Empower youth to build peace, not fight endless wars
By responding to the realities of young people, the Youth, Peace and Security Act of 2020 will lessen the need for expensive and burdensome militarized solutions.
By responding to the realities of young people, the Youth, Peace and Security Act of 2020 will lessen the need for expensive and burdensome militarized solutions.
Defense Minister Benny Gantz was in Washington this week asking for an upgrade to maintain Israel’s regional military edge.
Border disputes are drawing these nations closer to confrontation, but this time the U.S. should step aside and let others try to deescalate.
If he wins in November, he’ll have to act quickly to return the US into compliance with the nuclear deal, or else there won’t be a deal left to return to.
The Trump administration’s snapback fiasco will weaken future nonproliferation agreements and damage U.S. power on the U.N. Security Council.
Biden can build on his ambitious plan to combat climate change by making renewables an international imperative.
It’s legally questionable, dangerous, and largely ineffective, but the Pentagon is pushing its strike capabilities further into Africa.
Although the early predictions that the virus would kill between 250,000 and 500,000 Iranians by August 2020 have failed to materialize, and the second wave is slowly flattening, Iran is by no means out of the woods.
While such a prospect cannot be ruled out, the chances that Saudi Arabia will normalize relations with Israel remain small for the foreseeable future.
This forever war is suddenly getting more expensive. Why are we still there?
Trump critics love them. But after nearly 20 years of shameful war promotion, failures, and lies, these guys are no paragons of virtue.
The danger of a collision course between Taipei and Beijing is growing. Washington must assess whether our military involvement is worth it.
Time to acknowledge that a deal with Israel for ‘normalization’ won’t get the UAE, Bahrain, and others off the hook.
This year’s record declines could be attributed in part to perceptions of the country’s — and Trump’s — handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
Banning the popular mobile apps will only fan tensions between the US and China and spark blowback against American companies.
H.R. McMaster went so far as to claim on 60 Minutes this week that Trump is siding with the Taliban.
Trump is doing whatever he can to make it impossible for his successor to resolve some of the world’s most intractable problems.
While the administration withdraws from key treaties, the Pentagon is expediting new missile contracts for their friends Raytheon and Northrop Grumman.
The two leaders have formed a unique partnership mired in corruption and fraught with international isolation.
Associating hawkishness with credibility in foreign policy is in itself a symptom of deep malaise that has led the U.S. to excessive entanglements in the Middle East.
The move may have support in Washington and Riyadh, but has Manama fully considered how it will be seen at home?