Why Congress keeps giving the Pentagon more money than it needs
If deterrence is synonymous with dominance, no amount of military spending will ever be enough.
If deterrence is synonymous with dominance, no amount of military spending will ever be enough.
With the lowest turnout in its history, the Islamic Republic is moving further away from any sense of democracy.
Former Air Force analyst Daniel Hale is going to jail for revealing the extent to which US drones kill civilians.
Biden officials’ claims that the US doesn’t ‘seek conflict’ is belied by pushes to continually one-up Beijing’s defenses.
The move will mitigate crises and open the door to resolving wider issues diplomatically.
The move only serves to reinforce America’s forever wars.
Thomas Barrack’s links to the GOP go well beyond Donald Trump.
Expect the military officials who commanded Afghanistan to invoke ‘cutting and running.’ Let’s talk about why they failed.
A grassroots movement is opposing a package of nearly $100M in subsidies and local handouts for a new Raytheon defense plant in town.
Senators Sanders, Lee, and Murphy have teamed up again, putting teeth into oversight of arms sales and interventions.
New report finds that Iran is not ‘on the march,’ but among multiple powers, some US-backed, destabilizing the region.
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.
With $10 million of his boss’s money, Blake Masters could win the Senate and secure business for their border security and weapons investments.
The House passed a bill that sounds good superficially, but doesn’t end the useless militarized approach or get to root problems.
Long-standing ties between the two countries frayed significantly under Trump.
The legacy of foreign influence there is a grim one, especially when ‘help’ has ended up resulting in the opposite.
Emerging details suggest that President Moïse’s assassins were Colombians hired by a security firm in Florida. Sound familiar?
The country’s long journey of competing political visions begins in 1964, and right now, the future seems up for grabs.
Their fierce competition for economic power in the region might actually smooth America’s exit from the stage.
The administration may be overhauling punitive sanctions — but some countries will still be treated differently than others.