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National Journal Coverage
President Barack Obama chats with Afghan President Hamid Karzai during the start of a dinner at the Presidential Palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, March 28, 2010.

Which Is More Corrupt: Afghanistan or America?

Karzai cash payments highlight a growing friction as Afghans blame NATO for their poor reputation.

Insiders Split on Edits of Benghazi Talking Points

National Journal's National Security Insiders were split on whether the Obama administration's edits to remove any mention of terrorism from the original public statements on the Benghazi, Libya, attack that killed U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens showed it deliberately tried to mislead the American public.
Eric Holder

You Know What Really Risks National Security? Leak Investigations.

What happens if national security journalists stop trusting government warnings?
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.
U.S. Marine in Afghanistan

How the Afghan Conflict Will Be Decided

A horrific week for U.S. casualties reaffirms President Obama’s rush to rely on the Afghan army. But can they handle it?
Obama Rain

IRS, AP subpoena, Benghazi--and the Turkish Prime Minister Makes Obama's Life Worse

The president's Rose Garden press conference.
obama targeted

How the White House Scandals Could Hurt Republicans, Too

By enraging the base and strengthening the faction least willing to compromise with Obama, the IRS and Benghazi affairs could hurt a GOP shot at the presidency.
Obama announcement on IRS

You Want Angry? I'll Show You Angry, Obama Says on IRS Scandal

Facing criticism from Republicans, the president reasserts his authority by pushing out the IRS's acting commissioner.
Mike Rogers

Feinstein: Rogers a 'Respected' Contender for FBI

The Obama administration is considering House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, R-Mich., for the top job at the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Russia

What Moscow's Arrest Says About U.S.-Russia Relationship

As the U.S. and Russia go through the motions of expelling each other’s “diplomats” in the coming days, it’s likely they will only be pawns in a much bigger game.
GREG HICKS

Insiders Split on Whether White House Covered Up Benghazi Response

National Security Insiders say the U.S. has made missions more secure in the wake of the attack.
obama cameron

Obama's Outrage Focused on Republicans More Than IRS

At press briefing with British Prime Minister David Cameron, Obama slams Benghazi investigation as partisan.
air traffic time lapse

Can Cell Phone Metadata Hurt Your Privacy and Save America?

When Stone Librande took breaks from playtesting the new SimCity, he noticed something mesmerizing. Pausing from the construction frenzy that defines the rest of the game, SimCity’s lead designer discovered that his citizens’ schedules often created beautiful, shifting patterns of motion.
afghan

NATO’s Plan for Afghanistan Post-2014: A ‘Stable Instability’

U.S., allies are talking about commitments through 2018 and beyond, says top commander.
Jennifer Cox

5 Staffers to Watch Among House Freshmen

Running an office of a freshman member of Congress is never easy, but certain lawmakers and their top aides have especially unique challenges. Meet the chiefs of staffs of five House members whose election to Congress is somehow notable or newsworthy.
Jay Carney on IRS and Benghazi

What Jay Carney Could Have Said About Benghazi and Those IRS Probes

It is never a good week for a president when twice in seven days the political opposition is trying to liken your administration to that of Richard M. Nixon.
Hillary Clinton

Hillary Clinton's Allies Come to Her Rescue Over Benghazi

Paul Begala says Republican critics are wearing 'tin foil hats'. Ann Lewis blames the right-wing.  Welcome to the 1990s.
Chris Christie

The Coming GOP Civil War Over Climate Change

Science, storms, and demographics are starting to change minds among the rank and file. 
Energy Star appliance

Will New Oil Reserves Tempt Americans Back Into Wastefulness?

Recently discovered reserves suggest fossil fuels will last longer than we thought. But the economy won’t grow if Americans don’t use that energy efficiently. 
US Mexico Border

The Border Hawks Have Already Won

The Senate immigration bill already addresses hard-liner concerns, which means they’ll have less reason to oppose the final product. 
Barack Obama,  Laura Chinchilla

Why Mexico Will Always Play Second Fiddle

Like all presidents, Barack Obama says he wants a better relationship with his neighbors to the south. Then events get in the way. 
Obama and Clinton

Why Benghazi is a Blow to Obama and Clinton

Both parties are wrong about the scandal: It’s not Watergate and it’s not nothing.
Benghazi

Benghazi: Incompetence, But No Cover-up

The hearings deepen the tragedy, but not the scandal.
Gregory Hicks

Deputy Mission Chief Says He Was 'Stunned' by Rice's Early Depiction of Benghazi Attacks

The top deputy to the U.S. ambassador killed during the attacks last September in Benghazi, Libya, said Wednesday he was “stunned” when U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice said on talk shows days later that the incident stemmed from “demonstrations” sparked by protests over an anti-Islamic video.
Libya

