Trump’s Taiwan Arms Gamble Is Rattling the Indo-Pacific

Senator Tammy Duckworth’s arrival in Taipei marks a critical response to recent shifts in U.S. policy. As Trump casts doubt on long-standing arms commitments, Duckworth is reframing Taiwan’s autonomy as a vital economic and strategic necessity, emphasizing its role in the global semiconductor supply chain to secure lasting bipartisan support.
The Think Tank That Mapped Iran’s Pressure Points Before the Bombs Fell

New light has been shed on the informal network of advocacy groups and institutions that helped shape the case for Operation Epic Fury. Leaked documents detail a proposed project to map Iran’s internal pressure points, highlighting the blurred boundaries between independent research and intelligence-gathering in modern conflict planning.
The MOU Is Collapsing in Real Time — and the World Is Paying the Bill

The fragile Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding has disintegrated after just 28 days. As U.S.-Iran military strikes intensify and the Strait of Hormuz faces renewed blockades, the global economy braces for stalling disinflation and rising energy costs. This editorial analyzes the dangerous absence of a mechanism to halt this escalation.
America at 250: The Republic That Warned Against Itself

As America celebrates 250 years, the nation faces a profound irony. Founded to prevent the concentration of power, the U.S. has increasingly drifted toward executive overreach and global military dominance. This article examines whether the republic’s founding institutions still possess the strength to constrain these imperial impulses today.