News

Carlisle marked Armed Forces Day. It was a moment for our community to honour those whose who have served and given so much ...
NATO members have agreed to a new defense spending goal of 5% of each country’s economic output by 2035, more than doubling the previous figure of 2%. It’s an ambitious timeline that ...
In the windswept gardens of a Danish chateau, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and some of Ukraine's main European backers weighed options on Thursday for filling the gap after the Trump administration ...
The U.S. move affects high-demand munitions, including Patriot missiles, the AIM-7 Sparrow air-to-air missile and ...
Fireworks blast in California, Gaza aid scandal, Russia backs Taliban—Thursday evening's headlines span chaos from Esparto to ...
As the latest leader of the European Union, Denmark’s push for Ukraine to enter the coalition could set it at odds with the U.S.
Air superiority lies at the heart of modern military victory. It gives armed forces the ability to control the skies; it ...
NATO leaders deserve credit for overcoming parochial concerns and political resistance to agree on the new spending targets.
NATO member defense spending commitments are overdue, writes Bruce Stokes of the German Marshall Fund. But how plausible are they?
A look at where defense spending stands among NATO: Measured as a portion of GDP, Poland is NATO’s biggest military spender ...
The NATO alliance agreed to a new defense spending target of 5% GDP by 2035, after a record number of members met the prior 2 ...