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Examples

  • Somewhere in the middle is Max Rodenbeck, who writes in The New York Review of Books that al Qaeda has become little more than a brand name and marginal offshoots like AQAP "have been relegated to merely proving their existence by killing now and then, or blowing something up."

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • Somewhere in the middle is Max Rodenbeck, who writes in The New York Review of Books that al Qaeda has become little more than a brand name and marginal offshoots like AQAP "have been relegated to merely proving their existence by killing now and then, or blowing something up."

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • I'm inclined to side with Rodenbeck's interpretation, not because he lies in the middle but because it corresponds to my own understanding of the decline of al Qaeda over the last decade.

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • I'm inclined to side with Rodenbeck's interpretation, not because he lies in the middle but because it corresponds to my own understanding of the decline of al Qaeda over the last decade.

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • Somewhere in the middle is Max Rodenbeck, who writes in The New York Review of Books that al Qaeda has become little more than a brand name and marginal offshoots like AQAP "have been relegated to merely proving their existence by killing now and then, or blowing something up."

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • I'm inclined to side with Rodenbeck's interpretation, not because he lies in the middle but because it corresponds to my own understanding of the decline of al Qaeda over the last decade.

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • Somewhere in the middle is Max Rodenbeck, who writes in The New York Review of Books that al Qaeda has become little more than a brand name and marginal offshoots like AQAP "have been relegated to merely proving their existence by killing now and then, or blowing something up."

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • I'm inclined to side with Rodenbeck's interpretation, not because he lies in the middle but because it corresponds to my own understanding of the decline of al Qaeda over the last decade.

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • I'm inclined to side with Rodenbeck's interpretation, not because he lies in the middle but because it corresponds to my own understanding of the decline of al Qaeda over the last decade.

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

  • Somewhere in the middle is Max Rodenbeck, who writes in The New York Review of Books that al Qaeda has become little more than a brand name and marginal offshoots like AQAP "have been relegated to merely proving their existence by killing now and then, or blowing something up."

    John Feffer: Bunkum and Debunk 'Em John Feffer 2011

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