NJ Topics Conventional Weapons

Drone Journalism

When Journalists Have Drones

Communications researchers explore the scope and consequences of using unmanned aircraft as news-gathering tools.
Barack Obama, Vladimir Putin

United States, Russia Enter Into New Arms-Security Agreement

WASHINGTON -- The United States is entering into a new agreement with Russia that would continue in some form the Cooperative Threat Reduction program that aims to lock down vulnerable nuclear materials in the former Soviet Union, Global Security Newswire has learned.
John Boehner

House Faces Off on Farm Bill, Late-Term Abortions

The Senate continues its floor focus on amendments to its immigration-reform bill.
Edward Snowden

Edward Snowden Is Completely Wrong

Whether he's a hero or traitor, Americans are already so acclimated to the loss of privacy that his revelations won't unnerve them much. 
INDUSTRY

Defense Industry Focused on Sequestration

No one has been able to successfully wrangle Congress into reaching a grand bargain to reduce the deficit. But it’s not for lack of trying.
MILITARY

A Hollow Military Again?

The looming postwar drawdown of the U.S. armed forces will prove the most challenging of modern times.
MAINBAR

Major Battles in the House Armed Services Committee

On Aug. 1, 2011, hours before the government was set to default on its debt, House Speaker John Boehner convened Republican members of the House Armed Services Committee in his office to discuss a legislative solution.
Doug Roach

Remembering Doug Roach, Veteran Staffer

It's somewhat rare for a congressional staffer to gain praise from both Republicans and Democrats. Such was the case for Roach, a committee veteran for more than two decades who died in January at the age of 70.
Paul Arcangeli

Paul Arcangeli, Minority Staff Director

Paul Arcangeli announced the beginning of a "reign of terror" after taking the helm of the committee staff when Democrats were in the majority. "You can call me Mr. Arcangeli or O Dark Lord," Arcangeli joked.
Syria Civil War

How America Lost Its Nerve

Policymakers used to believe in a forceful projection of American authority. But after Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya, they are turning inward. 
Howard

House Armed Services Chairman Demands Pentagon's Military Options for Syria

Legislation rolled out on Monday would require the U.S. Defense Department to inform lawmakers regarding "a variety of options" for potential military involvement in the Syrian civil war and what resources would be needed to carry them out.
John Hamre

Former U.S. National Security Leaders Object to ‘More Restrictive’ Nuclear Trade Policies

A half-dozen former U.S. national security leaders last month implored President Obama to avoid tightening restrictions on foreign nuclear cooperation in the interest of nonproliferation.
dollar bill

Heading Off the Coming Retirement Disaster

Half of Californians are on track to retire in or near poverty. The state's new retirement plan model could change that.
stuxnet flame

Governments' Favorite Cyberweapons Don't Look Anything Like Stuxnet

Think more along the lines of "criminal enterprise."
Steve Israel

DCCC Outraises NRCC in March

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee outraised its Republican counterpart for a third straight month to start 2013, according to reports. Roll Call reported Thursday that the National Republican Congressional Committee raised $8.1 million in March, trailing the $10.2 million the DCCC gath...
Boston marathon

Defense Department Saves National Guard WMD Unit That Helped in Boston

The U.S. Defense Department was poised as recently as last month to dismantle a National Guard crisis team that assisted in the emergency response to the bombings at Monday's Boston Marathon. 

Insiders: North Korean Threat Serious, U.S. Response Appropriate

North Korea's saber rattling is a serious threat, National Journal's National Security Insiders say, and they overwhelmingly approve of the Obama administration's response.
Korea soldiers

Amid Deep Cuts, the Pentagon Labors to Keep Its Forces Ready for Korea

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Syria civil war

The Paradox of Syria's Chemical Weapons

The surest way to keep the arsenal safe is to leave it in the hands of a murderous dictator.
Northrop Grumman

This Defense Contractor Is Repeatedly Spear-Phishing 68,000 Innocent People

One company with deep Washington connections is running a huge online scam. It involves tens of thousands of victims. And it's completely legal.
Blue Angels

Armed With Excuses, Lawmakers Head Home to Sequester Complaints

As lawmakers were preparing to go back home to their districts for a two-week recess, many were already getting an earful of grievances from constituents about the sequester’s impact and were bracing to hear far more in meetings and town halls.
Trent Franks

