Is President Biden daring North Korea to start a crisis?
The new administration is promoting the failed idea that sanctions can be used for leverage — and Kim Jong Un is responding predictably.
The new administration is promoting the failed idea that sanctions can be used for leverage — and Kim Jong Un is responding predictably.
A new report from a trilateral working group outlines a path forward.
Let the record show: Trump poured fuel on our endless wars and kicked diplomacy to the curb.
Biden’s Secretary of State pick inherits a lot of trouble, but we want to make sure he has the right solutions.
A new approach requires recognition of the dangers of aggressive, ideologically driven policy centered on containing China.
Despite his weekend claims, he was the most partisan, anti-diplomatic secretary of state in recent memory.
Trump was right to meet with Kim Jong Un. As president, Biden can build on that opening for a lasting peace.
The move represents a major step forward in efforts to achieve peace on the Korean Peninsula.
The most recent presidential debate didn’t inspire confidence that the next US administration will bring us closer to peace with North Korea.
Pyongyang is never going to give up its weapons, so after 70 years the US must move the goalposts or risk further failure.
While it’s likely there will be no diplomatic movement with North Korea before January, 2021, whomever wins the election will have to cast aside ideas that are continuously tried and have consistently failed.
At worst, the denuclearization horse left the barn a long time ago. At best, a nuclear-free North Korea will require an extensive period of time to come to fruition.
It’s been two years since the historic Singapore Summit, but little progress has been made. The United States needs to start preparing for the long game.
If a restrained U.S. foreign policy means pulling back on security commitments around the world, might that result in nuclear weapons proliferation? And is that a bad thing?
Suspending all sanctions now will not only help combat the coronavirus, but it will also create the conditions to resolve our differences diplomatically.
A new report finds that the Trump administration has increased the global nuclear threat through policy failures and mismanagement.
Donald Trump’s North Korea policy has failed. South Korean President Moon Jae-in has the mandate, and the competence, to take over and lead.
Restarting diplomacy with North Korea not only reduces the threat of war, but it can also help stop the spread of the coronavirus.
This crisis is exposing just how senseless Washington’s approach to Pyongyang has been for the last seventy years, and why it must change as soon as possible.
U.S. and international sanctions have crushed North Korea’s health care system, making it harder to deal with the coronavirus.
If there’s one thing that unites conservatives and progressives in South Korea’s polarized political climate, it’s opposition to the U.S. ambassador.