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JOE GALLOWAY
Joseph L. Galloway is the senior military correspondent for Knight Ridder Newspapers and a nationally syndicated columnist.

  • Farewell to an American hero

    For the better part of 60 years, two old Army pilots who loved each other argued over many a meal and drink as to which of them was the second best pilot in the world.

  • A sad week for Georgia, America and the world

    Only someone with a tenuous grasp on reality and a poor knowledge of history and the world could have looked into the flinty eyes of a onetime colonel in the Soviet KGB and ”found him very straightforward and trustworthy.“

  • U.S. should heed general's report on Afghanistan

    There's military slang that seemingly applies to the situation on the ground in Afghanistan today. The operative acronym is FUBAR — Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition. That first letter doesn't really stand for fouled, and the R sometimes stands for repair.

  • A top general: more troops not answer in Afghanistan

    There's military slang that seemingly applies to the situation on the ground in Afghanistan today. The operative acronym is FUBAR — Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition. That first letter doesn't really stand for fouled, and the R sometimes stands for repair.

  • 1 step forward in Iraq, 2 back in Afghanistan

    The events of last week served to underline the fact that the war on terrorism was always really about Afghanistan and Pakistan, and that President Bush's splendid little adventure in Iraq was always a sideshow, even though it siphoned off the biggest chunk of manpower and resources.

  • 1 step forward in Iraq, 2 back in Afghanistan

    The events of last week served to underline the fact that the war on terrorism was always really about Afghanistan and Pakistan, and that President Bush's splendid little adventure in Iraq was always a sideshow, even though it siphoned off the biggest chunk of manpower and resources.

  • Fear the enemy within

    Early next week, the U.S. Senate will vote on an extension of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, with a few small amendments intended to immunize telecommunications corporations that assisted our government in the warrantless and illegal wiretapping it has grown to love.

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