The High Cost to the White House of Stonewalling on Benghazi

On Wednesday, U.S. diplomat Gregory Hicks came to Congress with headline-worthy testimony. He told House Oversight that officials in Libya were denied permission to deploy special forces to counter the attacks that killed an American ambassador. Hicks is one of three officials brought in as “whistleblowers” to challenge the administration account of its handling of the incident last year.
syria internet outage

Syria Has Switched Off the Internet For the Second Time in 6 Months

On Twitter, reports are coming in that the Syrian government has cut off Internet access to its citizens.
John Kerry in Russia

Mitt Romney Was Right: Russia Is Our Biggest Geopolitical Foe

Obama meets with South Korea’s president, but it’s Kerry’s sit-down with Putin that matters.   
Park Geun-hye

What Makes a Lady 'Iron'?

Six things to know about Park Geun-hye, South Korea's tough first female president.
Judith Rodin

The Hottest Trend for Wealthy Do-Gooders

The Rockefeller Foundation's Judith Rodin explains impact investing. But she warns: "This is not the solution to less government funding."
Benghazi

What to Expect at Wednesday’s Benghazi Hearing

The White House's accounting of what transpired in Libya is expected to be contradicted by three self-described whistle-blowers.
Keystone Pipeline

What People Close to Obama Think About the Keystone XL Pipeline

To environmentalists throughout the country, denying the Keystone XL oil pipeline would be the most important sign President Obama is committed to combating global warming.
Syria civil war

5 Charts Showing Why Americans Aren't Eager for Intervention in Syria

President Obama is acting cautiously on Syria -- and Americans aren't feeling so hawkish, either.
Islamic Center of Murfreesboro

Stopping Terrorism at the Source

Two years ago, the Obama administration launched a plan to use American Muslims as an early-detection system to spot radicals. So why hasn’t it worked?
Barack Obama

What Is a ‘Red Line’ Worth?

Syria is testing the idea that nations can’t cross the United States. What happens if other countries copy it?
Oklahoma City Bombing

Should Prosecutors Insist on Death for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev?

Cutting a deal with the alleged Boston bomber might prevent future attacks and ensure a conviction. But it could enrage victims and disappoint the public. 
Syria

Iraq and Libya Haunt Obama's Syria Policy

Weighed down by memories of Iraq and Libya, the president stands his ground.
Tim Holden, Vice President Biden

Play of the Day: Joe Biden's Plane

Fast forward to 4:25 to see the reaction after Vice President Joe Biden got home after Air Force Two broke down in Flagstaff, Arizona.
Accompanied by health care professionals, President Obama speaks about health care

Obama's Legacy: A Health Care Law That Hurts His Party

Like the Iraq war tarnished the Republican brand, ObamaCare could be a long-term political millstone for Democrats.
Barack Obama, Enrique Pena Nieto

Immigration Will Be Hot Topic During President Obama's Trip to Mexico

President heads south of the border on Thursday.
Mike Froman

What You Need to Know About Obama's Trade Pick Mike Froman

President Obama nominated one of his top national security advisers, Mike Froman, as the next U.S. trade representative on Thursday. Froman would replace Ron Kirk, who stepped down last month.
change.org

You (Yes, You!) Can Now Pay to Promote Your Change.org Petitions

"Crowd-promoted" petitions will give ordinary users even more of a voice -- so long as they've got the cash.
Obama

Obama Appears at a Loss to Define the Way Forward in Syria

The fuzzy red lines and rhetoric blur what comes next.
Tense Obama

Obama Channels Clinton’s Worst Day in Office, Raises Doubts About Relevancy

Like Clinton in April 1995, Obama struggles against forces out of his control.
President Barack Obama

Obama Is Still Fighting Bush's National Security Legacy

The president's hesitance to intervene in Syria and eagerness to close Guantanamo Bay underscore how different he is from his predecessor.
Senate Immigration

Asylum and Entry/Exit Systems Get Another Look in Congress After Boston

The impact of the bombings on the immigration debate has narrowed in on just two isolated policy arenas.
Syria

Obama's Chemical Weapons ‘Red Line’ for Syria Keeps Shifting: Former WMD Hunter

President Obama’s "red line" for U.S. intervention in Syria is actually more of a fuzzy zone whose goalposts keep shifting, said the former top WMD hunter in Iraq.
Bomb in Damascus

Doing Nothing in Syria Is Riskier Than Getting Involved

One allied ambassador: "If you continue to hesitate, the costs will be much higher when you finally act."
American dream

The American Dream, Downsized

The middle class now worries more about holding on for dear life than about climbing the ladder to riches. 
Levittown, PA

Why We’re Still in Love With the American Dream

Even if middle-class ambitions are illusory, it sure helps to believe in them.
Alan S. Blinder, left, and Glenn Hubbard.

