Former Air Force analyst Daniel Hale is going to jail for revealing the extent to which US drones kill civilians.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin inadvertently introduced a conversation about where European powers should focus their security priorities.
Combative high-level meetings this week highlight the urgency for Washington to take small steps toward reducing tensions.
Regional stability, friction between Saudi Arabia and the UAE, and a mutual need for economic development all contribute to Saudi-Oman rapprochement.
All but one Senate Armed Services Committee member recently succumbed to this wasteful exercise.
Biden officials’ claims that the US doesn’t ‘seek conflict’ is belied by pushes to continually one-up Beijing’s defenses.
The move highlights the many contradictions of US policy in the war-torn country.
A recent study finds that all major institutions working on nuke policy are getting funds from companies with a vested interest in it.
Germany may seem a natural partner in Biden’s “global competition between democracy and authoritarianism.” But the German public isn’t interested.
The author happens to advise Biden-linked consulting firm WestExec, whose client makes the weapons in question.
The move will mitigate crises and open the door to resolving wider issues diplomatically.
Nearly seven decades after the armistice, the status quo on the Peninsula does not serve American interests.
The move only serves to reinforce America’s forever wars.
The American interests at stake are unclear and Congress hasn’t provided authorization.
The United States gives a lot of money to countries that often undermine its interests — both at home and abroad.
Thomas Barrack’s links to the GOP go well beyond Donald Trump.
Despite years of policy and rhetoric designed to reproach Moscow, Washington now needs help containing the Taliban.
Another example of how our post-9/11 counterterrorism interests have emboldened violent leaders who seem to stay in power forever.
Recent months have not been necessarily kind to Chinese aspirations of remaining aloof to conflict beyond its borders.
The new Iranian administration may agree on a revised JCPOA with the U.S. But if the economic benefits are paltry, political support will drain away.
Expect the military officials who commanded Afghanistan to invoke ‘cutting and running.’ Let’s talk about why they failed.