Al-Qaeda has accomplished the unthinkable: establishing an embryonic recruitment, radicalization and operational capacity on our shores. Our current strategy risks another 9/11.
The United States should not balk at getting more deeply involved in the volatile Balkans: a well-crafted foreign policy could yield real results.
Winning wars in the future may depend not only on how many troops you can put into the field but for how long you can afford to pay high prices for gasoline.
War with Iran does not appear imminent and the prospect has not been a hot electoral issue. But Howard explains why war with oil-producing nations will likely be wholly unanticipated.
In a volatile region of the world like South Asia, principled realism, not sloganeering, should guide U.S. policy.
There are no textbook solutions for the problems of a country like Pakistan--but a creative approach can go a long way.
The Specter of a "Colored Revolution"Kazakhstan's scheduled December 4, 2005 presidential election brings two major questions into focus for this Central Asian state.
Democracy comes to bring not peace but the sword.
China's reaction to the outbreak of influenza on the mainland will affect more than just the health of its citizens.
Bush's realist head and voter's evangelical hearts are taking him in two different directions on China.