News

NEW HAVEN — A federal judge in Massachusetts has issued a stay to prevent the U.S. government from deporting or moving a ...
This data breach, and the efforts to cover it up, raises serious questions about state secrecy, blame-shifting and accountability. After discovering the mistake in August 2023, the government covered ...
Superinjunctions are exceptionally rare and controversial, precisely because they run counter to the principle of open ...
U.K. media reported that the names of more than 100 special forces troops, MI6 spies and military officers were part of the ...
As programs created to support America's Afghan allies are shuttered, about 1,500 Afghans remain on a U.S. camp in Qatar, ...
WASHINGTON -- Temporary measures that allowed nearly 12,000 Afghans to work in the U.S. and be protected from deportation are expiring Monday as part of the Trump administration's efforts to make more ...
Temporary protected status for Afghan refugees in the U.S. ends Monday. Hundreds could face deportation back to Afghanistan, which is now under Taliban rule.
An Afghan interpreter working with the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division in Kandahar province displays a patch showing the Afghan and American flags, Sept. 9, 2010.
Tens of thousands of Afghans who risked their lives working for the U.S. government or military are now in limbo after the Trump administration issued two executive orders targeting refugees.
In the shadow of the Afghan mountains, a man sits in a small, windowless room. This is where he has lived for the past three years, since 2021, when U.S. troops withdrew and the Taliban reclaimed ...
A U.S. Army vet and filmmaker explores the Afghanistan war and its ending through his interpreters, Ismail and Saifullah Haqmal.