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AEI resident scholar Mackenzie Eaglen was testifying Wednesday to the U.S. House Armed Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, in which she explained that the 2013 long-term shipbuilding plan "does not accurately portray the forces or funding necessary to execute the administration’s strategy."
The results of the 2005 World Summit were not at all encouraging and the United States should insist on being honest about the manifest failures of the United Nations to reform itself.
With 100,000 patients dying every year from dangerous medicines, it is time to take concrete actions. Establishing a treaty against fake medicines should be the first step.
Either the Navy is retiring these ships too early or its lifecycle estimates are hopelessly optimistic. But service leaders cannot have it both ways. Similarly, the administration cannot realistically “pivot” to Asia—a region defined by the “tyranny of distance”—and cut the fleet at the same time.
The appropriate role of Congress in affecting the policies of the International Monetary Fund.
The controversy of the Hadley Climate Research Unit has made clear that it is time for climactic science to clean house, and investigations should extend beyond the United Kingdom.
For East Asian politicos, there’s not that much to grab headline attention in the world’s most economically dynamic region. Or maybe there is.
U.S. House of Representatives hearing on tax policy impacts on the commercial application of renewable energy technology







