Policy

Despite Critics, Obama’s Defense Policy Is Popular With the Public

The defense policy President Obama detailed at West Point will be pummeled by politicians and pundits, but it's popular where it counts -- with the American people. By Joe Cirincione

Policy

Obama and the Lessons of Eisenhower

After his West Point speech, Obama's model is clear: End costly, unwinnable wars, don’t start new ones, and rebuild the economic foundation of American power. There will be opposition. By Peter Beinart

Policy

Is America Still a Global Power?

President Obama's speech at West Point reveals a slippery approach to the future of U.S. foreign policy. By David Frum

Policy

Obama Wants Allies To Take More Responsibility Off His Shoulders

The president lays out a multilateral approach to global problem-solving that could be plagued by America's inability to get friends to do heavy lifting. By James Oliphant

Policy

Full Text: President Obama’s 2014 West Point Commencement Address

A complete transcript of President Obama's foreign policy speech at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point on Wednesday.

Ideas

Obama’s Foreign Policy Balancing Act

In the post-war era, the U.S. will have to strike a delicate balance between interventionism and isolationism, President Obama said in a major foreign policy speech Wednesday. By Stephanie Gaskell

Policy

Obama Draws a Roadmap for Foreign Engagement

Using all of America’s assets—beyond just military prowess—makes sense. By Tara Sonenshine

Policy

This Is How Wars End in the 21st Century

The new normal is a lot like the old normal. By Major Garrett

Ideas

Stop Debating and Start Prioritizing America's National Security Crises

Russia, Iran, China? Policy makers and the press need to explain why we should care. By Peter Beinart

Ideas

Leave Ballistic Missiles Out of the Iran Nuclear Talks

It made sense to go after Iran’s missiles a few years ago. Not anymore. By Greg Thielmann

Threats

Iran and Saudi Arabia Edge Closer to Talks

After growing distrust and almost a year of silence, the Saudi foreign minister kickstarts discussions with Iran's top diplomat. By Global Security Newswire

Policy

Will Democrats Join the Benghazi Committee?

House Democrats are trying to decide if they'll participate in the soon-to-be-formed Benghazi committee. By Elahe Izadi

Ideas

Democracy's Future in the Middle East

Across the region, power struggles mask a more fundamental divide over the meaning of the modern nation-state. By Shadi Hamid

Policy

Why the U.S. Needs an Ambassador to the North Pole

The country is about to gain a whole lot more responsibility in the Arctic region that Russia, China, and others are vying to control. By Marina Koren

Policy

The U.S. Doesn't Need to Prove Itself in Ukraine

War hawks claim America's policies abroad will embolden enemies and undermine allies. They're wrong. By Peter Beinart

Ideas

Searching for the Obama Doctrine

In scolding his critics who want more military action, President Obama is overlooking his own supporters who want him to do more. By Gayle Tzemach Lemmon

Threats

Kerry: NATO Members Must Increase Military Spending

Secretary Kerry, claiming Russia has ‘escalated the crisis even further’ in Ukraine, tells under-spending NATO member states it’s time to pay up. By Ben Watson

Ideas

Why Nations Are Right To Ban USAID

Using the misfortune of less developed countries as a cover to advance U.S. interests compromises the credibility of all foreign aid. By Mark Varga

Threats

Obama Boosts Asia Pivot, Expands U.S. Troop Access to Philippines

President Barack Obama announced a 10-year agreement to send additional American troops and equipment through the Philippines. By Ben Watson

Threats

How America Lost Russia

The rupture between Russia and the West has been 14 years in the making. By David Rohde and Arshad Mohammed