Science & Tech

US Red Tape Threatens Drone Sales in the Middle East

American companies are being bested by foreign firms when it comes to selling unmanned aircraft to friendly militaries overseas, says Textron Systems boss Ellen Lord. By Marcus Weisgerber

Threats

How Countries Use War Games To Prevent Future Catastrophes

Since 9/11, many nations have taken it upon themselves to try out extreme scenarios to determine if their emergency teams are up to the task. By Kabir Chibber

Policy

Panetta's Book Could Not Have Come At a Worse Time for Obama

Vice President Biden may have been too candid in his recent remarks, but the damage from former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta's book will be far more lasting. By George E. Condon, Jr.

Ideas

US Strategic Leaders Need to Think Bigger – Much Bigger

The entire international system is in flux. It’s time U.S. leaders figure out America’s core interests and start fresh. By Hanna Samir Kassab

Ideas

Why It's Nearly Impossible To End the Cuba Embargo

Bill Clinton tried engaging Fidel Castro. After Havana shot down two U.S. planes, it all fell apart. By Peter Korbluh and William M. Leogrande

Policy

Everything You Need To Know About the GOP’s 2016 Frontrunners On National Security

Defense One brings you our early take on the rumored Republican 2016 candidates’ national security credentials. By Molly O’Toole

Ideas

In War and Tragedy, How the US Media Prioritizes Death

Gruesome beheadings by the Islamic State dominated the headlines, but it's worth understanding what gets lost and why oftentimes sympathy diminishes as death tolls rise. By Jacoba Urist

Policy

Can Ted Cruz Pivot from 'Conservative Kamikaze' to National Security Star?

Sen. Ted Cruz is on a foreign policy war path to the 2016 ticket, attacking Obama and Hillary Clinton while relying on fierce rhetoric to pull him ahead of GOP colleagues. By Tim Alberta

Policy

In New Hampshire, National Security Is a Top Concern

In the bellwether state, Senate candidate Scott Brown is attacking his Democratic opponent as soft on terrorism while hoping to capitalize on Obama's foreign policy 'confusion.' By Emily Schultheis

Ideas

A New Plan: Make U.S. Foreign Policy Swifter, Stronger and More Agile

We propose a solution: completely reorganize the structure of how we conduct foreign policy in ‘fragile states’ such as Iraq. By Ronald E. Neumann, Dennis Blair and Eric Olson

Policy

How to Defeat the Islamic State, According to Ted Cruz

The senator’s brand of national security is more steeped in dangerous, pandering rhetoric than actual military advice. By Peter Beinart

Policy

Marco Rubio Channels Dick Cheney To Step Up His National Security Game

Sen. Rubio outlines an aggressive foreign policy platform and takes some not-so-subtle jabs at President Obama and some of his less-hawkish fellow Republicans. By Emma Roller

Policy

America's Stake in the Scottish Referendum

Why a vote for independence would harm U.S. interests. By David Frum

Policy

GOP Tries To Turn Obama's Foreign Policy Into a November Opportunity

Russian aggression and the Islamic State are replacing healthcare and the economy as Republican election bait for this year's midterms. By Emily Schultheis

Ideas

Obama’s Speech Reflects a Refined Foreign Policy Doctrine

The president’s speech presents a refined American engagement that relies not just on our kinetic capabilities. By Maj. Mike Lyons

Policy

Dick Cheney Calls Obama's National Security View 'Willfully Blind'

While the former vice president is as hawkish as ever, the Republican consensus is not nearly as unified as it once was. By Emma Roller

Science & Tech

Social Media’s Very Arab Future

What does the Arab world’s Twitter use reveal about the U.S. challenge of winning hearts and minds online? By Patrick Tucker

Policy

What Isolationists? Poll Finds Americans Like Air Strikes

The latest poll from the Pew Research Center finds an American public shifting its tone on intervention, much like the 1999 strikes against Serbia once did. By James M. Lindsay

Threats

In Search of America's 'Organizing Principle'

Sometimes an ad-hoc foreign policy gets the best results. By Noah Gordon

Ideas

How Money Warps U.S. Foreign Policy

America's foreign policy is more elitist and insulated from public opinion than it has been in decades. And that’s a real problem for American democracy. By Peter Beinart