Matthew Rosenberg
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Pentagon Opens All Combat Roles to Women
- Friday December 4, 2015
- World News | Matthew Rosenberg and Dave Philipps, The New York Times
In a historic transformation of the U.S. military, Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Thursday that the Pentagon will open all combat jobs to women.
- www.ndtv.com
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Afghanistan to Allow Return of Expelled New York Times Reporter
- Sunday October 5, 2014
- World News | Reuters
Afghanistan's new government will allow a New York Times journalist who was expelled in August to return and resume work in the country, the newspaper said Sunday.
- www.ndtv.com
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Afghanistan Gives New York Times Reporter 24 Hours to Leave Country
- Thursday August 21, 2014
- World News | Reuters
Afghanistan has given a New York Times reporter 24 hours to leave the country, accusing him of not cooperating with an investigation into his reporting, the Attorney General's office said on Wednesday.
- www.ndtv.com
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Afghan Government Bans American Journalist From Leaving Country
- Wednesday August 20, 2014
- World News | Reuters
The Afghan attorney general's office has barred a New York Times reporter from leaving the country after the paper ran a story about ministry and palace officials discussing plans to form an interim government if an election deadlock continues.
- www.ndtv.com
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At Afghan prison, female visitors face invasive searches
- Saturday March 17, 2012
- World News | By Matthew Rosenberg, The New York Times
Women visiting relatives at a notorious men's prison on the edge of Kabul have in recent weeks been subjected to invasive body-cavity searches at the order of the prison's commandant, who has told guards and American officials that the measure is needed to keep out contraband, Western and Afghan officials said.
- www.ndtv.com
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Shocking Taliban video: 'Urinating' Marines identified, says Pentagon
- Friday January 13, 2012
- World News | Graham Bowley and Matthew Rosenberg, The New York Times
A video showing four United States Marines urinating on three dead Taliban fighters provoked anger and condemnation on Thursday in Afghanistan and around the world, raising fears in Washington that the images could incite anti-American sentiment at a particularly delicate moment in the decade-old Afghan war.
- www.ndtv.com
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Against odds, path opens up for US-Taliban talks
- Thursday January 12, 2012
- World News | Steven Lee Myers Matthew Rosenberg and Eric Schmitt, The New York Times
Over the last year, Marc Grossman, a veteran but low-key diplomat, led a small team of American officials who met secretly from Doha, Qatar, to Munich with a shadowy representative of Afghanistan's Taliban leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, in hopes of starting peace talks.
- www.ndtv.com
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NATO air strike: Report blames both US and Pak
- Friday December 23, 2011
- World News | Eric Schmitt and Matthew Rosenberg, The New York Times
A United States military investigation has concluded that checks and balances devised to prevent cross-border mishaps with Pakistan failed to avert a deadly NATO airstrike last month in part because American officials did not trust Pakistan enough to give it detailed information about American troop locations in Afghanistan.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Pentagon Opens All Combat Roles to Women
- Friday December 4, 2015
- World News | Matthew Rosenberg and Dave Philipps, The New York Times
In a historic transformation of the U.S. military, Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Thursday that the Pentagon will open all combat jobs to women.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Afghanistan to Allow Return of Expelled New York Times Reporter
- Sunday October 5, 2014
- World News | Reuters
Afghanistan's new government will allow a New York Times journalist who was expelled in August to return and resume work in the country, the newspaper said Sunday.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Afghanistan Gives New York Times Reporter 24 Hours to Leave Country
- Thursday August 21, 2014
- World News | Reuters
Afghanistan has given a New York Times reporter 24 hours to leave the country, accusing him of not cooperating with an investigation into his reporting, the Attorney General's office said on Wednesday.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Afghan Government Bans American Journalist From Leaving Country
- Wednesday August 20, 2014
- World News | Reuters
The Afghan attorney general's office has barred a New York Times reporter from leaving the country after the paper ran a story about ministry and palace officials discussing plans to form an interim government if an election deadlock continues.
- www.ndtv.com
-
At Afghan prison, female visitors face invasive searches
- Saturday March 17, 2012
- World News | By Matthew Rosenberg, The New York Times
Women visiting relatives at a notorious men's prison on the edge of Kabul have in recent weeks been subjected to invasive body-cavity searches at the order of the prison's commandant, who has told guards and American officials that the measure is needed to keep out contraband, Western and Afghan officials said.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Shocking Taliban video: 'Urinating' Marines identified, says Pentagon
- Friday January 13, 2012
- World News | Graham Bowley and Matthew Rosenberg, The New York Times
A video showing four United States Marines urinating on three dead Taliban fighters provoked anger and condemnation on Thursday in Afghanistan and around the world, raising fears in Washington that the images could incite anti-American sentiment at a particularly delicate moment in the decade-old Afghan war.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Against odds, path opens up for US-Taliban talks
- Thursday January 12, 2012
- World News | Steven Lee Myers Matthew Rosenberg and Eric Schmitt, The New York Times
Over the last year, Marc Grossman, a veteran but low-key diplomat, led a small team of American officials who met secretly from Doha, Qatar, to Munich with a shadowy representative of Afghanistan's Taliban leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, in hopes of starting peace talks.
- www.ndtv.com
-
NATO air strike: Report blames both US and Pak
- Friday December 23, 2011
- World News | Eric Schmitt and Matthew Rosenberg, The New York Times
A United States military investigation has concluded that checks and balances devised to prevent cross-border mishaps with Pakistan failed to avert a deadly NATO airstrike last month in part because American officials did not trust Pakistan enough to give it detailed information about American troop locations in Afghanistan.
- www.ndtv.com