Two Completely Different Ways to Deal With the Upward-Mobility Crisis

Top economists from the Clinton and Bush administrations debate how to revive the economy to keep people from getting stuck. 
Syria

Obama Is Looking for Reasons to Delay Response to Syria's Chemical-Weapons Use

The White House is not eager to engage militarily in the Middle East again.
Dianne Feinstein

Senators Say Chemical Weapons in Syria Cross Obama's 'Red Line'

Senior senators -- now including Senate Intelligence Chairman Dianne Feinstein -- say Syria has used chemical weapons on its citizens, crossing the 'red line' President Obama put down as trigger for U.S. intervention.  

What Congress Learned Thursday About the Accused Boston Bombers

The FBI was not just concerned with Tamerlan Tsarnaev in 2011 but other family members too, according to information that U.S. security officials gave some senators during a closed-door briefing on Thursday. Here is what the senators learned, according to one lawmaker, who would not speak on the record.
Oil refineries

What If Oil Lasts Forever?

New technology and a little-known energy source suggest that fossil fuels may not be finite. This would be a miracle—and a nightmare.
Bush family

When Presidents Gather, Let the Healing Begin

Obama joins the 4 living ex-presidents today at the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum.
Solar panels

California's Dream to Be the Saudi Arabia of Solar Is Dead

Three years ago California regulators in quick succession approved nine multibillion-dollar solar thermal power plants. They were to be built in the desert and would generate 4,142 megawatts (MW) of carbon-free electricity. The state, it was said, was on its way to becoming the Saudi Arabia of solar. 
Tamerlan Tsarnaev

Was the Ball Dropped in the Tsarnaev Questioning?

To paraphrase Boston Red Sox slugger David Ortiz: This is our @#$&%! Constitution.
West, Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion

How Will Texas Explosion Impact Chemical Security Laws?

Industry officials 'appalled' by those who say the incident suggests a need for tougher chemical security laws.
stuxnet flame

Governments' Favorite Cyberweapons Don't Look Anything Like Stuxnet

Think more along the lines of "criminal enterprise."
Sen. Bob Corker

Bob Corker Charts Leadership Course

Sen. Bob Corker's independent voice on high-profile issues and scholarly devotion to studying policies he is interested in have made GOP leaders take notice of him and want to keep the Tennessee Republican close at hand — both to capitalize on his expertise and to watch his moves.
Somalian immigrant becomes a U.S. citizen

How Immigration Opponents Are Trying to Use the Boston Bombings to Delay Reform

Democrats, Gang of Eight members, are playing offense to prevent delays.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev

How Tamerlan Tsarnaev Might Have Been Stopped

Did the Obama administration fail to follow up on Muslim community outreach programs?
Fracking

Why the U.S. Should Give Its Fracking Technology to China

But don’t count on much popular support for U.S. help.
George W. Bush at National Hispanic Prayer Breakfast

George W. Bush's Reluctant Re-Emergence on the Political Scene

The ex-president is preparing to dedicate his library this week, but these days he's more interested in painting, golfing, and enjoying a life away from politics.
Capitol

The End of Government as We Know It

Whatever happened to Johnny Whitmire? The answer is tied to a new book on digital-age innovations to improve government.
Boston Bombing Sustpects

Boston Suspect's Legal Status A Test Case

Nearly 12 years after 9/11, authorities still have not figured out how to try terrorists.
Statue of Liberty

How Refugees Come Into the United States

The United States has a fairly generous policy in admitting foreigners to the country as refugees, harkening back to the 1950s when several laws were passed to provide for people who escaped communist regimes.

What is the Islamic Jihad Union?

The FBI is reportedly investigating whether Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the brothers of Chechen descent suspected of carrying out the deadly Boston Marathon bombings on Monday, have links with the Islamic Jihad Union rooted in central Asia. Chechnya, which has a predominantly Muslim population and fought two wars attempting to split from Russia, has attracted Islamic extremist groups. Where does the IJU fit in?
Boston suspect

The Psychology of a Boston Marathon Terrorist: 10 Questions for a Retired Marine

“Terrorists are not psychotics or mentally disordered,” retired Marine Corps Reserve officer and criminal behavior expert G.I. Wilson said.
Boston bomber search

Boston Lockdown Reflected WMD Response Plans

The Friday lockdown of Boston and surrounding communities was a highly rare response in the United States to a terrorism threat, reminiscent of security plans typically contemplated in response to attacks involving weapons of mass destruction.
Boston house crime scene

Were Boston Bombers Lone Wolves or Long Arm of al-Qaida?

