The bare bones of a deal with North Korea may exist, but senseless provocations could set off a conflict long before then.
The bare bones of a deal with North Korea may exist, but senseless provocations could set off a conflict long before then.
The most effective way to prevent a nuclear war with North Korea is to reassure them that the U.S. won’t strike first.
The president’s over-the-top threats have made war seem like a real possibility. And war would be catastrophic.
If the U.S. made a deal with Maoist China in the 1970s, it can surely cut one with North Korea today.
Some in the Trump administration are still eyeing regime change in North Korea. They’re missing what’s really going on over there.
How should the United States respond to the detention and subsequent death of an American student who visited North Korea?
If Trump wants to make an early mark with North Korea, it should be with the only thing that’s ever worked: diplomacy.
Attacking North Korea now would undermine the very reason U.S. troops have been stationed on the peninsula for seven decades: to protect the South Korean people.
They hack us. We hack them. It’s a recipe for catastrophe.
Trump’s leading foreign policy advisers are obsessed with Iran and making dangerous moves from East Asia to the Middle East.