Will 2024 Bring the Return of the Neocons?
The GOP nominee can forge a humbler path on foreign policy—or turn back to failed neoconservatism.
The GOP nominee can forge a humbler path on foreign policy—or turn back to failed neoconservatism.
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.
The Kentucky Republican also expressed disappointment that Congress has not repealed the war on terror authorization of military force.
Are we stumbling into disaster? Again?
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.
The first female speaker of the House leaves behind a legacy of big government liberalism.
But a few remnants of post-9/11 foreign and domestic policy still need to be thrown out.
The former secretary of state died today at the age of 84 after a long and complicated career in U.S. foreign policy.
Today's journalists aren't speaking truth to power by not-so-subtly agitating for direct military involvement in Ukraine.
"Anyone in a black suit and a black mask can break into my house and take me and kill my family."
A leading proponent of the invasion of Iraq vs. the editorial director of Antiwar.com.
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.
Upon his passing, it's worth remembering how badly things can go when a man has such great power, even a man with elements of conventional decency.
Repeal would do little to change how Congress and the president collaborate—or don't—on military operations.
Repealing the law that allowed America to depose Saddam Hussein won't stop us from waging war elsewhere.
A significant portion of the world views the U.S. as a threat to democracy in their home countries.
Just keep an eye on the small print. The wars might officially end while still allowing inappropriate military meddling.
His rumored candidate for CIA director, Michael Morell, is raising alarms.
It's unclear what Biden will ultimately be able to accomplish as president, but he has been trying to bring transformative change since the 1970s.
The documentary Coup 53 explores how a seemingly easy regime change wrecked U.S. foreign policy for decades.
Trump even vetoed a bill that would stop him from military action in Iran without congressional approval.
Plus: A majority of Americans support policing reforms, say goodbye to Aunt Jemima and Uncle Ben, and more....
On crime, drugs, immigration, and foreign policy, his 44-year policy record is a cautionary tale of bipartisanship in response to perceived crises.
Plus: China takes campus free speech issues to a new level, Bloomberg wants to take away your vape, and more...
Few people are buying the U.S. government's unconvincing explanations about "imminent" threats.
Plus: CNN's slanted Sanders/Warren setup, Trump's shower-related election pledge, and more...
It's good to hear Biden admit that his initial vote to go to war was a mistake, but he continued to support the war well after it was clearly a disaster.
A smart foreign policy includes the consideration of unintended consequences.
“Let’s vote on this and see who is serious about ending forever wars.”
But their rhetorical tricks no longer bewitch a war-weary nation.
Be skeptical of the spymasters.
History shows that expertise is not the same as wisdom.
The vice president says assassinated Iranian general Qasem Soleimani was involved in the September 11 plot. That's as true as when Republicans said Saddam Hussein was.
Reports now suggest that Trump took the unprecedented step of killing a foreign leader based on thin evidence of a threat and with an eye toward domestic politics.
The Council on Foreign Relations survey of foreign policy experts finds "more threats...likely to require a U.S. military response in 2020 than ever before."
Several dozen protesters tried to storm the American embassy in Baghdad in retaliation for U.S. airstrikes in the country over the weekend.
Despite a change in administrations, U.S. foreign policy in the 2010s stayed its wasteful, destructive course.
The Kentucky senator makes the case for less American military involvement abroad.
Tulsi Gabbard and Stossel discuss war, drug legalization, and government spending.
It's refreshing to see many conservatives abandon their kneejerk support for militarism, and nice to watch Joe Biden be held accountable for his support for the Iraq blunder.
Welcome to 21st-century politics (finally) with creation of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft.
If the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are any indication, the move would be a disaster.
The presidential candidate wants to end wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and levy a "war tax" for every future conflict.