Over the past week, C-17 heavy-lift cargo planes, which usually transport troops and equipment, flew to Puerto Rico at least ...
Fort Darnet, a 19th-century fort on the River Medway, was auctioned for more than double its initial price after 40 years ...
In Venezuela’s downtrodden fishing towns, locals are squeezed between a growing U.S. military presence off the coast and what ...
Experts say the Trump administration's seizure of an oil tanker in the Caribbean over the weekend is part of an effort ...
The Trump administration has launched military strikes in Syria to “eliminate” Islamic State group fighters and weapons sites ...
Ukrainian forces say they have hit an oil terminal, a pipeline, two parked jet fighters, and two ships in a series of strikes ...
The Supreme Court deliberated for weeks over the Trump administration’s claim that National Guard troops were necessary to ...
Fentanyl and cannabis aren’t comparable substances, pharmacologically, and the administrative mechanisms in play are quite ...
He pledged in 2015 to take oil from Iraq as repayment for U.S. occupation of the country, writes Scott Waldman. Three years later, after winning the White House, Trump outlined a similar approach with ...
Taiwan faces a new obstacle in securing U.S. weapons to deter a possible attack by Beijing: domestic political deadlock.
No American would accept this kind of law enforcement. Yet, it parallels what our military has now begun doing to “suspected drug boats” in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific.
Imagine walking out of a grocery store into flashing police lights. Two suspects are kneeling with their hands up, visibly unarmed. Someone nearby says a drug sale may have taken ...