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So men and women who faced death at Fallujah or Kandahar or Desert Storm are now to face death panels at home? That’s the upshot of the administration’s plans for military health care.
In the aftermath of the midterm election, President Obama has claimed that he got all of the policies right, but his self-exonerating narrative is simply wrong.
Had European policymakers not been overly complacent over the past decade, they might have learned a lot from Latin America's sad past experience with misguided macroeconomic policies, especially under fixed exchange rate regimes. This might have helped them to avoid their present sovereign debt crisis. Now that they are neck-deep in the mess, it is too late for those lessons.
Japanese are disappearing in slow motion and so far, there is no rescue plan.
With each passing day, Greece's economic and political malaise deepens despite one massive International Monetary Fund-European Union bailout package after another to keep that country afloat.
John McCain and Carl Levin's proposal to cut the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program would severely hinder American defense capabilities.
This year's report by the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission includes a new section on the PRC's efforts to control "information" about China, both inside its borders and abroad.
In the next month, after more than four decades of distinguished public service including almost five extraordinary years at the Pentagon supervising the successful surges in Iraq and Afghanistan, Defense Secretary Robert Gates will retire. His parting words, delivered in a series of valedictory speeches, carry the weight of his long experience and sober judgment.








