This Week in War. A Friday round-up of what happened and whatâs been written in the world of war and military/security affairs this week. Itâs a mix of news reports, policy briefs, blog posts and longform journalism. Subscribe here to receive this round-up by email.
A member of the EUâs Syria delegation was killed in a rocket attack.
A report from the charitable organization Save the Children details the murder, rape, torture and trauma inflicted on the children of Syria. [PDF] UNICEF released a statement calling this generation of Syrian children a âlost generation.â
Rebels released 21 UN peacekeepers on Saturday.
Ankar Kochneva, a Ukrainian journalist captive for several months in Syria, has escaped.
Syria has increasingly lost control of the border with Iraq.
The Guardian investigates why 110 bodies washed up in the river running through Aleppo.
The UN has disputed the claim that BBC video editor Jehad Mashshrawiâs baby son was killed in an Israeli rocket attack. The BBC is challenging this counterclaim, saying there is little evidence that the rocket was instead a Hamas misfire.
Hazem Kandil on deadlock in Cairo in the LRB.
An unemployed man who self-immolated in Tunisiaâs capital died on Wednesday.
Journalists are on strike in Mali to demand the release of Boukary Daou, editor of the Le Républicain.
Kurdish rebels released 8 Turks in a promising move for the peace process.
Western weapons are the tools of a crackdown in Azerbaijan.
Seymour Hersh notes the tenth anniversary of the bombing of Iraq.
The Guardian tracks down the stories from the most iconic images of the Iraq War.Â
The New York Timesâ Lens Blog reprints Dexter Filkinsâ introduction to Photojournalists at War, an oral history of the war from the photojournalists who saw from the front lines.Â
The family of Amir Hekmati, an Iranian-American former Marine who has been held in Iran for the last 19 months, is pleading for his release.
On the two year anniversary of the Saudi-led intervention, clashes between protesters and security forces have erupted in Bahrain.
The USAFÂ is no longer reporting drone strike data from Afghanistan.
The Atlantic In Focus has a collection of stunning black and white photos (like the one above) taken of anti-Taliban militia activity in Afghanistan.
Mazar-i-Sharif is facing a wave of suicides, particularly young women.Â
A suicide bomber detonated at a buzkashi game on Wednesday in the province of Kunduz, killing ten.Â
Monday was the deadliest day so far this year for American troops in Afghanistan: 5 soldiers were killed in a helicopter crash in the east.
Over this weekend, Staff Sgt. Bales will begin a court-ordered sanity review.
Parveen Rehman, a well-known Pakistani aid worker and the head of the Orangi Pilot Project to help people escape poverty, was killed by four gunmen on Wednesday.
Former President Pervez Musharraf will return home to Pakistan after four years of self-imposed exile in Dubai.
Gunmen kidnapped two Czech tourists in southwest Pakistan.
Peace talks may have begun with FARC and the economy may be looking up in Colombia, but the Afro-Colombian population seems to have been left behind.
A Chilean court has ordered the exhumation of Pablo Neruda as part of an investigation into allegations that he was poisoned following the 1973 military coup that replaced Salvador Allende with Gen. Augusto Pinochet.
Remembering when journalists became part of the story during Northern Irelandâs Troubles.
Gen. Keith Alexander, the chief of the newly-created Cyber Command, testified before Congress this Tuesday alongside top intelligence official James R. Clapper Jr.
Court documents from the failed federal prosecution of Blackwater reveal a previously secret CIA past.
Kenneth Roth of Human Rights Watch asks what rules ought to govern drones.Â
Listen to Bradley Manningâs leaked court statement.
Secretary Hagel has ordered a review of the overturning of a jury conviction of an Air Force Lt on charges of aggravated sexual assault.
Senators like Kirsten Gillibrand grilled military leaders over this case and sexual assault in the military in a Senate hearing.
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Photo: Logar Province, Afghanistan. Farzad Akbari, the young son of anti-Taliban militia commander Farhad Akbari, poses armed for a photograph. Vikram Singh.