What pushed two seemingly normal young immigrants past the tipping point of youthful anger and into wanton terrorism?
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in ambulance

Why Law Enforcement Worked So Hard to Take Boston Bombings Suspect No. 2 Alive

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev can help authorities clear up many mysteries -- now that he's in custody and alive.
Grozny

What You Need to Know About Chechnya

With the troubled Russian region in the news, here's a primer on a violent region that has long struggled against Russian hegemony.
Boston Marathon bomings

The Boston Bombs Remind Us That We’re Not Safe

Just because law enforcement officials learned how to track terrorists doesn’t mean we’re not at risk. 
Barack Obama, John McCain

Why John McCain Is Barack Obama’s New Best Friend

The two have their eyes on history as they transcend years of friction. The upshot could be good for the country.
 Lake Borgne Barrier

Let’s Not Talk About Climate Change

Louisiana’s two senators worry more about oil than the rising water level.
Gregory Jaczko

Reid Appoints Besieged Regulator to Nuclear-Weapons Panel

Late in the evening on Wednesday, one of the busiest and most unnerving times Washington has seen in a long while, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid quietly appointed Gregory Jaczko, a controversial former nuclear-energy regulator to a key but obscure panel.
Boston aftermath

In Boston as in Baghdad, Tragedy Cannot Be Ignored

Friends and colleagues ask why, and how, this was possible. Perhaps this is the way the world already is, and has been for some time.
Obama

After the Gun-Control Defeat, How to Counter the Passion Gap

There was certainly no lack of angst or passion among gun-control advocates in the wake of their devastating defeat in the Senate. The problem, as President Obama correctly diagnosed, will be to summon that level of intensity on Election Days of the future–and stoke some of it among the massive numbers of rank-and-file voters who agree with them.
Gas prices

Companies Battle, With Gas Prices at Stake

The lobbying fight over how much natural gas the United States should export has picked up considerably this year.
Barack Obama_Ron Kirk_Michael Froman

U.S. and E.U. Will Gnaw on Trade Agreement

Late last month, the White House notified Congress that it planned to begin negotiating a comprehensive trade and investment agreement with the European Union. Talks on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership are expected to begin in June—and that’s when the House Energy and Commerce Committee will step up its involvement.
Cars at GM Assembly Plant

Manufacturers, Ag Interests Will Lobby for Trade Deal

The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership won’t be focused on already-low tariffs between the U.S. and European Union. It will be focused on so-called “behind the border” measures, like regulation—and that means there will be plenty of stakeholders with strong opinions.
418Keystone-protest_AP

Keystone XL Pipeline Channels Partisan Attacks

Congressional Republicans see the Keystone XL pipeline as the perfect lightning rod through which to channel attacks on President Obama’s energy policy.
Person uses computer screen

Internet Regulation Tests Bipartisanship

  When China and Russia last year proposed building a set of rules into a long-standing global-telecommunications regime, critics decried the idea as a way for governments to spy on their citizens. Both chambers of Congress unanimously passed a nonbinding resolution opposing it. Dozens of countries, including the United States, refused to sign the final international treaty.

Now, as part of a broader effort to address Internet regulation, the House Energy and Commerce Committee wants to institutionalize Washington’s position in the talks as official policy. It’s one of those rare moments at which Democrats and Republicans find themselves in alliance based on their respective beliefs, rather than out of political expediency. Democrats see the issue as mainly about civil liberties; for the GOP, it’s about blocking government overreach. When China and Russia last year proposed building a set of rules into a long-standing global-telecommunications regime, critics decried the idea as a way for governments to spy on their citizens. Both chambers of Congress unanimously passed a nonbinding resolution opposing it. Now, as part of a broader effort to address Internet regulation, the House Energy and Commerce Committee wants to institutionalize Washington’s position in the talks as official policy.   

capitol

How Can Congress Help Manufacturers?

The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade kicked off 2013 with a focus on its middle name. It’s fitting. After all, Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., who chairs the committee, changed the subcommittee name when he took over in 2011 to include an explicit reference to manufacturing.
Fred Upton

5 Things Immigration, Gay Marriage, and Gun Control Have That Climate Change Doesn't

The amount of change happening in Washington is impressive, but this kind of sea change can’t happen right now with energy and climate policy. Here's why.

Bad News: There’s Less Being Spent on Green Energy. Good News: There’s More Green Energy

It’ll come as no surprise that global investment in clean energy fell last year. Quarterly numbers had foreshadowed that investors and governments were retreating from big green bets. But here’s the twist: Though investment dropped  11%, to $269 billion in 2012, renewable energy installations grew by a record 88,000 megawatts (MW), according to a report released today by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
Dirty Bomb Drill, Seattle

Despite WMD Fears, Terrorists Are Focused on Conventional Attacks

WASHINGTON – The United States has spent billions of dollars to prevent terrorists from obtaining a weapon of mass destruction even as this week’s bombings in Boston further show that a nuclear weapon or lethal bioagent is not necessary for causing significant harm.
Boston aftermath

Plenty of Clues, Few Leads on Motive of Boston Marathon Bomber

The bombings could be the work of al-Qaida affiliates, domestic right-wing extremists, or lone-wolf terrorists inspired by an indeterminate ideology.
President Barack Obama, Boston Marathon

For Obama, a Rising Tide of Rage

The Boston bombing is the first since 9/11, but only because of effective interdiction.
Martin Richard

Why Boston Bombings Might Be Scarier Than 9/11

Killing Americans at play resonates differently than attacks on economic and military targets.
Boston marathon explosion

In Boston, a Rare Tragedy

Because of the FBI's police work, attacks like Monday's Boston Marathon bombing have been uncommon since 9/11.

