America's Post-9/11 Surveillance Authorities Were Inevitably Turned Against Its Own Citizens
We were warned about the dangerous power of the USA PATRIOT Act. Edward Snowden proved that critics were justified.
We were warned about the dangerous power of the USA PATRIOT Act. Edward Snowden proved that critics were justified.
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We can stop obsessing about Islamic terrorists crossing the Southern border.
Shameful scenes like those in Kabul don’t have to happen if we avoid military interventions.
In a speech aimed at proponents of perpetual war, the president refused to apologize for exiting Afghanistan.
But numerous politicians and war hawks were duped by seeing what they wanted to see.
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The deadly Sunday explosion is a reminder of the hundreds of civilians U.S. strikes have killed in Afghanistan.
The hubristic idea that America could successfully nation-build in Afghanistan was a bipartisan delusion for nearly two decades.
The Pentagon says 12 Americans were killed and 15 more wounded in a pair of suicide attacks near the Kabul airport. At least 60 Afghans died as well.
Breaking encryption technologies always makes us less safe, no matter what the justification.
After a nearly 20-year occupation, this was one inevitable outcome.
A U.S. agency spent 13 years documenting our government's failure to stabilize or rebuild the country.
The final price tag could eventually exceed $6 trillion, and American taxpayers will be paying the tab when the 50th anniversary of 9/11 arrives.
Why did it take presidents so long to realize this?
You can both support withdrawal and recognize its failed execution.
"I will not repeat the mistakes we've made in the past," Biden said Monday.
Federal espionage laws are used once again to punish a whistleblower.
Upon his passing, it's worth remembering how badly things can go when a man has such great power, even a man with elements of conventional decency.
Repeal would do little to change how Congress and the president collaborate—or don't—on military operations.
Retired FBI agent Ali Soufan argues that the agency's thirst for torture made it harder to protect Americans.
After nearly 20 years, America's longest war could soon be over. But delaying withdrawal for what seems like symbolic reasons is questionable.
By playing with definitions, the military is able to keep more troops in Afghanistan than it publicly reports.
Just keep an eye on the small print. The wars might officially end while still allowing inappropriate military meddling.
We have to stop governing by emergency.
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Adopting "counterinsurgency" tactics for use against wide swaths of Americans can only make the situation worse.
The federal government should prosecute those people who committed acts of vandalism or violence. However, we should be leery about giving the feds additional powers.
We have an agreement to pull out by May. We should honor it regardless of the state of the country.
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Their letter to Congress warns about inevitable abuses against religious and racial minorities.
Government grows in response to a crisis.
We don’t need new tools or agencies to track alleged domestic terrorists.
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Frightening events create openings for attacks on civil liberties.
His rumored candidate for CIA director, Michael Morell, is raising alarms.
For some, Trump’s troop drawdowns are too fast and too much. In reality, they’re too little and way too late.
National security journalist Barton Gellman talks about "the surveillance-industrial state," the possibility of a Biden presidency or a second Trump term, and his gripping new book.
The War on Terror gave us federal anti-terror-hoax laws. Now the FBI is using them to punish a man who falsely claimed to have COVID-19.
The presidential candidate reserves the right to wage unauthorized wars, kill Americans in foreign countries, prosecute journalists, and selectively flout the law.
"Most of the [indicators] of measuring success are now classified, or we don't collect it," the special inspector general for the Afghanistan reconstruction told a Senate committee.
Civilian deaths are also on the rise, and it's increasingly obvious that there is no clear strategy for the U.S. to "win" its longest military conflict.
Sending Omar Ameen back to Iraq will likely result in his execution, and the case against him doesn't make sense. The Trump administration is fighting to do it anyway.
A deadly shooting on a Naval base in Florida may lead to a new battle against encryption.
“Let’s vote on this and see who is serious about ending forever wars.”
The CIA and its defenders insisted that torture would help keep America safe. They were wrong.
The Council on Foreign Relations survey of foreign policy experts finds "more threats...likely to require a U.S. military response in 2020 than ever before."