The GOP Split on Ukraine Aid Isn't Really About Ukraine
For most aid critics, the urge to cut off Kyiv appears unconnected to any sort of principled realism, non-interventionism, or even isolationism.
For most aid critics, the urge to cut off Kyiv appears unconnected to any sort of principled realism, non-interventionism, or even isolationism.
The Human Rights Foundation is mobilizing a global band of activists to fight authoritarianism in China, Iran, Russia, and beyond.
Lawmakers are avoiding important debates about America's role in the conflict and the potential for misuse of funds and weapons.
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There’s no endpoint in sight to a war that threatens widespread consequences.
Small, private groups are working to feed the hungry and evacuate the endangered.
Our drones still patrol the skies, and our tax dollars will be paying off the costs of failed nation-building for decades.
How much good can $6 billion really do?
A U.S. agency spent 13 years documenting our government's failure to stabilize or rebuild the country.
Neither side needs military aid funded by U.S. taxpayers.
Obama was also no immigration hero.
Impeachment managers in Trump's Senate trial have overplayed their hand by claiming that Ukrainians perished because he blocked aid from the country.
Militarized borders and military intervention are two sides of the same coin.
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The "largest women's empowerment program" was supposed to benefit 75,000 women.
Private enterprise helps global economic development in ways besides simple charity.
The heart of the potential for conflicts of interests is not the Trump business empire. It's the presidential power to steer benefits to particular interests.
Bombs shouldn't be taking the place of aid.
With an off-hand remark, the president indicates the status quo of U.S.-supported Israeli occupation is fine with him.
Changing café culture and international do-gooderism collide on a troubled island.
Israel is fully capable of funding its own defense, but now they'll have billions more to spend on U.S. weaponry.
An experiment in international aid hits a snag.
Ima Matul was a victim of forced labor, or labor trafficking. In the U.S. and around the world, it's as common if not more common than sex trafficking.
South Sudan, described as an "American creation," has been at war almost since its independence in 2011.
U2 frontman makes some good points in congressional testimony but mostly wallows in showbiz solipsism.
How the military became the most powerful diplomatic tool America has - and why that won't help win the fight against ISIS.
In the case of CIA torture, hard hearts mixed with soft minds to further a policy that was not only grotesque, but unwise.
Throwing good money at bad governments makes poor countries worse off.
Three things you can count on: death, taxes, and American support for military contractors channeled through the tiny but prosperous democracy.
Aid-dependent Liberian leaders neglect the needs of their people to please Western benefactors.
Don't ask whether the U.S. will get involved—ask how it's involved already.
Mythbusting naysayers about third-world development
All together, the United Nations promised $2.4 billion in assistance
International Development Secretary Justine Greening says the scale of suffering in Syria is "hard to exaggerate"