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.
Kim Jong-Un

Why Is North Korea Acting Out?

Two members of Congress discuss John Kerry's trip to the Korean Peninsula, what China can do to help, and the Kim Jong Un relatives who seem to be guiding the rogue leader.
Kim Jong Un

North Korea: The Family Business Is Failing

Kim Jong Un is a third-generation heir to a business his grandpa started. Like most heirs, he may be driving the firm into the ground.
Yamaha Motor Corporation USA's RMax

What Drones Can Do for You

Prescription drugs, fast-food delivery, disaster relief—unmanned aerial vehicles can be handy in all sorts of ways. 

Poll: Is It Politically Advantageous for Obama to Cut Medicare and Social Security?

Insiders from both parties say it is, though more Democrats are skeptical. 
Korea soldiers

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

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Sen. Murray

Sen. Murray Keeps Hanford Nuclear Site Safe From Budget Cuts

She may not attend Tuesday’s confirmation hearing for Ernest Moniz, President Obama’s nominee for Energy secretary, but you can bet Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., will make sure the department has all the money it needs to keep the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in her home state running safely.
Smoke stacks from the NRG power plant

U.S. Carbon Emissions Hit Lowest Point Since 1994

Carbon emissions have now declined every year since 2007 save for 2010.
Drone

Vetting the Kill List

Civil libertarians want a judge to oversee the administration’s targeted-killing program. It sounds appealing, but it could do more harm than good.
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.
Shush

When Corporations Are Hacked, Who Should Know?

Companies hurt themselves—but help the rest of us—when they disclose cyberattacks. 
Denis McDonough

The Man Who Could Put Climate Change on the Agenda

White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough has a record against global warming—and the president's ear.

Poll: Even Democrats Say the NRA Is Beating the White House on the Gun Debate

Insiders from both parties see Obama struggling on the issue.
Mike Rogers

No Shortage of Headlines for House Intelligence Chair

The Michigan Republican must toe a fine line between his role as a representative and communicator for the public and his advisory role on sensitive national-security issues.
Bush

Play of the Day: Remember George W. Bush?

Fast forward to 3:40 to see Letterman challenge Kim on camera.
Gas prices

Fuel Exports Are Probably Driving Up the Price of Gas. But That's Not a Bad Thing.

When something scarce is sold to the highest bidder anywhere in the world, prices inevitably go up. But does that mean it's time to clamp down on oil exports? Not necessarily.
iPhone

Could Your Smartphone Lower Your Electricity Bill?

Smart-grid technology aims to prevent blackouts, cut costs, and maybe even change the way you use energy.
Bob Corker

Sequestration Hurting Your Budget? It Didn't Stop a 13-Day Overseas Congressional Trip

Roughly 16 Senate Finance Committee staffers are wrapping up a whirlwind 13-day trip to Vietnam, Australia, and New Zealand, even as federal agencies have been forced by sequestration to limit employee travel and participation in out-of-town conferences.
Mike Rogers

Rogers on North Korea: 'This Is Serious'

The U.S. needs to be aggressive in its response to rhetoric coming from North Korea, which threatened to attack South Korea and the United States as its faces tougher international sanctions following its latest nuclear test, said House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers.
Lizard

13% of Americans Believe President Obama Is the Antichrist

New polling shows just how many conspiracy theorists lurk among us—and what they believe.
North Korea, Rally in Pyongyang

How the U.S. Could Cool Tensions With North Korea

It's not too late. Regional experts say that the United States should seek to engage the DPRK.
Arkansas spill

Why Public Opinion Could Still Stop Keystone

In China, Europe and the U.S., local groups are furious, respectively, over air pollution, shale drilling and oil pipelines. This makes it a dangerous time for oil companies and some governments: A riled public is often the greatest driver of big policy shifts.
European Central Bank—Euro Currency Symbol

Why the Euro is Doomed

It's the gold standard minus the shiny rocks.
CBO spending

There’s Nothing to Fear But the Debt Itself

Quick, which segment of federal spending will grow fastest from 2015 through 2021? Did you guess Medicare? If you did, you’d be wrong.
Cypriots Cue for Laiki ATM on March 21, 2013

Cyprus's Steps to Stop Bank Runs Are Risky, but the Eurozone Is Likely to Survive Them

