Below, our favorite stories of the week. Kindle and Readmill users, you can also get them as a Readlist. Sign up to receive this list free every Friday in your inbox. *** 1. This Is Danny Pearl’s Final Story Asra Q. Nomani | Washingtonian | January 23, 2014 | 30 minutes (7,639 words) Asra Nomani, […]
Search results
The Guantánamo Memoirs of Mohamedou Ould Slahi
[Three-part series] The firsthand account of a prisoner detained in Guantánamo: “Suddenly a commando team of three soldiers and a German shepherd broke into our interrogation room. [ ] punched me violently, which made me fall face down on the floor, and the second guy kept punching me everywhere, mainly on my face and my […]
Guantánamo: An Oral History
Ten years after the arrival of the first detainees, officials, lawyers, prisoners and soldiers speak out on how it all started—and how difficult it has been to close it: “When I first got down to Guantánamo, I, along pretty much with everybody else in my group, thought that we were going to be dealing with […]
Diary: Guantánamo
In the cells there were other kinds of torture. Above all they prevent you to sleep. They brought big vacuum cleaners to make a lot of noise. They put on music – I understood the words were bad words. At night, they switched on lights everywhere. If they saw you sleeping, they came shouting: WAKE […]
The Boy from Gitmo
Eight years ago, an [REDACTED] Afghan kid—some say he was [REDACTED] years old, others say he was 12—was grabbed in a Kabul marketplace after a grenade attack on two American soldiers. He was interrogated, [REDACTED], and then taken to Guantánamo. He spent his teenage years there, seven in all, confined in a [REDACTED] [REDACTED] [REDACTED] […]
Hope. Change. Reality.
Attorney General Eric Holder entered the Justice Department on a mission to reinvent it. He’d rectify the dubious hires of the Bush era; he’d shut down Guantánamo and try the most notorious detainees here on U.S. soil; he’d speak forcefully and often about the return of the rule of law. Unfortunately, Washington doesn’t like an […]
Stories My Father Told Me
When America went to “the dark side” to fight terrorism, she became unrecognizable to the world. That’s when my father took on the case of Guantánamo prisoner number 707 and became unrecognizable to me.
Can One Good Man Redeem a Nation for the Sins of Guantánamo?
As the Obama administration prepares to try the 9/11 plotters in military tribunals, David Iglesias stands at the ready to prosecute them — and maybe just save the legacy of the White House that fired him #Sept11
The End of the ’00s: The Guantanamo Gift Shop, by Spencer Ackerman
When I visited Guantanamo Bay in the summer of 2005—the middle of this wretched, spiritually-draining decade—the last thing I expected to find was the summit, the epitome, the apotheosis of the Bush era’s epic union of consumerism and brutality. Yes: Guantanamo Bay has a gift shop. I bought this adorable plush iguana there. I’ll explain.

