Bin Laden's death offers President Obama a chance to end the war in Afghanistan and to prevent one in Pakistan.
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It is impossible to believe the government of Pakistan did not know exactly where we could find Osama.
Our war has radicalized Pakistanis, turning many against the West and their own government.
Pakistan's ISI served as an arbiter in the Taliban dispute over the New York Times reporter's kidnapping.
America's Pakistan problem is getting worse, not better, on President Obama's watch.
Three US special forces soldiers were killed in northwest Pakistan this week, confirming that the US military is more deeply engaged on the ground in Pakistan than previously acknowledged by the White House and Pentagon.
Is Pakistan really in danger of falling into the hands of the Taliban?
Should President Obama and General McChrystal read the 111-year-old novel, The War of the Worlds?
Given a severe global economic crisis and the election of Barack Obama, the possibility of a serious discussion about a US exit strategy from the Afghan disaster hovers on the horizon.
The history of Pakistan's border regions remains an unruly captive of the imperial "Great Game."


