News

In his first term, Trump wanted foreign adversaries to fear he’d lost his marbles. Now he’s extending that strategy to every policy arena.
U.S. Department of Defense guidance for nuclear policy in late 2024, shortly before Trump took office, recognized that ...
The Democratic Republic of the Congo has some of the largest deposits on Earth. Its President wants to sell them—and win a ...
Accidentally sharing attack plans with a journalist in a group chat is bad. Causing a rising superpower to declare war on you ...
As Syria struggles in the wake of the Assad regime's collapse, its neighbors are carefully coordinating to avoid potential ...
The secretary of state suggested that the US can revoke an immigrant’s legal status when they participate in protests that ...
Trump’s tariff agenda is not simply a policy preference; it is essential for the security and safety of the United States in ...
Most of us can remember at least a few troubling scenes from George Orwell’s dystopian novel 1984: the mandatory love ...
Washington should encourage its European allies to take a larger role not only in Ukraine, but also the Red Sea to deter the ...
An immigration judge's decision reinforces the constitutional argument against the law that the secretary of state is ...
President Donald Trump’s efforts to get a nuclear deal with Iran have met a formidable obstacle: the Israel lobby. As the ...
Militaries exist, in most contexts, to help nations preserve their borders. In that sense, the application of U.S. assets ...