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Our military, including its leadership, should reflect that we as a nation are at war, which is healthy for our Armed Forces and for the civic life of our country.
Ever since its founding in 1948, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea has maintained an aggressive and bellicose international security posture. Today, fully two decades after the end of the Cold War, North Korea's external defense and security policies look arguably more extreme and anomalous than ever.
The U.S. government seems to have no plan to stop Julian Assange, the Australian computer programmer behind WikiLeaks, a massively successful effort to disclose secret or classified information.
Terrorists should not be allowed to subvert U.S. defense policy by suing private citizens for their acts as public officials.
NATO's overwhelming response of solidarity and empathy after last week's attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon is having a hard time finding an outlet.
Nicholas Eberstadt explains the state of the North Korean economy in response to a series of seven questions.
Our relationship with Japan is indeed a cornerstone of the liberal international order that has marked the six decades since the end of the Second World War, and for that reason we should look forward to maintaining it for years to come.
We think 2010 has been a tumultuous political year, but it has been a gentile tea party compared to 1968, the year that brought Richard Nixon and Daniel Patrick Moynihan together.



