Quantcast

Bob Dreyfuss | The Nation

Bob Dreyfuss

Author Bios

Robert Dreyfuss

Bob Dreyfuss

Contributing Editor

Robert Dreyfuss, a Nation contributing editor, is an investigative journalist specializing in politics and national security. He is the author of Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam and is a frequent contributor to Rolling Stone, The American Prospect and Mother Jones.

Articles

News and Features

A recounting of three horrific US/ISAF civilian massacres, the procedures implemented to prevent such events from happening again—and why those procedures were inadequate.

Even among staunchly antiwar politicians and pundits, few bother to mention the cost of the war to civilians.

Gen. Stanley McChrystal himself put it best: “Because of civilian casualties, I think we have just about eroded our credibility here.”

In a clear challenge to hardliners, President-elect Hassan Rouhani vowed, ‘I have come to destroy extremism.’

There are some hopeful signs, including his recent speech at the National Defense University and a new, less hawkish foreign policy team.

The US bombing of a Pakistani border outpost, US drone attacks and Pakistani support for the Taliban—all threaten to destroy the chances for a peaceful US-NATO exit from Afghanistan.

The United States has alienated both allied regimes and their opposition movements.

Economic crisis, deficit mania and war weariness have created political momentum for big cuts to military spending.

If Obama is looking for a reason to scale back his foreign policy ambitions, the GOP takeover of the House is the perfect excuse.

Blogs

Secretary of State John Kerry will be slip-sliding during a visit to Saudi Arabia and Qatar, as pro-Assad forces make gains on the ground.
Tipping over ethnic and sectarian balances for imperial purpose is not a good idea.
No time to lose, if Afghanistan is to avoid full-blown civil war in 2015.
Hassan Rouhani in a stunning apparent victory.
Aiding Syria’s ragtag rebels means, well, backing Al Qaeda.
There’s no predicting the outcome, and the results might really matter.
Not a molehill, but not a mountain either.
Close