North Korea: The Costs of War, Calculated
Even a limited war with North Korea would kill millions, devastate the environment, and bankrupt the U.S.
Even a limited war with North Korea would kill millions, devastate the environment, and bankrupt the U.S.
A vital discussion about the US moving its embassy to Jerusalem and officially recognizing the sacred and controversial city as the capital of Israel.
The increased tempo of the GOP’s snatch and grab in recent days suggests that they’re feeling a certain desperation.
The anti-war movement needs money, and the Koch brothers have it. But it comes with strings attached.
Thousands of Arab Bedouins in Israel’s Negev desert are denied power, water, sewage, and roads by the state. And their villages are under constant threat of demolition.
This conference will unpack how international political patterns have changed in the transition from Obama to the current president and whether or not Donald Trump is a passing phenomenon or a harbinger of a more permanent shift in global politics.
In IPS Fellow John Feffer’s new book with in-depth interviews of Eastern Europe’s many extraordinary activists he shows that, despite stiff odds, hope for the region’s future remains alive in many.
China and South Korea could be game changers on climate — and create a more peaceful region in the process.
The president’s over-the-top threats have made war seem like a real possibility. And war would be catastrophic.
ISIS is on the decline, but the catastrophic political divisions in Iraq and Syria that gave rise to it are no closer to being mended.