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Continued US bombing of Iran is not a viable long-term strategy and runs contrary to President Donald Trump’s established ...
The Obama administration's new national security strategy calls for the U.S. to use its massive military power in concert with friends and allies. IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience ...
The United States needs a National Economic Security Strategy to protect and utilize its economic tools and assets in order to maintain geopolitical competitiveness and deter the China's aggression.
The Military Strategy of ‘Deterrence by Denial,’ Rightly Understood Robert Almelor Delfeld Our focus should be on military dominance, not social, economic, or green policy.
The National Military Strategy guides the implementation of the National Security Strategy within the Defense Department. It is the first defense strategy released since 2008.
President Trump's National Security Team will hopefully soon be assembled and one of its first tasks is to create a National Security Strategy (NSS,) reflective of how the new administration views ...
Our armed forces are shrinking in size and capacity. The current crisis in military recruiting qualifies as a direct threat to U.S. national security. In just two years, the active duty Army has ...
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth directed Undersecretary of Defense Elbridge Colby to begin developing the 2025 National Defense Strategy. The NDS serves as a road map for the Department of ...
Military recruiting continues to miss its target. That’s why the nation needs a national security strategy to address the problem, The Heritage Foundation’s Thomas W. Spoehr writes.
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to journalist Thomas Ricks about his book on a military history of the civil rights movement: Waging a Good War: A Military History of the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1968.
The current crisis in military recruiting qualifies as a direct threat to U.S. national security. In just two years, the active-duty Army has shrunk from 485,000 to only 452,000 troops.
The current crisis in military recruiting qualifies as a direct threat to U.S. national security. In just two years, the active duty Army has shrunk from 485,000 to only 452,000 troops.