The Children of ISIS
Three siblings from Chicago ran away to become jihadis. Is it fair to try them as terrorists?
Three siblings from Chicago ran away to become jihadis. Is it fair to try them as terrorists?
Janet Reitman Rolling Stone Mar 2015 45min Permalink
One man’s story.
Joshua Partlow Washington Post Mar 2015 10min Permalink
Even ISIS’s opponents are hard men who understand terror.
Matthieu Aikins Rolling Stone Mar 2015 25min Permalink
What one sergeant says he saw before the alleged suicides of three detainees.
Alexander Nazaryan Newsweek Jan 2015 Permalink
An Islamic State senior commander reveals the terror group’s origins.
Martin Chulov The Guardian Dec 2014 20min Permalink
An essay on PTSD.
Tom Ricks New Yorker Dec 2014 10min Permalink
A 2003 essay that foreshadows the emergence of the Islamic State a decade later – an insurgency incited by American policy in Iraq during the early days of the war.
Mark Danner New York Review of Books Sep 2003 15min Permalink
When American and Iraqi soldiers were exposed to leftover chemical munitions from Saddam Hussein’s war against Iran, the Pentagon kept silent.
C.J. Chivers The New York Times Oct 2014 Permalink
A couple’s only son is killed in Iraq.
Steve Oney Los Angeles Jun 2007 50min Permalink
The full text of a 20,000-word ebook on the interpreters who worked alongside American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, and their fates once they were no longer of service.
Ben Anderson Vice News Aug 2014 1h25min Permalink
The life and death of Pat Tillman.
Gary Smith Sports Illustrated Sep 2006 Permalink
On the future of Iraq.
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Apr 2014 45min Permalink
The fight to grant asylum to the translators who worked—and sometimes fought—alongside U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Paul Solotaroff Men's Journal Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Embedded with a U.S. bomb squad in Baghdad.
The story that inspired The Hurt Locker.
A political history of Donald Rumsfeld.
Mark Danner New York Review of Books Nov 2013 20min Permalink
Each soldier in Iraq and Afghanistan generated around 10 pounds of garbage per day. Most of that trash—along with used equipment and medical supplies and other wastes of war—was burned in open-air pits, emitting a toxic smoke that many soliders blame for their poor health today.
Katie Drummond The Verge Oct 2013 Permalink
Jamie Leigh Jones’s story of gang-rape in Iraq changed the law to help victims, even though she might not have been one herself.
Stephanie Mencimer Washington Monthly Oct 2013 2h30min Permalink
A year and a half with Candace Desmond-Woods, whose husband, and Iraq war veteran, suffers from PTSD and alcoholism.
Christopher Goffard The Los Angeles Times Sep 2013 25min Permalink
The life and death of a reporter.
Gene Maddaus LA Weekly Aug 2013 25min Permalink
How a con man named James McCormick sold $38 million worth of phony bomb-detection devices to Iraqi authorities.
Adam Higginbotham Businessweek Jul 2013 20min Permalink
After being fired from both Nirvana and Soundgarden, Jason Everman joined the Special Forces.
Clay Tarver New York Times Magazine Jul 2013 Permalink
After two tours in Iraq, the writer returns to a volatile region of Afghanistan as an embedded journalist.
Matt Cook Texas Monthly Jul 2013 35min Permalink
An Iraq War veteran assuages his PTSD with bank heists.
Scott Johnson Buzzfeed May 2013 35min Permalink
On decorated sniper Chris Kyle and the troubled young veteran who took his life.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker May 2013 50min Permalink
Born with spina bifida, Noor al-Zahra Haider entered the media spotlight in 2005 after U.S. troops arranged her life-saving surgery in America. This is what happened when she returned to Iraq.