After ISIS, Iraq Is Still Broken
One year after the liberation of Mosul, distrust, fear, and a paralyzing sense of insecurity plague the country’s religious and ethnic minorities.
One year after the liberation of Mosul, distrust, fear, and a paralyzing sense of insecurity plague the country’s religious and ethnic minorities.
As the Assad regime declares victory in Daraa, Syrians fleeing his forces have been left stranded.
On Facebook and in the cafés of decimated Mosul, they envision a country free from political Islam. Do they have a shot?
The fatwa to kill wasn’t real, but the consequences were.
“Maybe if we were killed, it’d be easier”
Protests in the country's capital are directed not only at Israel but also at the Jordanian government.
Far from trying to “Islamicize” the country, some Syrian refugees find its version of Islam too conservative for their taste.
A reporter who covers domestic labor in the Middle East tells of the women who are exploited there, and the women who do the exploiting.
How trolling Trump became a marketing strategy
Conversations with refugees