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Reasonable people can disagree about whether the United States should resume using enhanced interrogation techniques (as it appears it will if a Republican assumes the presidency in January 2013). But we should at least debate this proposition based on facts.
The administration subcontracted the crucial work of detention and interrogation because it did not want to do that work itself under the jurisdiction of American courts. That was a mistake.
Alberto Gonzales will face questions regarding the decision to deny POW status to al Qaeda and Taliban fighters.
The Republican presidential race is returning to where it startedeighteen months ago: with John McCain as the front-runner despite his low standing among the party's conservative base.
Judicial overconfidence in intruding into war decisions could produce more Abu Ghraibs in combat zones and remove our most effective means of preventing future terrorist attacks.
In its decision in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld rejecting President Bush's military commissions for the trial of al-Qaeda terrorists, the Supreme Court made a number of missteps.
Americans voice their opinions on taxes, their economic situations, Mitt Romney, and more.
The brothers that Senator John Kerry once scorned are now stepping forward to repudiate him in their turn.




