CS

Chris Sands

CorrespondentGlobalPost
Chris Sands has lived in Afghanistan since 2005, regards it as his home and hopes to remain there for many years to come. In the past his reporting from across the country has been published by The National, The Independent, the New Statesman and Le Monde diplomatique, amongst others. He is now a freelance correspondent for GlobalPost.
Conflict
Obama speech in Kabul: What he didn’t tell us
Conflict
In Afghanistan, fears that a NATO withdrawal will lead to another civil war
Conflict
Afghans fear conflict will escalate long after it ends for America
Conflict
Afghanistan: Schoolgirls caught in the crossfire
Conflict
In Afghanistan, US borrows strategy from Iraq
Conflict
North Waziristan: The problem no one wants to talk about
Conflict
The dangerous political battle for Afghanistan
Conflict
Meet the most important man in Afghanistan
Conflict
Afghan surge: Obama’s great gamble comes to an end
Politics
US Election: What if Afghanistan could vote?
Conflict
Losing Afghanistan: Clerics now openly support the Taliban
Conflict
Taliban in control at Kabul’s doorstep
Conflict
Afghanistan: A former US ally says a new conflict looms
Conflict
Afghanistan: Taliban fear grips once peaceful Parwan province
Conflict
Afghanistan: Missing George W. Bush
Conflict
Afghanistan’s thriving civil society is getting worried
Conflict
Petraeus, Allen scandal adds to sense of unraveling in Afghanistan
Conflict
Afghanistan: Another province goes to the Taliban
Conflict
Afghanistan: For ex-Taliban, it’s peace or death
Conflict
Afghanistan’s University of Resistance
Conflict
2012 was a tough year for Afghanistan. 2013 will be tougher
Conflict
Afghanistan transition: One city is a ticking time bomb
Conflict
Afghanistan: It’s worse in the winter
Conflict
Welcome to Kabul: Here are some brass knuckles
Conflict
Afghanistan’s post-NATO era takes shape
Conflict
How the Taliban wins over Afghans without firing a shot
Conflict
Suicide attacks, once uncommon, on the rise in Afghanistan
Conflict
The risky craft of being an artist in Afghanistan
Conflict
In remote Afghan district, the roots of insurgency are local