Liz Cheney knows a thing or two about lying
The GOP hawk may lose her leadership today, but her bloody record on war and torture should have disqualified her years ago.
The GOP hawk may lose her leadership today, but her bloody record on war and torture should have disqualified her years ago.
These institutions still have something to offer, but a lack of transparency has hurt their credibility as honest brokers.
The country’s sharp rise in cases means other countries must fill the gap.
Hardliners will take a financial hit too, as they control the black market.
It’s a craze sweeping the nation’s capital and beyond: We need to do x, y, or z or succumb to the threat.
Any new government in Kabul will likely need aid, which can be conditioned on preserving gains Afghan women have made.
Applying phony solutions to real problems — it seems the armed forces, in league with Congress, has this down.
While Israel moves to sabotage the US in the Middle East, Biden seems hesitant to call out Tel Aviv’s abuses. Why?
If the president wants to prove that ‘diplomacy is back,’ he needs to step it up and start shedding past failed approaches.
The Senate bill would turn all the positive things about Washington-Beijing competition, and cooperation, on its head.
Tucked into this 400-page document is a recipe for keeping ‘maximum pressure’ on Kim Jong Un and a 70-year war going.
We stand almost exactly where we did nearly 50 years ago: leaving a failed war behind with little to show for it but pain and regret.
JCPOA opponents have been cherry picking an IMF report to claim Trump’s ‘maximum pressure’ campaign worked.
The second installment in our series exploring Senate measures that could set the US on a course of cold war with China.
Washington’s failed approaches to foreign policy and counterinsurgency is playing out today in our own backyard.
While millions of Americans have yet to recover, War Incorporated joins pantheon of wealthiest elites profiting during the pandemic.
The hawkish former national security advisor has a history of pushing for wars and speaking for those who actually served in them.
The first in a series about a Senate bill enshrining a zero-sum approach to Beijing that will surely set us on a course of escalation.
The panel with no diversity of views was meant to reinforce a forgone conclusion: more money for more weapons.
If diplomacy really is back, President Biden should reconsider ineffective economic penalties used to solve complex issues.
A prominent DC think tank has offered a way forward that most in the foreign policy establishment have refused to consider.