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Britain has been successful at preventing another major terrorist attack since the suicide attacks in London on July 7, 2005, but there is an ongoing debate in Britain about amending, or doing away with altogether, some of the counterterrorism authorities that have been put on the books since 2005.
At The Chronicle of Higher Education, “journalistic standards” are of the double kind. And incivility is a firing offense — unless you’re criticizing a conservative, in which case nasty smears are all the rage
As world leaders gathered in Gleneagles, Scotland, for their annual G-8 summit, a wave of coordinated terrorist bombings struck London, killing dozens. These attacks and their aftermath will be the subject of an AEI briefing. AEI scholars Thomas Donnelly, Frederick Kagan, Michael Rubin, and Radek Sikorski will be joined by...
Public opinion on transportation security, the Supreme Court nomination, media favorability, the bad news bias, and smoking bans.
Until the terrorist attacks of 9/11, the American view of radical Islam and its many discontents was shaped more by the Middle East than South Asia. The U.S. has long been at odds with the raging Ayatollah in Iran, the murderous truck bomber in Lebanon and the masked Palestinian "freedom...
The failure of Kurdish leaders to fulfill their diplomatic agenda extends beyond the latest Turkish incursion. Turkey's occupations, however, provide the Kurdistan Regional Government with an opportunity.
Last week, the London-based nonprofit Bureau of Investigative Journalism published a series of articles accusing the U.S. of covering up civilian casualties caused by drone attacks in Pakistan's tribal areas. In reality, drones represent the most discerning--and therefore most moral--form of aerial warfare in human history.





