Schmitt is notable for breaking the story that the
Obama administration was planning to reverse the
Bush policy of holding captives in
extrajudicial detention in American internment facilities in
Afghanistan, without allowing them to learn why they were being held. On September 12, 2009, Schmitt, quoting officials who did not want to go on the record by name, that Bagram captives would be allowed to request to review and challenge the allegations that lead to their detention. In 2004 Schmitt reported that on the fears of rape held by female GIs in
Iraq at the hands of their fellow GIs. Schmitt was interviewed by
National Public Radio on the DoD's response to the GI's fears. Schmitt was one of the
New York Times journalists who played a key role in reporting the homicide of several Afghan captives in U.S. custody at the
Bagram Air Base internment facility in 2003 and 2004. In 2006 Schmitt and a colleague reported on bribery concerns that involved
Major Gloria Davis, an officer in the
United States Army who was found dead from a gunshot wound shortly thereafter. In 2011, he published a book, ''Counterstrike: The Untold Story of America's Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda
with Thom Shanker, his colleague at the New York Times''. His book provides a more in-depth view of the war on terror and what U.S. intelligence agencies know about
al-Qaeda's inner workings in a
narrative journalism format. ==References==