On Wednesday, Cyprus will announce the eurozone’s first-ever capital controls. 
Obama Jordan

Public Show Over, Obama Turns to Private Diplomacy in Middle East

President Obama’s highly visible trip to the Middle East was seen as a timely and badly needed shot of public diplomacy in the world’s most volatile region. But what happens behind the scenes and out of public view now that the president is back in the United States may be even more critical to the decades-old American quest to forge stable peace between Israel and her neighbors.
Pakistan missile test

Pakistan's 'Strategic Pivot' May Not Include Reforming Its Nuclear Policies

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- The Pakistani military and the nation’s recently dissolved government have been touting a “strategic pivot” toward increased cooperation and transparency with regional neighbors, but it is far from clear whether these major shifts would affect Islamabad’s nuclear weapons. 
Cyprus

How Cyprus, A Two-Bit Country, Could Change the World

Tiny Cyprus poses an existential threat to the eurozone, proof that little countries can occasionally have big consequences.
Cyprus

What Could Happen If Cyprus Fails

Things are looking increasingly dicey for the Mediterranean nation. Here's what could happen if the country fails.
first days iraq

A Decade of War: What the U.S. Military Learned

The 10-year anniversary of the Iraq war has rightfully prompted extended soul-searching about a conflict that cost the nation dearly in blood, treasure, and international prestige. 
stealth combat drone demonstrator Neuron

When the Whole World Has Drones

The precedents the U.S. has set for robotic warfare may have fearsome consequences as other countries catch up.
Obama

The Jerusalem Gambit

Obama went in with two messages: "We're with you" and "Get real." He may have just pulled it off.
Hillary Clinton in Malawi

Hillary Clinton's Global Feminist Legacy

Her tenure at State may have lacked a bold diplomatic achievement. But posterity will remember her efforts to help women.
Iraq invasion

My Iraq War

Fear, death, and even elegy—one witness’s recollections from a decade of war.
Cover321

Inside the Cover: When the Whole World Has Drones

In this week's National Journal cover story, Kristin Roberts discusses the dangerous global precedent the United States is setting with its drone policy. In this video, go inside the story with the author herself.
Barack Obama

Obama to Israelis: Don’t Listen to Bibi

The president goes over Netanyahu’s head abroad, just as he has with the GOP at home.
Predator Drone

How Many Americans Are on the Kill List? Zero.

No Americans are currently marked for death on the U.S. government’s terrorist strike list, according to the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee.  
Syria

Behind Obama’s Big 'No!' on Syria

Despite terrible bloodshed and the risks of a wider war, the president is barely moving. Here’s why.
Obama in Israel

Empty-Handed Tourist?

JERUSALEM — President Obama arrives in Israel less burdened than any previous U.S. president by the diplomatic malignancy known as the peace process.
McCain and Graham

On the Anniversary of War in Iraq, Who's Rooting for War in Syria?

McCain, Graham are pushing president Obama down a bloody slope.
first days iraq

The First Days of the Iraq War, as Seen Through National Journal Correspondents

Journalists were getting a sense of how this invasion would (for better or worse) begin to define the decade and the Bush presidency.
Obama and Netanyahu

Obama and Netanyahu: It's Complicated

A look at some of the ups and mostly downs of the relationship between President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Netanyahu and Obama

Personal Frictions Loom Over Obama's Trip to Israel

It is widely believed that this American president and Israeli prime minister simply don’t like each other. And the personal always has a bearing on the policy.
Irish Deputy PM Eamon Gilmore in 2012

Ireland's Deputy PM: 'You Cannot Get an Economy to Recover Just by Doing Austerity Measures or Budget Discipline.'

A Q&A with Ireland’s Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore.
Carter in Israel

Past U.S. Presidential Visits to Israel

National Security Insiders: Obama Can't Bring Israelis and Palestinians to Negotiating Table

President Obama is headed to the Holy Land this week, but 72 percent of National Journal's National Security Insiders are not optimistic he can bring Israelis and Palestinians to the negotiating table anytime soon.
Obama in Israel

Mapping Out Obama's Middle East Trip

From the museum that holds the Dead Sea Scrolls to the ancient city of Petra, here are the stops President Obama will visit on his Middle East trip.
U.S. servicemen queue to board a bus

The Legacy of the Iraq War? Anti-War Democrats and Rand Paul

The most enduring impact of the invasion is a neo-isolationism that will be with us for a long time.
Hillary Rodham Clinton

Why Hillary Clinton Now Supports Gay Marriage

Former first lady wanted to make her views known before the Supreme Court rules on the subject.
A Woman Walks Past the Bank of Ireland in 2012

Are There Lessons For the United States in Ireland's Post-Crash Economy?

