• Home
  • About
    • Mission
    • Who We Are
    • TF History
    • Submissions
    • Contact
  • Lloyd Investigative Fund
  • Donate
  • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Toward Freedom
  • Our Investigations
  • Africa
  • Americas
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • West Asia
  • Reviews

doha

The U.S. flag is lowered as U.S. soldiers leave Helmand province, southern Afghanistan, May 2, 2021 / credit: Afghan Ministry of Defense Press Office

Biden Must Call Off the B-52s Bombing Afghan Cities

Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J.S. Davies August 11, 2021 Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J.S. Davies

The lesson of the United States' experience in Afghanistan should be a new “Afghanistan syndrome,” a public aversion to war that prevents future U.S. military attacks and invasions, rejects attempts to socially engineer the governments of other nations, and leads to a new and active U.S. commitment to peace, diplomacy, and disarmament.

SIGN UP FOR OUR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

    Trending

    • Pan Africanism in the Sahel Region
    • Derailing the Engine of Liberty
    • Time to Reverse Course and Change the Conversation from Doomsday to Peace Day
    • Remembering Armistice Day
    • Commentary – The Unfinished Business of the Pan African Congress

    Copyright Toward Freedom 2019