In Sisi’s Egypt, you’re lucky if you only get arrested

I've got a new piece at LobeLog looking at the arrest and detention of Egyptian journalist Hossam Bahgat last weekend. Bahgat evidently angered the Egyptian military in October with an investigative piece about a couple dozen officers who appear to have been railroaded, complete with coerced confessions, into guilty verdicts in a case about an … Continue reading In Sisi’s Egypt, you’re lucky if you only get arrested

Shunning refugees is what ISIS wants us to do, so why would we do it?

I was all set to write something about the snowballing right-wing mass freak out over the possibility of Syrian refugees coming to America and committing terror attacks here, but The Week's Ryan Cooper has already written it for me (and I'm not just saying that because he cites me in his piece): Furthermore, sheltering refugees … Continue reading Shunning refugees is what ISIS wants us to do, so why would we do it?

“The most deadly terrorist group in the world” isn’t ISIS — well, not exactly

The Institute for Economics and Peace released its Global Terrorism Index 2015 report today, and if you're looking for 2014's gold medal winner in terror, it's not ISIS. Not exactly. It's complicated: Also notable over the past year is the major intensification of the terrorist threat in Nigeria. The country witnessed the largest increase in … Continue reading “The most deadly terrorist group in the world” isn’t ISIS — well, not exactly

The Syrian peace talks and governance, my latest at LobeLog

A new piece from yours truly went online at LobeLog yesterday, and while I think the main point still holds, I'll admit that it got a little overtaken by events (I sent it in late Friday afternoon, before...well, you know). Please go read it anyway! See, on Saturday, in the aftershock of the Paris attack, … Continue reading The Syrian peace talks and governance, my latest at LobeLog