Carle is regarded as a leading expert on al-Qaeda and assessed the threat the organization poses 10 years after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 on
C-SPAN. Carle is a regular commentator for
Al Jazeera and has appeared on
Inside Story Americas. He was interviewed on The Listening Post to comment on the '
Zero Dark Thirty' controversy. In a 2011 interview with
Democracy Now! Carle revealed how, in 2005, President George W. Bush's administration at least twice sought damaging personal information from the CIA on
Juan Cole, an academic and prominent critic of the Iraq war. A CIA spokesman said in response to queries, "We've thoroughly researched our records, and any allegation that the C.I.A. provided private or derogatory information on Professor Cole to anyone is simply wrong." In an interview with New Zealand's
Sunday Star-Times, he talked about the curtailment of freedom of speech under the
Espionage Act of 1917, designed for foreign spies, which he claimed was being employed to prosecute at least six American former spies. Carle has appeared on
MSNBC in
Hardball with Chris Matthews in a discussion titled "Does torture work?" In an interview with
Anderson Cooper 360° he made the point that "you don't define yourself by the practices and objectives of the enemy" but figure out who are we and what do we need to be?" Carle has repeatedly stated that
torture doesn't work, is morally wrong and is clearly illegal under both
international and U.S. law. He makes the point that the U.S. convicted many Japanese soldiers "for the express crime – the torture – of waterboarding" that it has euphemistically called waterboarding. He has also been interviewed on Hardtalk on the
BBC. Before the
presidential election of 2008, Carle argued in an influential
Washington Post article that Senator
John McCain, the Republican nominee, had overstated the threat of "radical Islamic extremism." Carle wrote that jihadists are "small, lethal, disjointed and miserable opponents" and that "We do not face a global jihadist 'movement' but a series of disparate ethnic and religious conflicts involving Muslim populations, each of which remains fundamentally regional in nature and almost all of which long predate the existence of al-Qaeda." He went on to say, "
Osama bin Laden and his disciples are small men and secondary threats whose shadows are made large by our fears." the
Delta State University,
Boston College, the
University of Sydney, and the
United States Naval Academy. Carle has been critical of President Donald Trump, particularly after Trump began to disparage American intelligence agencies' assessment of Russian influence over the 2016 presidential election. He told
Newsweek, in an article dated December 21, 2017, that he believed that President
Donald Trump was "actually working directly for the Russians." == References ==