Though this nuclear deal is a victory for international diplomacy, the United States still has a ways to go before their relations with Iran are truly normalized.
Though this nuclear deal is a victory for international diplomacy, the United States still has a ways to go before their relations with Iran are truly normalized.
President Obama pledges to use his power of veto should Congress reject the freshly minted Iran nuclear deal.
Supporting Saudi attacks on Yemen is a way for the U.S. to show the Saudis that Iran is still a mutual adversary.
How a semantic argument over passports prompted a debate over who gets to shape U.S. foreign policy toward Israel-Palestine.
Despite its improving relations with Havana, Washington’s ultimate goal for the island remains regime change.
During the Cold War, it not only served the Soviet Union’s purposes to overestimate the size of its nuclear weapons program, but the United States.
80 percent of people in the Arab world’s poorest country are in danger of starving to death under a U.S.-backed blockade and bombing campaign.
Many Russians and Americans would rather see their governments helping other countries than hurting them. That means facing some hard truths.
The China-inspired doctrine originally known as AirSea Battle has the Army feeling left out.
Not only is bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities fruitless, but invading and occupying it are completely out of the question.