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This nation’s defensesare adequate to cope with the growing dangers we face from hostile powers possessing weapons of mass destruction and effective means of delivery.
AEI"s Richard Perle assembled a panel of security-policy veterans to explain the objections to the treaty and to defend the decision to reject it.
Outer space has become the next frontier for American national security and business. But instead of advancing American primacy in this realm, the Obama administration has wrongly decided not only to follow a European Union draft “code of conduct” regulating outer space, but also to circumvent the Senate’s central constitutional role in making treaties.
Hurrying to negotiate a successor to the second Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty reflects a "zeal for the deal" approach that benefits only Russia.
Only by continuing to act on the high seas as it always has can the United States hope to maintain a system of international rules that serves its own interests. Ratifying UNCLOS could very well have the opposite effect.
Although hitherto overlooked in the media, President Obama's arms-control priorities are major components of his upcoming foreign policy agenda.
Ridding the world of nuclear weapons is an impossible and probably dangerous goal.
While the administration accepts the urgency of halting the spread of nuclear weapons, the policies it has embraced to reach that goal are likely to make matters worse.





