Pakistan

The Front

On July 25, Najibullah Zazi, a lanky man in his mid-twenties, walked into the Beauty Supply Warehouse in Aurora, Colorado, a suburb of Denver. The visit was captured on a store video camera. Wearing a baseball cap and pushing a shopping cart, Zazi appeared to be just another suburban guy.

Peter Bergen | The New Republic | October 19, 2009

Revenge of the Drones

As a result of the unprecedented 41 drone strikes into Pakistan authorized by the Obama administration, aimed at Taliban and al Qaeda networks based there, about a half-dozen leaders of militant organizations have been killed--including two heads of Uzbek terrorist groups allied with al Qaeda, and Baitullah Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistani Taliban--in addition to hundreds of lower-level militants and civilians, according to our analysis.[1]

Peter Bergen, Katherine Tiedemann | October 19, 2009

The Case for Humility in Afghanistan

The United States has two compelling interests at issue in the Afghan conflict. One is the ongoing, increasingly successful but incomplete effort to reduce the threat posed by al Qaeda and related jihadi groups, and to finally eliminate the al Qaeda leadership that carried out the Sept. 11 attacks. The second is the pursuit of a South and Central Asian region that is at least stable enough to ensure that Pakistan does not fail completely as a state or fall… more

Steve Coll | ForeignPolicy.com | October 16, 2009

The Taliban-Al Qaeda Connection

The case of Najibullah Zazi serves as a grim reminder that al Qaeda continues to plan deadly attacks against American civilians. Zazi traveled to Pakistan's rugged borderlands, where he connected with al Qaeda operatives who provided him with explosives training in the summer of 2008. The next year, a few months after he had returned home to the United States, Zazi began gathering explosive materials to launch an attack, one that could have killed dozens. Yet it's worth keeping in mind that this plot, however dastardly, pales… more

Reihan Salam | The Daily Beast | October 16, 2009

Review: 'Frontline: Obama's War' on PBS | Los Angeles Times

New Yorker writer Steve Coll summarizes: "This could not be a more complicated war. If you think about it, the United States is essentially waging a war ...
Steve Coll | October 13, 2009

Karzai Weaker, but Still Important | New York Times

A repeated failing of US foreign policy has been to project American interests onto one leader and feel cheated if he falls short, said Steve Coll, ...
Steve Coll | October 13, 2009

AfPak | WTOP

Sameer Lalwani | October 10, 2009

Afghanistan and Pakistan | Forbes

Support for this view came from CNN's Peter Bergen, who reported on Thursday that there has been a fundamental shift in popular opinion in the country. ...
Peter Bergen | October 8, 2009

Why We Must Stay

In an address to the Veterans of Foreign Wars in August, President Obama made an impassioned case for the American military effort in Afghanistan. "If left unchecked," Obama said, "the Taliban insurgency will mean an even larger safe haven from which al Qaeda would plot to kill more Americans." Indeed, he went so far as to call the war in Afghanistan a "war of necessity," a term one normally reserves for repelling a foreign invasion or foiling an imminent attack. One of the vitally important points the… more

Reihan Salam | The Daily Beast | October 8, 2009

The Cost of Commitment in Afghanistan | Council on Foreign Relations

But Peter Bergen, a terrorism expert at New America Foundation, says that "if US forces were not in Afghanistan," the Taliban would return to Kabul "within ...
Peter Bergen | October 8, 2009