Search results
Putin to visit N. Korea as Kremlin floats possible ‘strategic’ treaty
Courthouse News Service· 7 hours agoRussian President Vladimir Putin will travel to North Korea on Tuesday, in a rare visit that may see...
Watchdog: Nuclear-armed nations are deepening reliance on nuclear weapons
Stamford Advocate· 19 hours agoThe world's nine nuclear-armed states continue to modernize their nuclear weapons as the countries...
China blames Philippines for ship collision in South China Sea. Manila calls the report deceptive
Stamford Advocate· 10 hours agoA Chinese vessel and a Philippine supply ship collided near the disputed Spratly Islands in the...
This city just made it illegal to advertise SUVs. Here’s why.
Washington Post· 3 days agoEdinburgh’s city council voted to ban fossil fuel advertisements on city property, undermining the...
Opinion | America Isn’t Leading the World
New York Times· 7 days agoDr. Wertheim is a historian and an analyst of U.S. foreign policy. After four years of Donald Trump, Joe Biden was supposed to restore the United States...
Israel: Plausible Paranoia And Righteous Retribution
Strategy Page· 11 hours agoWhile Iran has been subject to more and more international sanctions since the 1980s they managed to convince several major Western nations, including the United& ...
Russia: Elusive Illusions
Strategy Page· 1 day agoAugust 2, 2019: Today the U.S. withdraws from the 1987 INF (Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces) treaty. With this deal, the U.S. and Russia (Soviet Union) agreed to ban the ...
Sweden scrambles fighter jets to intercept Russian bomber over Nato border
The Telegraph via Yahoo News· 2 days agoUnion states will not be directly involved for now in a $50 billion loan that the Group of Seven ...
Opinion | Here’s Why Ukraine Should Seek Peace
New York Times· 4 days agoDr. Dorn is a professor of defense studies at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario, and the Canadian Forces College in Toronto....
Procurement: Risen From The Grave
Strategy Page· 2 days agoThe U.S. is allowed, according to an arms control treaty, to maintain 76 B-52s on active duty. When one of the 76 is lost due to an accident, an AMARC B-52 is revived.