Conflicts don’t have to include “genocide” to demand intervention. And “intervention” doesn’t have to mean military action.
Conflicts don’t have to include “genocide” to demand intervention. And “intervention” doesn’t have to mean military action.
The White House seems hell bent on hijacking an Olympic moment of inter-Korean unity.
ISIS is on the decline, but the catastrophic political divisions in Iraq and Syria that gave rise to it are no closer to being mended.
As the war on terror enters its 17th year, it’s clear that abuses of power by one administration lead to abuses by the next.
Trump’s plans to extend the war he once supported ending are even more worrisome for their lack of transparency.
The war on terror was supposed to be about making our country safer. As a Muslim American, I don’t feel safer at all.
ISIS may be on its way out, but the Iraqi city has a long road ahead.
As a Palestinian, I can’t set aside my identity for two hours and root for an actor who spoke up for violence against people like me.
By putting such a sinister face on it, Trump might have finally inspired lawmakers to rein in America’s post-9/11 war machine.
With mass-casualty events from Raqqa to Mosul, some think the U.S. military is scrapping rules designed to protect innocents.