Historian Serhii Plokhy explains why the Kremlin’s nuclear proliferation has begun a dangerous new era of mutually assured ...
South Korea’s growing investment in American shipbuilding could foster the development of ships capable of using next ...
Firmly opposing double standards on nuclear nonproliferation and the practice of favoring geopolitical interests over the ...
How the paranoia of the Cold War has evolved into a new digital conflict, and why the key to resilience lies in understanding ...
The Red Sea is rapidly becoming a highly contested zone, where traditional and emerging global powers are vying for influence ...
At the dawning of the British Empire in 1818, the romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley penned a memorable sonnet freighted with foreboding about the ...
PICATINNY ARSENAL, N.J. - This Thanksgiving marks the 75th Anniversary of one of the most grueling and hard-fought battles in ...
U.S. sanctions have forced the dismantling of Lukoil's overseas empire, turning it into one of the most politically charged ...
Immigrants make up a significant proportion of all the country's doctors. New policies are making it harder and less appealing for foreign-born physicians to come to the U.S.
Trump and senior Republican Congressional leadership are testing the waters of a two-pronged attack to neuter the US States’ ...
When you’re waiting for a flight, what’s the difference between out there and in here?
Yaroslav Trofimov of The Wall Street Journal explains why he thinks that the U.S., Russia, and China have entered a new nuclear race.