The US risks pushing Iran towards a nuclear weapon
Absent quick US action to return to the JCPOA, Iran may be pushed to follow the North Korean model.
Absent quick US action to return to the JCPOA, Iran may be pushed to follow the North Korean model.
Both parties should start a three-phase synchronised process to bring them back into compliance with their nuclear deal obligations before Iran’s elections.
Returning the US to compliance with the JCPOA is a no brainer and time is running out.
The US will maintain security cooperation with the Gulf kingdom, but the days of preferential treatment are long gone.
Our forces are strategically impaired and can’t win wars because of failing leadership, corruption, hubris, and more.
The pending $23 billion deal to the Emirates threaten to fuel conflict in Yemen and Libya and reward bad behavior.
This war is much older than the U.S. or even Saudi involvement in it. Biden’s new envoy has his work cut out for him.
We found that the majority of members on a panel advising the president about withdrawal have ties to the defense industry.
The Biden administration said Friday that it’s undertaking a review in line with its broader goal of finally closing the prison.
Recent reforms don’t seem to be driven by a genuine determination to break with the Kingdom’s ultra-conservative past.
Conventional thinking holds that sanctions and isolation will make North Korea give up its weapons. Wrong.
If Biden wants to confront the competition, he must address the huge gap between the military and state department budgets.
In remarks this week the president proclaimed Washington’s objective is “winning” its competition with Beijing.
During the Trump era, Iran hawks employed a semantics game to prevent any future administration from reentering the nuclear deal.
Blinken agrees with his predecessor’s description of what the Chinese are doing to the Muslims in Xinjiang. The question is what to do about it
President Carter’s 4-decade-old pledge to safeguard Persian Gulf oil has bogged the US down in the Middle East.
The forever wars of the 21st century have had a similar effect on our society as Vietnam did more than 50 years ago. Not good.
But they’re wrong and after decades of failed sanctions to bring the regime to heel, it’s time for ‘maximum diplomacy.’
The Netanyahu government is moving ahead unimpeded with the Trump ‘peace’ plan.
His call for a comprehensive strategy is welcome, but putting the DoD out front looks like he’s still favoring military-led solutions.
With the Taliban onboard, Turkmenistan may now hope international investors can be persuaded to get involved.