Search Results
-
FILTER BY DATEAll Time
-
-
FILTER BY RELEVANCEMost Relevant
-
-
FILTER BY CONTENT TYPEAll Content Types
-
If there is one success story since 9/11, it has been the efforts to combat terror finance. If military action is sometimes akin to conducting surgery with an axe, efforts to dry up sources of funding are like wielding a scalpel.
More than three decades after the Revolution of 1979, the Islamic Republic of Iran Army and the IRGC remain entangled in a rivalry which the Army — should the hitherto trend continue — is bound to lose.
The defense budget cuts that will affect us most are the reductions in recruitment and retention spending for the Marine Corps and Army.
Harvard recognizing its Naval ROTC program is a great moment and other universities should follow suit.
By adopting its own version of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," the Pentagon is only encouraging the growing gap between American elites and those who put their lives at risk for our freedoms.
Elena Kagan, President Obama's choice to replace Justice John Paul Steves on the Supreme Court, adopts the lazy conventional liberalism of the faculty lounge.
Both President Barack Obama and Elena Kagan bring to public service attitudes that are commonplace in the faculty lounge but not nearly so common in the rest of America.
As the U.S. enters the third year of its war in Iraq, there is mounting concern about its impact on the health of the American armed forces.




