Who’s really being naïve about nation-building?
Poems take up nearly one fifth of many al-Qaeda magazines.
“The deranged ones.”
Abdullah Azzam’s Afghan jihad.
Money and symbols.
“We are all Parisians” is more than a slogan.
No. “IS has been eager to reveal its own thinking. It slaughters for religious reasons.”
In Submission, his most recent novel, the French writer-provocateur Michel Houellebecq imagines France after an Islamic takeover. The book, argues Amir Taheri, is as much. . .
Ceding northern Iraq to jihadis is bad enough; inviting Iran to help stop them will make everything worse. But when America is passive, others fill the vacuum.
The jihadists’ target is the free world; yet Europe refuses to listen, even as it continues to fund incitement against Jews, Israel, America, and Europe itself.
Before deciding exactly what action to take against the Syrian dictator, the U.S. must determine whether his unleashing of chemical weapons was a sign of. . .