Peter Bergen: All Related Content

All related content for this individual is listed below.

Terror Threat from Gitmo Prisoners is Exaggerated

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
May 8, 2013 |

From Bin Laden to Boston

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
April 30, 2013 |

Agencies Often Miss Warning Signs of Attacks

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
April 29, 2013 |

Ricin: Almost Never Deadly

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • Jennifer Rowland,
  • New America Foundation
April 19, 2013 |

Why Terrorist Bombings Have Been Rare In U.S. In Past Decade

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • Jennifer Rowland,
  • New America Foundation
April 16, 2013 |

Syria Rebel Group's Dangerous Tie to al Qaeda

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • Jennifer Rowland,
  • New America Foundation
April 10, 2013 |

Growing Threat of Extreme Right-Wing Violence

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • Jennifer Rowland,
  • New America Foundation
April 4, 2013 |

Who Really Killed bin Laden?

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
March 26, 2013 |

Strange Bedfellows — Iran and al Qaeda

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
March 10, 2013 |

The appearance Friday in a lower Manhattan courtroom of Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, Osama bin Laden's son-in-law and one-time al Qaeda spokesman, to face charges of conspiracy to kill Americans underlines the perhaps surprising fact that members of bin Laden's inner circle have been living in Iran for the past decade or so.

Original Article

Trying Osama's Son-in-Law in New York Makes Sense

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
March 8, 2013 |

George Venizelos, the FBI's assistant director in charge, asserted Thursday in a written statement that the recently arrested "Sulaiman Abu Ghaith held a key position in al Qaeda, comparable to a consigliere in a mob family."

This is overblown. Though he was Osama bin Laden's son-in-law, Abu Ghaith is far from a big fish in al Qaeda.

Original Article

What Went Right?

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
March 5, 2013 |

Quick question: Which Asian country has seen its life expectancy go up an astounding 18 years in just one decade, while turning from one of the world's most rural countries into one of its fastest-urbanizing? Oh, and the country's GDP increased tenfold in that same period.No, this isn't Japan in the 1960s, Singapore in the 1970s, South Korea in the 1980s, or India in the 1990s. It is Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban.

The New Story of the Death of Osama bin Laden

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
February 13, 2013 |

On Monday Esquire magazine published a massive profile of the Navy SEAL who says he shot Osama bin Laden.

Weighing in at some 15,000 words, the story does not identify the killer of al Qaeda's leader by his real name and refers to him only as "the Shooter."

Original Article

John Brennan, Obama's Counterterrorist

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
February 7, 2013 |

When Vice President Joe Biden and Defense Secretary Robert Gates advised President Barack Obama in late April 2011 that sending a Navy SEAL team into Pakistan to capture or kill Osama bin Laden was not worth the various risks that this operation entailed, John Brennan, the president's top counterterrorism adviser, urged the president to authorize the raid.

Should We Still Fear Al Qaeda?

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
February 4, 2013 |

The attack in January on a gas facility in Algeria by an al Qaeda-linked group that resulted in at least 37 dead hostages has sparked an outpouring of dire warnings from leading Western politicians.

British Prime Minister David Cameron described a "large and existential threat" emanating from North Africa. Tony Blair, his predecessor as prime minister, agreed saying, "David Cameron is right to warn that this is a battle for our values and way of life which will take years, even decades."

Abandon Afghanistan? A Dumb Idea

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
January 10, 2013 |

Afghan President Hamid Karzai will meet with President Barack Obama on Friday to discuss the post-2014 American presence in Afghanistan.

The U.S. military has already given Obama options under which as few as 6,000 or as many as 20,000 soldiers would remain in Afghanistan after 2014. Those forces would work as advisers to the Afghan army and mount special operations raids against the Taliban and al Qaeda.

John Brennan, Obama's Drone Warrior

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • Jennifer Rowland,
  • New America Foundation
January 7, 2013 |

President Barack Obama has nominated his top counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, to be the next director of the CIA.

If there is an emerging Obama doctrine to deal with the threat from al Qaeda and its allies, it is clearly a rejection of the use of conventional military forces and a growing reliance instead on the use of drones and U.S. Special Operations Forces -- and Brennan has been central to Obama's policy.

Senior Senators Slam 'Zero Dark Thirty' Torture Scenes

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
December 20, 2012 |

On Wednesday, three senior U.S. senators sent Michael Lynton, the CEO of Sony Pictures, a letter about "Zero Dark Thirty," the much-discussed new movie about the hunt for Osama bin Laden, which described the film as "grossly inaccurate and misleading."

Gun Violence is a National Security Issue

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
December 18, 2012 |

The proliferation of semiautomatic weapons in the hands of Americans of the types that were used in the Newtown massacre is sometimes framed as a public health issue in the United States.

There is considerable merit to the notion of treating gun violence as a public health matter. After all, homicides -- around 70% of which are accomplished with firearms in the United States according to an authoritative study by the United Nations -- are the 15th leading cause of death for Americans.

A Feminist Film Epic and the Real Women of the CIA

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
December 13, 2012 |

The star of the new film "Zero Dark Thirty" is a flame-haired female CIA analyst Maya (played by Jessica Chastain) who is obsessed with finding Osama bin Laden.

Maya sits in on brutal interrogations of al Qaeda detainees without a qualm and is constantly berating her male bosses to do more to find the leader of al Qaeda. And Maya is there at the end of the movie, identifying bin Laden's body shortly after a Navy SEAL team has killed him in Abbottabad in northern Pakistan.

'Zero Dark Thirty': Did Torture Really Net bin Laden?

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
December 11, 2012 |

"Zero Dark Thirty" is a likely shoo-in, deservedly, for Oscar nominations for best director (Kathryn Bigelow) and best screenplay (Mark Boal) and perhaps a slew of other categories.

Jessica Chastain, who plays Maya, a CIA analyst who in the film is the key player in finding Osama bin Laden, is reminiscent of Cate Blanchett in both looks and talent. The movie is beautifully filmed, and the propulsive score moves the action forward effectively.

Republican Obsession with Benghazi Makes No Sense

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
November 28, 2012 |

Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice, a possible nominee to be the next secretary of state, came to Capitol Hill Tuesday to perform a private mea culpa to key Republican senators for her erroneous initial public statements about the perpetrators of the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi in September in which four Americans were killed.

It didn't work.

Tough Choice for Obama on Petraeus' Successor

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
November 13, 2012 |

 In choosing a new CIA director to replace David Petraeus, President Barack Obama has a range of well-qualified candidates to choose from, although some of the most qualified were in management roles at the CIA when controversial interrogation techniques were used by agency interrogators questioning al Qaeda prisoners and the CIA was maintaining secret prisons overseas to detain members of al Qaeda.

Michael Morell, a three-decade veteran of the CIA, is now the acting director of the agency and a leading contender to become the next director of central intelligence.

How Petraeus Changed the U.S. Military

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
November 11, 2012 |

Historians will likely judge David Petraeus to be the most effective American military commander since Eisenhower.

He was, after all, the person who, more than any other, brought Iraq back from the brink of total disaster after he assumed command of U.S. forces there in 2007.

To understand how daunting a task that was, recall that when Petraeus took over in Iraq, the country was embroiled in a civil war so vicious that civilians were dying at the rate of 90 a day.

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