The controversial leader had been accused of overstaying his term back in February and cracking down on protesters.
The administration may be overhauling punitive sanctions — but some countries will still be treated differently than others.
The late professor launched the first incarnation in 1974. A year after his death, his wife and colleagues are pressing forward under new name.
The Conference of Presidents noted Reza Pahlavi’s ‘calls for regime change’ on the event invite.
Trump’s instincts to withdraw them from the country were right. Now the Pentagon seems to be reverting back to old, failed strategies.
The CCP’s 100th anniversary is a time for honest reflection. For starters, Washington should not try to emulate it in order to beat it.
The Biden administration says it wants to counter the corruption that’s driving displacement. Does that apply to U.S. allies in Honduras?
Offering limited sanctions relief now and abandoning denuclearization up front will be a good start.
Biden’s recent strikes in Iraq and Syria highlight the need to revisit, and reorient, the so-called ‘Lippmann Gap.’
With Palestinians accounting for more than 40 percent of Jordan’s population, maintaining the status quo in Jerusalem is key to ensuring regime survival.
Despite its logistical resources, the U.S. army is caught unprepared to face this unprecedented threat.
While the domestic politics are tricky, Biden can at least start with issues that have an humanitarian impact.
A shift in spending toward urgent priorities like addressing the possibility of future pandemics would be a far better investment in “national security.”
In new book, Ervand Abrahamian says fresh evidence shows the plot to overthrow Mossadegh was thick and a long time in the making.
A US Navy ship shot down the civilian airliner 34 years ago, a tragic event that Americans forget but Iranians never will.
Southeast Asians want to find a way to live with both powers in the region, which might have an impact on the rivalry. Or not.
Known for his swagger and jingoistic approach to the job, the former Secretary of Defense later became a symbol of Iraq War failure.
The country’s erratic prime minister continues to fan the flames.
The circularity of the rationale for keeping troops in region should be obvious by now.
Despite cuts, the Army wants nearly $1B to upgrade a vehicle that literally put our soldiers in harm’s way. But it’s a big boon for the contractor.
France and Germany are disenchanted with U.S. sanctions, but Poland and the Baltic states are far from ready for rapprochement.