The New Start treaty has limited the number of deployed strategic nuclear warheads for both countries.
For the last 16 years, the US has not had any nuclear nonproliferation policies. Henry Sokolski in this op-ed argues why that needs to change.
As "The Book at War" makes clear, books have always been a dictator's vulnerability. They preserve memory, and memory ...
In the sienna-colored curves of Pakistan’s Hindu Kush mountains, one of the most rugged and lawless regions in the world, a cavernous, grooved crater gouged out from a hillside shines in the winter ...
The National Interest on MSNOpinion
Japan Beams the Future from Orbit—While America Watches
Japan’s OHISAMA Project is a practical demonstration of space-based solar power (SBSP)—which, if scaled up, could solve many ...
In the 21st century, America will either be relegated to the horizon of a Chinese-dominated Eurasia or become history’s ...
The post-war international order may be tearing apart at the seams and international law is increasingly looking like a ...
In this week's It’s Debatable article, Rosen and Moster debate if President Trump's foreign policy actions have increased the ...
This Blast from the Past article was initially published in Army Logistician (the former title of Army Sustainment) in the ...
Pentagon's new National Defense Strategy prioritizes homeland defense over overseas missions, warning that future wars may ...
RealClearDefense on MSNOpinion
Restraint or escalation: America's nuclear future?
Some analysts argue that a new international arms-control framework is the best path forward, contending that the only ...
As it prepares for conflict with China, the Department of Defense has overlooked good programs today in pursuit of better ones tomorrow.
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