When Ireland’s Prime Minister Enda Kenny meets with President Obama in Washington next week, they should find plenty to talk about.
Paul Ryan at CPAC

Previewing the Sunday Shows

This week's Sunday shows will focus on the rival budgets put forth by leaders from both parties. House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., will be on Face the Nation, while House Speaker John Boehner will be doing a one-on-one interview with ABC's Martha Raddatz on This Week. The Sunday sh...
Wells Fargo

Report: Threat of Foreclosure on Calif. Homes Disproportionately Affects Minorities

Leading mortgage lender Wells Fargo is urged to be more transparent about relief reporting and to grant more principal reductions.
Cover 315

VIDEO: Inside This Week's Cover Story

In this week's National Journal cover story, Michael Hirsh discusses how the United States could contain Islamism in the Middle East. In this video, go inside the story with the author himself.
Arab Spring in Egypt

The Next Arab Challenge

Two years after the Middle East revolts, the Obama administration has mounted no real effort to understand the dynamics of political Islam.
Keystone XL Pipeline

Why the White House Loves Natural Gas

While green groups protest outside, the president huddles inside the White House with oil and gas executives.
Rand Paul

Why John McCain Doesn't Matter Anymore

The GOP is now more open to isolationists and deficit hawks like Rand Paul than to traditional pro-defense Republicans.

Republican Insiders Doubt a Grand Bargain Will Be Reached

But then again, so do Democrats. Plus: Neither party expects to gain much much politically from the upcoming budget process.
Fracking

How Fracking Could Transform Transportation

What to do with the natural gas glut produced by the U.S. fracking boom? One answer: Planes, trains and automobiles.
James Clapper

America's 3 Biggest Cybersecurity Vunerabilities

The Obama administration has put cyberattacks at the top of the list of global threats, and concerns are rising about at-risk infrastructure.
Joe Lieberman

Former Sen. Joe Lieberman Back in Washington for ‘Internationalism’ Project

In recent years, a number of prominent lawmakers have either renounced their party or been excommunicated.
800-mile Trans-Alaska pipeline

3 Energy Pipelines That Could Shake Up Geopolitics

Three of the most volatile parts of the Middle East—Iran, Iraq and Israel—are the scene of oil and gas initiatives that could shake up geopolitics there and beyond. The efforts center on three energy pipelines, at least two of which seem likely to be built. 

National Security Insiders: It's Possible for Congress to Oversee Drone Program

Plus: A narrow majority says Chuck Hagel will be a good Defense secretary.
Jeffrey Energy Center coal power plant

Climate Change: Even Worse Than We Feared

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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.  
Pakistan missile test

Why Almost Nobody Likes News About Pakistani Nuclear Security

There’s an old adage about blaming the messenger who bears bad news – a practice often applied to journalists -- but when it comes to disturbing media revelations about the potential theft or unauthorized use of Pakistani nuclear weapons, fingers point in all directions.
MANDA BAY

Outsourcing the Fight Against Terrorism

The United States is using local soldiers to fight al-Qaida allies in East Africa.
Sen. Patty Murray

Why the Senate Democrats' Budget Will Be Vague

The fewer specifics they offer, the less political ammunition there will be for the GOP to use against them.
China's smog problem

How Dirty, Polluted China Takes Climate Change More Seriously Than We Do

People may not be able to breathe in Beijing, but its politicians are doing more than U.S. lawmakers are to slow global warming.
Netanyahu

How Bibi Beat Barack

Obama desperately wants peace in Israel. Too bad there’s nothing he can do to force it.
Maxican Standoff

The Real Budget Battle

In Washington, all financial skirmishes lead to the same place.
Rand Paul

What Was Behind Rand Paul's Filibuster of John Brennan

Angry about the Obama administration’s claim it may kill U.S. citizens on American soil in certain situations, the Kentucky Republican took to the Senate floor for hours to hold up the nomination of John Brennan to become CIA director.
First Solar Manufacturing Plant

America's $1.6 Billion Trade Surplus With China (Yes, China)

For those who fret over the US trade deficits and that China’s dominance of the solar industry, here’s some good news: The US is in the black with a massive $1.6 billion green technology trade surplus with China.
Mark Toohey

The Math Behind the Automatic Budget Cuts

Under a deal to raise the legal limit on the government's borrowing in August 2011, lawmakers agreed to roughly $1 trillion in spending cuts over the next decade and set up a process to find at least $1.2 trillion in further savings. Under that deal, known as the Budget Control Act, a "supercommittee" was established to try to hammer out an agreement on long-term budget savings. The committee folded in 2011 without an agreement on deficit reduction, setting the stage for automatic cuts to mostly discretionary programs totaling $1.2 trillion to kick in starting in 2013. The cuts, known as sequestration, apply to both domestic programs and defense spending.
Afghanistan

How Obama Fumbled Afghanistan

How Obama stymied his own special envoy, Richard Holbrooke, and fumbled the administration's Afghanistan policy.
Obama Cabinet Meeting

