U.S. recognition of Western Sahara as part of Morocco wasn’t symbolic. It was a strategic signal. Dino Buloha explains why Washington must now turn that move into real policy: backing Morocco’s autonomy plan and demanding accountability around Tindouf.
Susan Rice is warning businesses, institutions, and media that dare to work with President Trump that a Democrat “reckoning” is coming. Her message is clear: submit or face retribution. This piece explains why Americans must reject intimidation and stay on offense.
The Houthis used time, captured weapons, and Iranian backing to turn a local Yemeni insurgency into a strategic threat on the Red Sea. If Washington keeps treating Yemen as background noise, it risks facing a permanent Iranian‑style forward base on its doorstep
Retired Special Forces Colonel James Williamson reflects on General Michael T. Flynn's career, personal sacrifices, and continued voice on national security — through the eyes of a fellow soldier, not a partisan.
Retired investigator John Adams examines how media coverage of law enforcement shootings routinely applies the "Moment of Threat Rule" — a standard unanimously rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court in Barnes v. Felix (2025).
President Trump has moved decisively to reclaim American sovereignty, restore deterrence, and reestablish strategic clarity. The United States owes no one an apology for asserting its strength, projecting military power, and protecting national interests.
From lived operations across the Caribbean and South America, Dino Buloha describes how the U.S. has shifted from statements to enforcement, targeting Venezuela, Cuba, and the Marxist‑criminal axis that enabled China’s strategic foothold.
For more than sixty years, the people of Cuba have lived under an oppressive Marxist dictatorship. From just 90 miles away, Cuba serves as a base of operations for hostile intelligence services which target the United States—a reality that must be confronted head-o
The divisions we are living with did not appear overnight. They were accelerated by a governing philosophy that redefined the United States not as a shared civic nation, but as a collection of competing identity groups—identity politics as insurgency.
Lebanon is not doomed by its size. It is weakened by one thing: a state that has been forced to share authority with factions that do not answer to it. Lebanon can live with diversity. What it cannot survive is diversity without a strong referee.
Hatred of Jews has learned to survive by changing its language. What was once shouted openly is now whispered behind academic jargon, activist slogans, and media-approved euphemisms. The word "Zionist" has become the preferred substitute for "Jew."