Will Biden Sleepwalk Into a War With Iran?
Israeli leaders have been betting on a U.S.-Iranian war for a while. After this week, it might be at their doorstep.
Israeli leaders have been betting on a U.S.-Iranian war for a while. After this week, it might be at their doorstep.
The late U.S. diplomat helped form America’s policies towards Iran, Iraq, and Israel. By the end of his life, he'd had enough.
The wars aren’t over. America is still fighting—directly and indirectly—in the Middle East, Africa, and Eastern Europe.
Washington quietly funded Israeli-Iranian proxy wars for years. Now American men and women are directly involved.
Plus: An immigration deal that's already collapsing, more expensive Big Macs, and Taylor Swift (because why not).
The U.S. base on the Jordanian-Syrian border has long been "strategic baggage."
All of the unfinished U.S. conflicts in the Middle East are coming together into one big crisis for Biden.
U.S. officials ritualistically tout their respect for Iraq’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, but every U.S. president over the last three decades has bombed Iraq in some way.
Our troops are just sitting there with targets on their backs. Why?
From Russiagate to COVID discourse, elites in government and the media are trying to control and centralize free speech and open inquiry.
Revoking the 1991 and 2002 authorizations for the use of military force would be a good start, but the 2001 authorization has been used dozens of times to justify conflicts in numerous countries.
Four years after IS was officially defeated, the U.S. continues to keep hundreds of troops in Syria to fight the vanquished terrorist group.
The Kentucky Republican also expressed disappointment that Congress has not repealed the war on terror authorization of military force.
Bolton says the Bush administration's biggest error in Iraq was failing to invade Iran too. That's madness.
There’s no vital U.S. interest served by this indefinite advise-and-assist mission in the region.
Lawmakers are once again trying to reclaim their war powers through AUMF repeal.
It was a blunder. Worse than that, it was a crime.
Religious Kurds used social media to shut down a rap concert—and they're swinging their weight around politics, too.
Plus: The editors consider Ye and social media, then field a question about the TARP bailouts during the 2008 fiscal crisis.
It's the economics of energy production that make petrostates more trigger-happy, Emma Ashford argues in Oil, the State, and War.
He claims he'll be "the first president to visit the Middle East since 9/11 without U.S. troops engaged in a combat mission there." But that's not true.
Ideas Beyond Borders is bringing ideas about pluralism, civil liberties, and critical thinking to hotbeds of Islamic extremism.
The co-founders of Ideas Beyond Borders talk about bringing Steven Pinker and John Stuart Mill to an audience dying for them.
Today's journalists aren't speaking truth to power by not-so-subtly agitating for direct military involvement in Ukraine.
The former Texas congressman and presidential candidate says his goal was to get people to think about freedom.
Biden rightly stuck to his guns when he defended the long-overdue U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, but he fails to apply the same logic elsewhere.
A new, heavily investigated report shows a Pentagon uninterested in correcting its deadly errors.
"Anyone in a black suit and a black mask can break into my house and take me and kill my family."
National security reporter Spencer Ackerman on 9/11, mass surveillance at home, and failed wars abroad.
The Reign of Terror author on fighting surveillance and interventionism done in the name of stopping jihad.
Historian Stephen Wertheim says two decades of failed wars have finally made America more likely to embrace military restraint.
The foreign policy author and podcast host discusses Joe Biden's withdrawal and how to fix U.S. foreign policy.
The Enough Already: Time To End the War on Terror author on fixing foreign policy in the Joe Biden era.
I witnessed firsthand how U.S. actions that favored one group inevitably angered another, which is why the war is an endless game of whack-a-mole.
It may look like Congress is reclaiming its constitutional war powers, but the president still has plenty of ways to justify his military actions.
Saying that American troops are in Iraq for "training and advising" and not "combat" might sound nice, but it doesn’t get them out of harm’s way.
Keeping American boots on the ground means keeping them in harm's way.
Repeal would do little to change how Congress and the president collaborate—or don't—on military operations.
Whistleblowers and publishers are crucial for keeping government officials reasonably honest.
Plus: Remembering Steve Horwitz, Oregonians can temporarily pump their own gas, and more...
Just keep an eye on the small print. The wars might officially end while still allowing inappropriate military meddling.
The 33-year-old successor to Justin Amash's House seat says his party has abandoned limited government, economic freedom, and individualism.
The president promised that any attack by Iran against the United States would be met with a response "1,000 times greater in magnitude!"
The Wall Street Journal reports that the Pentagon will be reducing troop levels in Iraq by a third.
"The best aspect of the Trump foreign policy is that he has revealed the mind of the foreign policy establishment," says historian Thaddeus Russell. "The worst part... he's a mass murderer just like the rest of them."
Rocket attacks and "precision defensive strikes" will bring us ever closer to truly endless war.