As the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran grinds into its third week, Washington is committing more forces from the Pacific to the ...
Analysts from all six GCC states tell Newsweek of growing frustration with the U.S. approach to the war with Iran.
As the war enters its fifth day, the US-Israeli assault on Iran has assumed ever more openly the character of a war of annihilation and extermination.
"For Whom The Bell Tolls": Ernest Hemingway’s “For Whom the Bell Tolls” was initially published in 1940. Some consider it to be his best work. Copies of the book today can be found selling for as much ...
The U.K. voted to leave the European Union, and a few months later Donald Trump was elected president of the United States. A series of other shocks followed, including pandemic disruptions and rising ...
Opinion
The New Republic on MSNOpinion
DOJ Spent Months Emailing Wrong Address in Quest for 2020 Revenge
Donald Trump’s Department of Justice spent weeks emailing its request for Oklahoma’s voter rolls to the wrong email address. Then, they sued Oklahoma for not complying. It began in December, when ...
The man accused of stealing sensitive social security data didn’t just potentially commit a massive security breach that could affect millions of Americans—he also has a serious conflict of interest.
This Black History Month, we're looking back at 137 years of Black first ascensionists, mountaineers, and Olympians who ...
History has its share of forgotten aircraft carriers. These long-forgotten ships were often testbeds for new technologies and strategies.
It’s been a busy year for Hegseth, Trump’s unconventional pick for secretary of war. Now, with the war in Iran, he’s firmly ...
Opinion
Great energy reckoning: Oil’s last stand Vs. solar ascendancy, and why Sri Lanka holds the ace
The global order is being redrawn not by guns alone, but by electrons and hydrocarbons. On one side stands the United States and its allies, doubling down on a fortress-like strategy to control the ...
Opinion
Don’t let the battlefield optics fool you: America’s overall national security has been harmed
Despite our nation's current penchant for combat engagements, the U.S. has become a second-tier military power, writes retired Navy vice admiral Joe Sestak.
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