Did the US know that MSF facility in Kunduz was a hospital?

When US aircraft bombed a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, on October 3, it was clear that something had gone terribly wrong, but it wasn't clear what that was. Did the US deliberately attack a medical facility? Was there some kind of inexcusable error in the heat of battle that led to that … Continue reading Did the US know that MSF facility in Kunduz was a hospital?

Doing ISIS’s job for them

My newest piece at LobeLog is based on having watched a whole slew of panel discussions that have been happening around DC lately, assessing the first year or so of the anti-ISIS air campaign. The results have been mixed at best, with one analyst, Hassan Hassan from Chatham House (who has literally written the book … Continue reading Doing ISIS’s job for them

Today in European history: a bad day for the Ottomans (1912)

The year 1912 does not stand in the history books as a particularly good one for the Ottoman Empire. There was the January-August Albanian Revolt, which ended with the Ottomans forced to grant substantial autonomy and other concessions to their restive Albanian minority. There was the Italo-Turkish War, which began in 1911 and ended, badly … Continue reading Today in European history: a bad day for the Ottomans (1912)

Calm before the (actual) storm

I don't know about you, but this seems pretty ominous to me: A potentially catastrophic landfall is expected Friday evening as a very powerful and dangerous Hurricane Patricia moves towards Mexico's Pacific coast. Hurricane Patricia became the most powerful tropical cyclone ever measured in the Western Hemisphere on Friday morning as its maximum sustained winds … Continue reading Calm before the (actual) storm