Policy

Meet John Kasich, the Fiscal-Defense Hawk You Don’t Remember

The two-term Ohio governor and 16th presidential candidate had a center seat at the table of power in Washington for nearly two decades more than a decade ago.

Policy

Kerry Defends UN Vote on Iran Deal, Says Bought Congress Time

Members of Congress wanted a vote on the Iran agreement before the U.N. had its say, but the Obama administration says it fought and won them a 90-day window.

Policy

Closing Guantanamo Tops Havana’s To-Do List

The U.S.-Cuba relationship may be thawing, but Congress may be the only one who can melt the iceberg that is the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Policy

Iran Deal Trips Up Hillary Clinton’s Delicate Dance

The nuclear agreement is forcing the Clinton campaign to figure out how to tout her tenure as Obama’s first secretary of state while keeping the president’s mixed national-security record at arm’s length.

Policy

‘Hard Sell’ Ahead for Iran Deal, But Congress Has No Real Kill Switch

President Obama on Tuesday announced a deal with Iran to curb its nuclear program, saying it is “not built on trust.” He could’ve been talking to Congress.

Policy

Scott Walker’s National Security Gap

Translating gubernatorial leadership to presidential has long plagued state executives running for the White House. But Scott Walker has a particularly tough sell in 2016.

Business

Three Women Advance to Next Phase of Army Ranger School

The last of the 19 women who began the first gender-integrated course for the Army’s elite Rangers will move on to the mountain stage.

Policy

Lindsey Graham Gets Specific: We Need 20,000 U.S. Troops in Iraq and Syria

That makes him the only presidential candidate explicitly calling for a large American ground force — and the only one saying exactly what he’d do against the Islamic State.

Policy

Hagel: Vietnam War Offers Lessons for Islamic State Fight

The former defense secretary shares some insight ahead of the congressional commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the war in Indochina.

Policy

The Pentagon Wants To Train 15,000 Syrian Fighters. So Far It's Got 60.

Tense words between Sen. John McCain and Defense Secretary Ash Carter reveal that the U.S. has not decided how to defend the fighters if they are attacked by the Assad regime.

Policy

Meet Martin O’Malley, Hillary Clinton’s Latest Unlikely National Security Critic

The former Maryland governor offers a warier foreign policy, contrasting himself with a more hawkish Clinton and Republican field.

Ideas

Special Report: Beyond Guantanamo

President Obama has begun his final push to close Guantanamo. But America’s bigger challenge is deciding what to do with tomorrow's prisoners in a war without end.

Policy

Senate Attempts To Arm Kurds Directly, Reform Military Justice Fall Short

The Senate voted to move forward with the annual defense authorization bill earlier than in recent years, but it's as peppered with controversy as ever.

Threats

Is ‘Whack-A-Mole’ Working Against al Qaeda?

The terror group’s No. 2 was killed in Yemen, reportedly by a U.S. strike. But are such killings bringing the U.S. any closer to “degrading and ultimately defeating” terrorism?

Policy

Jeb Bush Enters 2016 Race, Keeping National Security at a Distance

Bush announced his candidacy with a promise to be the optimistic candidate of ‘Today and Tomorrow’ — and no word on his father’s and brother’s wars in the Middle East.

Policy

Hillary Clinton, Former Secretary of State, Isn’t Emphasizing Foreign Policy — Yet

The most experienced national-security candidate in the 2016 presidential race formally opened her campaign by talking mostly about her personal narrative and domestic-policy goals.

Threats

Obama Administration Transfers 6 Guantanamo Detainees to Oman

Defense Secretary Ash Carter ends a five-month pause in transfers as the White House and Congress battle over the future of the U.S. military prison.

Policy

No. 2 Democrat Launches Standoff over Defense Spending ‘Gimmick’

The GOP shot down Sen. Dick Durbin’s amendment, but look for its main idea to resurface when the spending bill hits the Senate floor.

Policy

On National Security Cred Tour, Jeb Shakes Fist at Putin

Bush is taking a different tack on his presidential rite of passage in Europe than his GOP rivals: he’s talking.