The New York Times bestselling author of Kill Anything That Moves and Next Time They'll Come to Count the Dead
Harper's Magazine
An ethnic-cleansing campaign by the government threatens to empty South Sudan
The Network
100 Reporters and The Intercept
TomDispatch
Talking Donald Trump in South Sudan
The Intercept
Military officials stopped answering a reporter's emails and calls about overseas bases, so he filed FOIA requests. The Pentagon was not pleased.
The Intercept
A new project, "Remembering the Ones We Lost," is compiling a list of civilians killed in Sudanese civil wars since the 1950s.
TomDispatch
The story of the America’s secret war against the Islamic State
TomDispatch
U.S. Special Operations forces deployed to 135 nations -- roughly 70% of the countries on the planet.
TomDispatch
In the shadows of what was once called the “dark continent," a scramble has come and gone. If you heard nothing about it, that was by design. But look hard enough and -- north to south, east to west -- you’ll find the fruits of that effort: a network of bases, compounds, and other sites whose sum total exceeds the number of nations on the continent. esting? Write a catchy description to grab your audience's attention...
The Intercept
Unbeknownst to most Americans and without any apparent public announcement, the U.S. has recently taken steps to transform this tiny, out-of-the-way outpost into an “enduring” base, a key hub for its secret war,
The Intercept
The U.S. military’s expanding footprint in East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula
New York Times
While nearly 60,000 American troops died, some two million Vietnamese civilians were killed, and millions more were wounded and displaced, during America’s involvement in Vietnam dience's attention...
Los Angeles Times
Declassified papers show U.S. atrocities went far beyond My Lai.
Los Angeles Times
'Americans don't do things like this,' an officer thought when he learned of three villagers' deaths. His shock grew when the soldier convicted continued to serve.
Los Angeles Times
Documents show troops who reported abuse in Vietnam were discredited even as the military was finding evidence of worse.
Los Angeles Times
Decades-old Pentagon records show that Army criminal investigators substantiated seven massacres of Vietnamese and Cambodian civilians by U.S. soldiers — in addition to the notorious 1968 My Lai massacre.