The paradox of America’s endless wars
There is no significant anti-war movement in America because there’s no war to protest. Let me explain. In February 2003, […]
There is no significant anti-war movement in America because there’s no war to protest. Let me explain. In February 2003, […]
The Taliban now must start negotiations on a power sharing arrangement with the Afghan government.
What does anthropology and psychology have to say about our seemingly permanent state of war with Iran?
A new survey finds that those Americans who have lived most of their lives with the U.S. at war are looking for something new.
After 18-plus years of our forever wars, where are all the questions? Who’s been fired for them? Who’s been impeached? Who’s even paying attention?
“Now more than ever, there is room for a new consensus — one that rejects the warmongering and militarism of the past and looks toward a more hopeful, peaceful world.”
To create peace and stability in other nations, we must elevate their people to prosperity, instead of crushing them.
The gobs of money we throw at the Pentagon isn’t to meant to protect us; it’s meant to protect the Pentagon.
The benefits of diplomacy are greater and longer-lasting, but not as tangible.
Resistance to Donald Trump must extend to a U.S. military machine that’s moving like a runaway train, undeterred by the human costs of its destruction.
Donald Trump’s drone war should remind us how dangerous it is when a president claims the legal authority to kill in secret and no one can stop him.
Thirty years later, perhaps it’s time to assess just how well the United States has fulfilled the expectations President Bush articulated in 1990.
Why was the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies paying Richard Goldberg’s salary while he was working for Trump’s National Security Council?
To the sure delight of the hardliners inside and outside the U.S. administration who have always favored regime change, Trump has no plan B that can create a credible path back to diplomacy and negotiations.
Hawks hated the Iran nuclear deal because they feared not that it would fail to prevent Iran from getting the bomb, but that it would succeed — and thereby deprive the United States of a rationale to dominate the region and discipline its foe.
The latest developments in Iraq and the greater Middle East illustrate the flaws in a piecemeal, unrealistic, and excessively military-reliant U.S. strategy.
A diverse group of young policy professionals has joined forces to start a new organization that will develop a foreign policy platform for the next generation.
Congress has made clear it isn’t moved by recent revelations of dishonesty and waste in our war-making.
Soon after 9/11, a group of former Soviet military brass warned us about what has been documented in the Afghanistan Papers.
Research has proven that there are no military solutions in the fight against terrorism.
Foreign policy has been largely absent in the Democratic presidential debates . That has to change.