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Budget Battles

  • Republicans Want Strings Attached to California Disaster Aid
  • Biden Goes Out With a Bang in the Jobs Market
  • Trump Privately Pushes Senators for ‘One Big, Beautiful Bill’
  • Trump Considers Declaring National Emergency for Tariff Rollout
  • Trump Unloads: Grievances, Greenland and the Gulf of Mexico
  • Republicans Divided Over How to Pass Trump’s Agenda
  • Trump Pushes Johnson to Victory as Speaker

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  • Senator Ben Cardin (D-MD) arrives at Democratic Party caucus meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., January 19, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/ File Photo

    Factbox: What happens in a U.S. government shutdown?

    By Richard Cowan and Susan Cornwell and Amanda Becker and Richard Cowan and Susan Cornwell and Amanda Becker, Reuters

    In shutdowns, nonessential government employees are furloughed, or placed on temporary unpaid leave. Workers deemed essential, including those dealing with public safety and national security, keep...

  • A U.S. Navy crew member looks at a F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter as it takes off from the USS Ronald Reagan during a joint naval drill between South Korea and the U.S., in the West Sea

    The Mysterious Threat to Pilots That the Pentagon Can’t Solve

    By Ciro Scotti

    Episodes of oxygen deprivation affecting the pilots of F/A-18 Hornet and Super Hornet — and other military aircraft including the F-35 — are on the rise and remain an unsolved mystery.

  • U.S. President Trump speaks to reporters at his golf estate in Bedminster, New Jersey

    What Game Theory Tells Us About Trump’s ‘Madman’ Approach to North Korea

    By Rob Garver

    Is Donald Trump out of his mind? Maybe he wants North Korea to think so.

  • Does the Army’s $580 Million Handgun Have a Fatal Flaw?

    By Ciro Scotti

    Last January, the Army made a $580 million decision: It would replace its longstanding sidearm, the M9 Beretta, with a new modular handgun made by the U.S. arm of the German-controlled gunsmith Sig...

  • South Korean President Moon Jae-in attends his New Year news conference at the Presidential Blue House in Seoul, South Korea, January 10, 2018.  REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

    Why the Escalating Threats Between Trump and Kim Won’t End in War

    By Patrick Smith

    The supercharged threats volleyed between President Trump and Kim Jong Un this week bring us closer to war with the North Korea than at any time since Pyongyang tested its first nuclear device in...

  • The Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine USS Tennessee returns to Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay, Georgia in this handout photo

    Here’s the Real State of the $1 Trillion U.S. Nuclear Upgrade

    By David Francis

    The American nuclear arsenal is just about the same as it was when Trump took office.

  • Here’s Why North Korea Put Guam in Its Crosshairs

    By David Francis

    Hours after President Donald Trump threatened North Korea with fire and fury like the world has never known, Pyongyang announced it is "examining the operational plan" to attack Guam, a tiny U.S...

  • The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter - $1.5 trillion (over 55 years)

    Why the Price of the F-35 Keeps Soaring

    By Ciro Scotti

    The most costly fighter ever built is getting even more expensive. A new General Accounting Office report says the Pentagon will spend an additional $3.9 billion over the next five years on “...

  • Trump meets with Price to discuss opioid addiction during a briefing at Trump's golf estate in Bedminster, New Jersey

    The Media Has to Stop Provoking Trump’s Worst Instincts

    By Rob Garver

    For a man constantly boasting about his extraordinary negotiating prowess, President Trump made a pretty obvious rookie mistake on Tuesday, with his apocalyptic-sounding promise to deliver “fire and...

  • U.S. soldiers stand guard near the site of a U.S. bombing in the Achin district of Nangarhar province in eastern Afghanistan April 15, 2017. REUTERS/Parwiz

    Five Things You Need to Know About Plans to Privatize the Afghan War

    By David Francis

    The White House is actively considering a plan to turn a big chunk of the war in Afghanistan over to private contractors. That’s according to Erik Prince, founder of the Blackwater security firm, who...

  • How the Republican Drive to Boost Defense Spending Could Backfire Big Time

    By Eric Pianin

    The House is on the verge of approving a massive, $790 billion spending bill for defense, military construction and veterans’ programs that is $72 billion above the legal caps imposed by the 2011...

  • How Much Do Transgender Soldiers Really Cost the US Military?

    By Beth Braverman

    An analysis by the Rand Corporation last year found that the costs of allowing transgender people to serve in the military would have a “minimal impact” on the budget.

  • The Pentagon Skips Out on a $10 Billion Debt

    By Eric Pianin

    By law, the free-spending Defense Department is required to implement a plan to achieve at least $10 billion in administrative cost savings within the next two years. But the Government...

  • An exhibit booth for firearms manufacturer Smith & Wesson is seen on display at the International Association of Chiefs of Police conference in Chicago, Illinois, October 26, 2015.     REUTERS/Jim Young

    How Phony Cops Got $1.2 Million in Weapons From the US Government

    By Eric Pianin

    An extraordinary Government Accountability Office sting operation revealed that the U.S. Department of Defense continues to play fast and loose with a program to sell surplus military weaponry to law...

  • File photo: U.S. sailors in a rigid-hull inflatable boat approach the Military Sealift Command missile range instrumentation ship USNS Invincible (L) to conduct a personnel transfer in Arabian Sea on November 21, 2012.  Courtesy Deven B. King/U.S. Navy/Ha

    US Navy Patrol Ships Sends a Warning to Iran in the Persian Gulf

    By Idrees Ali, Reuters

    The official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the USS Thunderbolt fired the warning shots after the Iranian vessel ignored radio calls and the ship's whistle. The Thunderbolt was being...

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