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Home > Resources > Articles, Papers, and Reports |
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Despite an American military presence here, the Taliban are back and Khost is more dangerous than it was a few years ago. There are suicide attacks, killings in the streets, and corruption is rife. A newspaper predicts that the Taliban will regain complete control by 2010.
Baluchistan borders on Afghanistan and Iran. In the past it was a haven for the Mujahideen; now it harbors the Taliban and perhaps al-Qaeda.
Jere Van Dyk reports on the current situation in Kabul, describing the changes since his first visit in 1970.
Jere Van Dyk reports on the mood in Pakistan and the situation in the border
areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan, scene of several aerial attacks on villages
by the CIA and the Pakistan government.
Morocco is a Muslim country, but Marrakech is to Europe what Acapulco or Cancun is to Americans: an exotic, safe tourist destination in the sun, says Jere Van Dyk. Yet al-Qaeda has a presence here, as shown by the 2003 suicide bomber attacks in Casablanca.
Jere Van Dyk returns to his old haunts in Peshawar and is awed by the faith that
permeates life there. Yet violence is just beneath the surface. He talks to one
Afghan who has once again become a guerrilla leader, and another who was
wrongfully imprisoned in Guantanamo.
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On assignment in Pakistan, Morocco, and Afghanistan, journalist Jere Van Dyk reports back to the Council on his experiences.
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