: from Adelaide to Afghanistan
2007-03-28Guantanamo illegal despite guilty plea: critics
2006-12-08WHAT'S IN A NAME - World War IV - Let's call this conflict what it is
2007-01-03Tomgram: On the Imperial Path in 2007
2006-11-26Islam, Terror and the Second Nuclear Age
2006-10-17Guilty Until Confirmed Guilty
2006-10-13Interview Vali Nasr
2006-10-13Regional Implications of Shi‘a
2006-08-24Open letter to US President George W. Bush: Accuse him and his nation
2006-05-01Intelligence, Policy,and the War in Iraq
2006-05-01How to Win in Iraq
2006-09-19THE AGITATOR
2006-09-05Afghan Symbol for Change Becomes a Symbol of Failure
2006-09-08Lawyers and G.O.P. Chiefs Resist Proposal on Tribunal
2007-09-16How Al-Qa'idah 'martyrs' enter Iraq
2007-09-17Commentary: Is 'terrorist threat' to America another Bush-Cheney fabrication?
2007-09-20Fight the U.S., al Qaeda's Zawahri says in new video
2007-10-03The Bush administration's ties to Blackwater
2007-10-04Iran Is Found To Be a Lair of Al Qaeda - Intelligence Estimate Cites Two Councils
2007-10-04Open Fire
2007-10-05Drum beaters for Iran war should think again
2007-10-08Running from Pakistani president
2007-11-04While Pakistan Burns
2007-10-30Michael Ledeen discusses the Iranian Time Bomb
2007-11-13Washington Stirs a Witch's Brew in Pakistan
2007-11-13Is the Military Our Last, Best Hope for Averting War with Iran?
2007-11-16The Threat of Maritime Terrorism to Israel
2007-11-11 case number IT-04-74-T, the Prosecutor versus Prlic et al
2007-11-12Text of Bush-Sarkozy Press Conference
2007-11-12NATO Expands into Arab South
2007-11-08The Pakistan Mess -- Editorial
2007-11-043-2-1… America Prepares To Attack Iran
2007-11-05Commentary: Geopolitical nightmare
2007-11-06Is a Presidential Coup Under Way?
2007-11-20The Neoconservative Moment
2007-11-20Whose War?
2007-12-02The Smart Way to Beat Tyrants Like Chavez
2007-12-07A new Chinese red line over Iran
2007-12-08September 11, 2001: The French Knew Much About It
2007-12-10Hill Briefed on Waterboarding in 2002
2007-12-13Bilderberg 2007 - Towards a One World Empire?
2007-12-27A Conversation With Benazir Bhutto
2007-12-27Pakistan: Luck Running Out?
2007-12-28How Pakistan Works
2007-12-29Pakistan Says Bhutto’s Death Has Qaeda Link
2007-12-18Time for smart power
2007-12-18Turkey's EU Membership's Possible Impacts on the Middle East
2007-12-20US lawmakers send Iraq war funds bill to Bush
2007-12-20Press Conference by the President
2008-05-14Guantanamo: The Bigger Picture
2008-05-14NATO at a Crossroads
2008-05-27Was it like this for the Irish? -- Gareth Peirce on the position of Muslims in Britain
2008-04-29The Pentagon's New Map
2008-04-15Education Toward War