Trump must withdraw from Iran nuclear deal — now
July 16, 2017The president’s primary obligation is to keep American citizens safe from foreign threats.
READ MORE.The president’s primary obligation is to keep American citizens safe from foreign threats.
READ MORE.A ceasefire agreement in southwestern Syria is a clear victory for Russia, Assad’s regime, Hizbollah terrorists and Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.
READ MORE.Confronting the twin issues of radical Islamic terrorism and the ayatollahs’ malign regime in Iraq are central not only to the Arab disputants but to the United States as well.
READ MORE.The regime in Tehran is not merely a nuclear-weapons threat; it’s not merely a terrorist threat; it is a conventional threat to everybody in the region who simply seeks to live in peace and security.
READ MORE.Reuniting Korea, essentially by the South peacefully absorbing the North, is in both of our best interests.
READ MORE.Nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists and their state sponsors may not be the only threat from the Middle East. But in the coming years, it definitely ranks first on the list.
READ MORE.The strikes on Assad and the routing of Isis could lead to Iran’s isolation and the redrawing of Syria and Iraq.
READ MORE.With North Korea threatening its sixth nuclear test, and the pace of its ballistic-missile tests quickening, Pyongyang’s global threat is ever more imminent.
READ MORE.President Trump’s trade rhetoric until now has been simple and effective: America is getting ripped off, he says, and things need to change. Simplicity works on the campaign trail, but how does it translate into actual governance?
READ MORE.We need to have a long-term strategy to keep Russia in check in both Eastern and Central Europe and in the Middle East.
READ MORE.