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Elizabeth Rubin

  • WORK
    • Stories from Afghanistan
    • Stories from Middle East
    • Stories Elsewhere
    • Op-Eds
  • About
  • Contact

Featured
Studio Kabul
Oct 12, 2012
Oct 12, 2012

Studio Kabul

The New York Times Magazine: Advancing Women’s Rights

At the age of 27, after 14 years of marriage, with seven children and a husband 30 years older than she was, a husband who was addicted to opium, who once deprived her of food because she gave birth to a girl and not a boy, who beat her when she took too long to conceive, who pulled out her hair and knocked out her teeth to make her too ugly to remarry, who beat her again when he couldn’t find money for opium because he had spent it on phone cards for the mobile to call his lovers — after 14 years, Abada had had enough.

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Oct 12, 2012
High Flier
Sep 5, 2012
Sep 5, 2012

High Flier

Vogue Magazine

A Medvac Pilot in Afghanistan, Jesse Russell faces down danger and horror to help the wounded.

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Sep 5, 2012
Bye-Bye Baby: Women at War
Sep 1, 2010
Sep 1, 2010

Bye-Bye Baby: Women at War

Vogue Magazine

Yearlong deployments for mothers of young children are seriously reshaping American family life.

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Sep 1, 2010
How’s Business: M. Project manager, DynCorp International, Kandahar, Afghanistan
Aug 1, 2010
Aug 1, 2010

How’s Business: M.

Project manager, DynCorp International, Kandahar, Afghanistan

Bidoun

Ramrod is a small military base at the edge of the Red Desert in Kandahar. Not a village in sight, just sand to every horizon. M., a young project manager for DynCorp International, sat with me in her office and bunk, the inside of a small white shipping container. The base is expanding every day.

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Aug 1, 2010
Mother Courage
Dec 1, 2009
Dec 1, 2009

Mother Courage

Vogue Magazine

Four months pregnant with her first child, war correspondent Elizabeth Rubin took an assignment on the front lines of Afghanistan…

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Dec 1, 2009
VIDEO: FRONTLINE/WORLD Special iWitness Report Afghanistan: Fight for the Korengal Valley
Nov 24, 2009
Nov 24, 2009

VIDEO: Special iWitness Report Afghanistan: Fight for the Korengal Valley

FRONTLINE/WORLD

In late 2007, correspondent Elizabeth Rubin embedded with U.S. troops in Afghanistan's Korengal Valley, a remote area close to the Pakistan border and a known hide out for insurgents. She spent two months with Battle Company under the command of Capt. Dan Kearney, and wrote a seminal piece about the experience for the New York Timesmagazine. Nine months later Rubin returned to the valley and, on both trips, captured some extraordinary video scenes, including a deadly ambush on Kearney's men after U.S.airstrikes on a nearby village.

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Nov 24, 2009
Karzai in His Labyrinth
Aug 4, 2009
Aug 4, 2009

Karzai in His Labyrinth

The New York Times Magazine

The Afghan President is isolated and distrusted, and even if he manages to be re-elected this month, that’s not likely to change…

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Aug 4, 2009
VIDEO: U.S. Military in Afghanistan Interview with Elizabeth Rubin
Mar 1, 2008
Mar 1, 2008

VIDEO: U.S. Military in Afghanistan Interview with Elizabeth Rubin

C-SPAN: Washington Journal

Participating by remote connection from New York City, Elizabeth Rubin talked about her recent article in The New York Times Magazine about her trip to Afghanistan where she spent two months embedded with the 173rd Airborne Brigade, Battle Company.

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Mar 1, 2008
Battle Company Is Out There
Feb 24, 2008
Feb 24, 2008

Battle Company is Out There

The New York Times Magazine

WE TUMBLED OUT of two Black Hawks onto a shrub-dusted mountainside. It was a windy, cold October evening. A half-moon illuminated the tall pines and peaks. Through night-vision goggles the soldiers and landscape glowed in a blurry green-and-white static…

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Feb 24, 2008
In the Land of the Taliban
Oct 22, 2006
Oct 22, 2006

In the Land of the Taliban

The New York Times Magazine

One afternoon this past summer, I shared a picnic of fresh mangos and plums with Abdul Baqi, an Afghan Taliban fighter in his 20’s fresh from the front in Helmand Province in southern Afghanistan…

