Officials have announced an ‘end’ to the combat mission, but this appears to be a shift in definitions rather than a real withdrawal.
Arguments against the JCPOA only become comprehensible only when one understands that nuclear nonproliferation is not their goal.
Its new national security strategy may be calculated to appeal to voters, but the West has clearly helped to push Putin’s buttons, too.
The administration has been sluggish in its pledge to withdraw material support to the Kingdom and help end the blockade in Yemen.
The War on Terror-era neocon is at it again, scolding America for withdrawing from Afghanistan and advocating we stay in the game.
A grassroots movement is opposing a package of nearly $100M in subsidies and local handouts for a new Raytheon defense plant in town.
Excuses for why the US can’t lift Trump restrictions on the cash Americans send their families there are outdated and inaccurate.
Senators Sanders, Lee, and Murphy have teamed up again, putting teeth into oversight of arms sales and interventions.
The E3’s failure to stand up to Trump was compounded by a series of miscalculations in the six months since Biden took office.
But will the Senate take up the mantle and finally bring about reunions between North Koreans and their families in America?
Heavily redacted classified DOJ memo shows the legal contortions used to justify the 2020 assassination.
He needs all the friends he can get, with restiveness in the palace and on the Jordanian street, and a greater power struggle in the Middle East.
New report finds that Iran is not ‘on the march,’ but among multiple powers, some US-backed, destabilizing the region.
Is there a double standard when government-linked makers and sellers of ‘nasty’ spyware used by autocrats are U.S. allies?
Two administrations could have done something when it counted. But now ‘doing something’ is no longer welcome in Port-au-Prince.
The willingness of countries to spill blood and treasure over secession is universal. Who thinks China would be any different?
Sanctions like those imposed on Cuba fail to achieve their stated policy objectives and create misery for millions of innocent people.
Despite aid and other commitments, democracy is backsliding among some key US-partners.
Will the departure of some 3,000 American troops from Afghanistan be a harbinger of a more fundamental realignment of U.S. Middle East security policy?
The U.S. must find ways of advocating for basic democratic principles without using them as a cudgel to bash Beijing.
Panicking over this development would just encourage Beijing to increase its arsenal more than it already is.