Electromagnetic Pulse Caucus Battles Skeptics in Push to Protect the Planet

A small but growing cadre of House members is set to relaunch efforts to protect the nation against what they say is a very real threat: the unleashing of an electromagnetic pulse either by a solar storm or a nuclear-armed foe that could cripple much of the nation’s electrical infrastructure.  
Draganflyer X6

The Wonderful World of Drones

Fighting fires, reducing crime, counting sea lions: the case for domestic UAVs.
Deborah Firestonewrote

Former Iran Hostages Are Still Seeking Justice

'Argo' won the Oscar. But the 52 Americans held captive for another 14 months didn't get their feel-good ending.
Bob McDonnell

Bob McDonnell's Political Lesson for President Obama

Supporters of President Obama’s insistence on additional revenue as the only way to avoid the sequester should take a close look across the Potomac River for an alternative way of getting things done.
Flight Delay

Where Automatic Spending Cuts May Hit Hardest

Here are some of the programs that would be pared as part of the sequester, according to a report by the White House Office of Management and Budget and letters from administration officials
Gina McCarthy

Who's In and Who's Out in Obama's Cabinet

President Obama has chosen many of the candidates for his second-term Cabinet, but he still has eight positions left to fill. Here's a look at which positions are open, the leading contenders to fill them, and the Cabinet choices he has already made.
Obama State of the Union 2012

Missed Opportunity? Obama May Avoid Spending-Cut Debate in Speech

When President Obama takes to the podium Tuesday night for the State of the Union, he’s expected to give scant attention to one of the most pressing issues facing Washington: the upcoming $85 billion in spending cuts.
Cody Wilson

Welcome to the Future: Congress Takes on 3-D Printing

Congress is being forced into the brave new world of 3-D printing.
Election 2012, Obama Speaks, Biden

Need Proof That Joe Biden Is Running for President? Look At His Staff.

The veep wants his boss’s job in 2016. For evidence, just look at the staff.
Keystone Pipeline

How the Keystone XL Pipeline Could Predict the Next Senate

His positioning on the Keystone pipeline suggests he's not so attuned to 2014 politics.
John Sherman-John Kerry

The History John Kerry Doesn't Want to Repeat as Secretary of State

Once his confirmation is behind him, John Kerry will be the first chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to become the secretary of state in more than 100 years. But if he has any ambition at all, he'd better hope his experience is nothing like his predecessor's.
Angry Obama

Why (and How) Obama Might Be Raising Expectations Too High Again

The president's newly confrontational approach might feel better, but it's a capitulation to the times that may backfire.
Aerial of the Pentagon

Insiders: Go Ahead, Slash the Defense Budget

Defense cuts may be on the table in a new fiscal-cliff deal, as the deadline to avoid sequestration is just weeks away. National Journal's National Security Insiders say: Go for it.
Oil Can

Obama’s Betting on Chuck Hagel, Unlike With Susan Rice

The president is fighting for the war hero and former senator in a way he didn’t for his first pick for secretary of State.
Syria

5 Key National-Security Issues for 2013

It has been a turbulent year, with violence continuing in Syria, heated debates over the defense-budget topline, and the terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya. National Journal looks at five key national-security issues that the U.S. will wrangle next year.
Former Senator Chuck Hagel

White House Wavers on Hagel, Considers Others for Defense

Besieged by criticism from right and left, and considerable skepticism from his former Senate colleagues, Chuck Hagel appears to be following the path of Susan Rice as a trial-balloon nominee who finds himself quickly losing altitude in Washington. And as happened with Rice, the White House is now signaling that it may soon puncture Hagel's hopes.  

Defense Authorization Bill Heads to President Obama

The sweeping defense policy bill is now headed to President Obama's desk, with the Senate passing the legislation authorizing about $633 billion in Pentagon programs by a wide 81-12 margin today. It came one day after the House passed it 315-107.

FOREIGN AFFAIRS - The Army's Gamble

V CORPS FORWARD TACTICAL COMMAND, Central Iraq-The sound came with such suddenness and ferocity that all heads craned skyward as if in supplication: An Iraqi Scud missile was boring back through the atmosphere at terminal velocity. Just to the right of the 110-vehicle convoy, a Patriot anti-missile battery answered, with the sparkling contrails of two missiles clearly visible as they soared toward an impact point nearly six miles overhead. Along the shoulder of the road, hundreds of soldiers scrambled to don chemical protection suits as a multiwheeled Fox detection vehicle ran down the column "sniffing" for lethal chemical agents. Within minutes, the Patriot battery reported a successful intercept and confirmed that the Scud would have hit the ground less than a third of a mile in front of the convoy.
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