New CBO report: DOD can cut budget by $1 trillion without changing US strategy
The Congressional Budget Office’s study should start a debate not on whether to make cuts at the Pentagon, but by how much.
The Congressional Budget Office’s study should start a debate not on whether to make cuts at the Pentagon, but by how much.
The vaunted Obama-era BCA limits expire today. Sadly, they did nothing to rein in defense spending.
A New York-based group linked to AIPAC organized a meeting there promoting diplomatic relations with the Jewish state.
The cable news giant is an ‘official broadcaster’ of an upcoming UAE state-run, six-month ‘expo’ that is seemingly meant to burnish its global image.
A new survey found general agreement on a less militaristic foreign policy but little consensus on how to handle Russia and China.
Many of those who opposed amendments to rein in DOD’s bloated coffers have been underwritten by the weapons industry.
U.S.-China tensions are fueling racism here at home.
A top-level Pentagon official has reportedly been dismissed for the crime of being skeptical about our nuclear weapons policies.
But there’s a prevailing view that the EU is more aligned with Washington’s military competition with China and Russia.
While European leaders promise more defense spending, their people aren’t necessarily on board.
They say adding $25 billion more than what Biden requested for the Pentagon ‘sends exactly the wrong message.’
The greased revolving door from the Pentagon to the weapons industry gives former officials easy access for influence peddling.
This would add to 750 existing American bases abroad, according to a new Quincy study hot off the presses today.
The promotions were removed for about a month after the internet mocked the clear appearance of a conflict of interest.
Military contractors may have even ended up with as much as one-half of the Pentagon’s $14 trillion allocation from Congress.
A recent article on the company’s secret weapons facility read more like promotional content.
The findings come as a separate study estimates the US has so far spent $8 trillion.
Everyone except the military industrial complex lost the ‘war on terror.’
The US military role in Afghanistan is over, but the costs will continue to mount as the forever wars rage on.
CACI is a well-known company with a $907 million contract in Afghanistan — it also has undisclosed ties to think tanks opposed to withdrawal.
Selective accountability on failed US foreign policy is a feature of Washington.