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About once per week, students receive special programming, like the “Olympics” athletic competition or the “math trails” scavenger hunt through Cambridge...

Author: By Alan J. Tabak, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Summerbridge Cambridge Celebrates | 8/6/2004 | See Source »

...emergence of Khan's network reflects the challenges the U.S. still faces in Afghanistan. Since ousting the Taliban in December 2001, the U.S. has struggled to hunt down al-Qaeda's leaders, disarm Afghanistan's warlords and shore up President Hamid Karzai against a revived Taliban-led insurgency. The renewed trade in opium has worsened all those problems. A recent World Bank report calculates that more than half of the country's economy is tied up in drugs. The combined income of farmers and in-country traffickers reached $2.23 billion last year?up from $1.3 billion in 2002. Heroin trafficking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Terrorism's Harvest | 8/2/2004 | See Source »

...their part, U.S. military commanders have been reluctant to commit the nearly 20,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan to opium eradication, fearing that doing so would divert attention from the hunt for terrorists. Afghan officials say that several times last year U.S. special forces spotted suspicious convoys that appeared to be ferrying opium. Radioing in for orders, the special forces were told to leave the convoy alone and keep hunting for al-Qaeda, the Afghan officials say. A senior Afghan security official says the U.S. military doesn't want to jeopardize the help it receives from local commanders by seizing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Terrorism's Harvest | 8/2/2004 | See Source »

...community to uncover and prevent the next 9/11? Backers of the panel's call for a single NID say the move would reduce the bureaucratic logjams that have contributed to the intelligence community's string of failures, from its inability to track the hijackers before 9/11 to the fruitless hunt for bin Laden to the missing weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq. "You need someone who can give orders," says Lawrence Korb, a former Assistant Defense Secretary, "telling the NSA to focus its wiretap on a specific target, the CIA to focus its human intelligence there and the [National...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Halting the Next 9/11 | 8/2/2004 | See Source »

...report on prewar intelligence has concluded that the CIA's 2002 estimate that there was "an even chance" Saddam had weaponized smallpox was "not supported" by the evidence and says the agency now admits it has "no evidence that Iraq ever weaponized smallpox." David Kay, who ran the postwar hunt for Iraq's illegal weapons, says, "We spent a lot of effort on the smallpox threat, but by December [2003] we had come to the conclusion that there was just a dead end there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Was Smallpox Overhyped? | 7/26/2004 | See Source »

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