An alternative US policy on Chad
The death of the country’s longtime ruler provides an opportunity to move away from viewing the region through a counterterrorism lens.
The death of the country’s longtime ruler provides an opportunity to move away from viewing the region through a counterterrorism lens.
The 60 Minutes anchor repeatedly tried to bait the secretary of state into taking a more militaristic approach.
Beltway policymakers are routinely threatening war with Beijing without seriously considering the possibility of losing.
Center-right Americans are far more anti-war than they were in 2016. GOP elites will find out soon enough.
What would our world actually be like if you simply declared peace and came home?
America’s most urgent infrastructure vulnerability is largely invisible and unlikely to be fixed by Biden’s $2 trillion American Jobs Plan.
The US can no longer afford to ignore the potential for regional conflict due to a changing climate.
The once vaunted ‘responsibility to protect’ doctrine faded away after the Libyan intervention. There’s a reason for that.
Carrying through with plans set into motion by Trump is something all Americans can cheer.
He wasn’t just a veep and failed presidential candidate. His work with Japan offers truly poignant lessons for future diplomats.
As Obama-era policymakers wrestle with their role in the war, they betray a certain naivete about their Saudi partners at the time.
Conditions that drove competitive fears that defined the post-World War II and Cold War eras don’t exist today.
The question will be what President Erdogan, who said the declaration opened “a wound” in US-Turkey relations, will do.
It’s easy to distract Washington reporters from the realities of high stakes diplomacy.
On China, Afghanistan, defense budget, climate crisis and the Middle East — a bit of a mixed bag, say Quincy experts.
According to a new GAO report the F-35 is still riddled with maintenance and performance issues, but yet Congress keeps demanding more.
But is the Republican grassroots outside the Beltway truly interested in their same old tune?
This has much more to do with current US policy towards Turkish President Erdogan than it does with the morality of the case.
The sabotage of the Natanz facility has not only failed to derail the Vienna talks but has, in fact, provided additional cause to sustain diplomacy.
China has already either surpassed the United States or is running neck-and-neck with it in certain specific sectors.
The late historian Paul Schroeder offered insights into how to bring Russia into a collective security arrangement.