A Brief History of Guantanamo Bay, America’s “Idyllic Prison Camp”
One day, our dispatch-boat found the shores of Guantánamo Bay flowing past on either side. It was at nightfall, and on the eastward point a small village was burning, and it happened that a fiery light...
View ArticleAmerica in Mosul: An Account of the Occupation of an Iraqi City
During the battles for Ramadi and Fallujah, those cities emptied out, their residents leaving for camps or fleeing to safety in other parts of the country or world. The Mosul operation was vastly more...
View ArticleLife Inside Guantánamo: An Oral History
“Guantánamo saved my life,” Uighur Adil Hakimjan said to us when he sat down in Stockholm for an interview in 2014. We had never heard those words from anyone before, nor had I expected to ever hear...
View ArticleTo Understand America’s Fear-Driven Response to Terrorism, Look to Chicago
The following is from The Torture Letters: Reckoning with Police Violence, by Laurence Ralph. * In the last letter I wrote to you—all the future mayors of Chicago—I offered the analogy of the torture...
View ArticleWaiting in Darkness: My Time At Guantánamo
I waited in darkness for death. The interrogators were done with me. You aren’t valuable enough to keep alive, they said. I didn’t have the intelligence they wanted on al Qaeda’s chain of command. They...
View ArticleConcerns arise that a Uganda novelist imprisoned for Tweets has been tortured.
In a grim reminder of the ever-tenuous position of truth-telling artists (the world over), Ugandan novelist Kakwenza Rukirabashaija appeared in court today—via video feed from prison—to answer charges...
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