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Oct 22, 2006
Land of the Seven Scarves: The Kuchi, Afghanistan’s nomads
Sep 1, 2006
Sep 1, 2006

Land of the Seven Scarves

The Kuchi, Afghanistan’s nomads

Bidoun

Out of a dust squall in the parched, defeated land, a ribbon of Technicolor crests the desert hills. You’ll see these images all over the Afghan landscape — in crevices of the jagged mountains, on switch-back mountain roads, in the Kandahari desert caves. They may be clans on the move, with camels and goats and sheep and babies. Or just a gang of girls, in dazzling dresses of purple, yellow and red, speckled with sequins and mirrors to guarantee that the sun’s rays and all of us passers-by in our modern transportation won’t miss the spectacle, won’t forget the Kuchis (the Dari word for nomads).

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Sep 1, 2006
Oct 9, 2005
Oct 9, 2005

Women’s Work

The New York Times Magazine

After bumping along five hours of potholes and rock-strewn mountain switchbacks on the main commercial artery from Kabul to Pakistan early last month, I was surprised as we entered the Jalalabad Valley to see an enormous campaign poster, the size of a Times Square billboard, featuring not the boyish face of Hazrat Ali -- Jalalabad's most famous ex-warlord and a parliamentary candidate -- but that of Safia Siddiqi.

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Oct 9, 2005
The Road to Herat
Feb 1, 2003
Feb 1, 2003

The Road to Herat

The Atlantic

Sami had disappeared. We were planning to head out of Kabul that morning on a road journey to Herat, in western Afghanistan. Sami was to be my guide, and I couldn’t find him anywhere.

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Feb 1, 2003
Dec 31, 2001
Dec 31, 2001

Kandahar Dispatch: Game Theory

The New Republic Online

"The game is so large that one sees but a little at a time," said Mahbub Ali, the Afghan horse trader and occasional British agent, advising patience to Rudyard Kipling's Kim, who was hungrily learning the spy trade at the height of the Great Game between Russia and England. It is wise counsel these days in Afghanistan…

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Dec 31, 2001
Dec 24, 2001
Dec 24, 2001

Going South

The New Republic

An elephant in heat. That's the only way to describe the scene Tuesday as the new governor of Kandahar, Gul Agha Shirzai, asserted his newly won authority. Inside the high-ceilinged halls of the governor's mansion…

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Dec 24, 2001
Dec 17, 2001
Dec 17, 2001

Kabul Dispatch: Prep School

The New Republic

If you pick up a standard schoolbook in Kabul, whether from the mujahedin government of Burhanuddin Rabbani, or from the subsequent Taliban regime, these are the standard math problems you'll find…

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Dec 17, 2001
Nov 21, 2001
Nov 21, 2001

Brother In Arms, Maidan Shar Dispatch

Not long ago I was talking to Baba Jan, the jovial Northern Alliance general who used to command the front lines north of Kabul from his perch in the Bagram airport tower, about the two Arabs who killed Ahmed Shah Massoud…

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Nov 21, 2001
Nov 19, 2001
Nov 19, 2001

Run Out

The New Republic

The small, white twin-engine plane veered sharply, looping across the sky, its wing dropping as it tilted away from the jagged mountainside at the gates of the Panjshir Valley. Across miles of open plains and desert…

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Nov 19, 2001
Nov 14, 2001
Nov 14, 2001

The Fall of Kabul

The New Republic Online

On Sunday U.S. planes circled north of Kabul around the Bagram airport, then nose-dived toward their target, dropping two bombs each from their underbellies. All week long everyone had been complaining that the United States was refusing to bomb the Taliban's front lines…

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Nov 14, 2001
Nov 5, 2001
Nov 5, 2001

Playing Games: Gulbahar Dispatch

The New Republic

Yesterday, in a field encircled by willow trees and surrounded by close to a thousand men of all ages, a dozen whip-wielding horsemen cantered around and into each other, grabbing after the carcass of a headless goat…

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Nov 5, 2001
Oct 29, 2001
Oct 29, 2001

On the Road: Jabal Saraj Dispatch

The New Republic

We were stuck in the border zone between Tajikistan and Afghanistan—some 15 journalists from all over the world in a caravan of Russian Lada Nivas and Volgas, Land Cruisers, Mitsubishi jeeps, and minivans…

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Oct 29, 2001