The 6 Species of Secretaries That Will Define Obama's Term

The president has made most of his top administration picks. Here's how they all fit into his second term.
Gina McCarthy

Republicans Take Aim at Obama’s EPA Nominee

President Obama’s nomination Monday of Gina McCarthy to lead the Environmental Protection Agency sets up the next high-profile clash between the White House and congressional Republicans over the incendiary issue of climate change.
Rodman

Why We Should Take Dennis Rodman More Seriously

If the only way to begin the drama between the U.S. and North Korea is with a clown show, then a weird, unemployed basketball star surely works as well as anyone else.
Tobacco Workers

Opinion: Immigrants Did Not Take Your Job

Writes Alex Nowrasteh of the Cato Institute: It's time  conservatives embrace a reform measure, for political and economic reasons.
Uranium Conversion Facility

If Nixon Can Go to China ...

Why can't Obama go to Iran? Because in Washington, good ideas can often be toxic.
Iraq

The Iraq War, Nearly 10 Years Later

This month marks ten years since the U.S. launched its invasion of Iraq. Why that's important, and what you should think about now.
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.
Border

Furloughs Come to Main Street

Automatic spending cuts will affect federal workers wherever they live—even thousands of miles from Washington.
Sen. Rand Paul

Rand Paul: 'We Shouldn't Be Crisscrossing the Skies With Drones'

The senator is concerned about the administration's use of drones for surveillance—and targeted killing—in the U.S.

Which Party Really Owns the Sequester?

Neither party's Insiders think they’ll face strong pressure to undo it. And Democrats are more bullish than Republicans on the tea party's role as political asset.
Chuck Hagel

The Rehabilitation of Chuck Hagel

Looking beyond the sequester, the new Pentagon chief plans a fast trip, and a focus on veterans.
Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

Now There's Proof: Washington May Have Violated Its Own Iran Sanctions

  The U.S. government learned this week that it might have run afoul of its own sanctions on Iran -- an awkward development, given that the economic penalties are at the heart of international efforts to pressure Tehran over its nuclear program. But here's why it might not be as embarrassing as it sounds:    
Rand Paul

Rand Paul Pledges to Hold Up Brennan’s CIA Nomination Until He Gets Answers on Drones

Sen. Rand Paul sees it as a very simple question, which could easily be answered with a “yes” or a “no”: Can the Obama administration authorize the use of lethal force—such as a drone strike—against a U.S. citizen on American soil?
Hostage

'Argo' Is Great, but 52 Former American Hostages Are Still Looking for Justice

33 years ago, 52 Americans went through hell in Iran. Now they and their survivors are pushing Congress for action. 

Insiders: Yes, Sequestration Will Really Hurt U.S. National Security

Insiders also support arming Syria's rebels.
Obama and Abe

Mr. Abe Goes to Washington: Japan PM Talks Autos, North Korea With President Obama

The five things you need to know about their meeting on Friday
Drone

What’s in the Secret Drone Memos

Sources say the Obama administration won’t release them because of classified agreements with foreign governments.
Customs and Border Protection's Predator B

The Backlash Against Drones

Flying robots can improve policing and assist in search-and-rescues. But they're also good at domestic spying, and that raises privacy concerns.

Republicans Say They Have Almost Even Odds of Taking Control of the Senate

How likely are the Democrats to take over the House in 2014? Political Insiders weigh in.
michael-hayden-pinch

One if By Land, Two if By Sea, 10101101 if By Cyberspace

How the world decides to use the battlefield of cyberspace will go a long way toward determining how disruptive—or destructive—war in this domain will become.
US-Mexico Border

The Hidden Obstacles to Legal Immigration Reform

If you think questions of legalization, border security, and fundamental party politics are the biggest obstacles to immigration reform, think again.
AFghan Woman Wearing Burqa With Child

Fewer Afghan Civilians Are Being Killed, But Drones Are on the Rise

The U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan released an annual report on the protection of civilians on Tuesday showing that while the number of civilian deaths in the conflict has decreased in the last year, there has been an increase in the number of deaths from drone strikes — a heated issue that has received greater attention in recent weeks, following CIA director nominee John Brennan's confirmation hearing.
Hagel

Chuck Hagel, Strategic Thinker

It looks awfully likely that Chuck Hagel will squeak through confirmation as President Obama's Defense secretary. But it is also likely that he'll enter the Pentagon a damaged figure, a nominee tainted by the lingering impression that he is not ready to handle the vast complexities of a defense budget slated for slashing.

Previewing the Sunday Shows

White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough will make his first round of Sunday Show visits since being named chief of staff. He'll appear on Meet the Press, Face the Nation and This Week to discuss the White House's upcoming policy goals. This Week also hosts Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., for an exclusi...
Keystone Pipeline

Are Environmentalists Getting It Wrong on the Keystone XL Pipeline?

Focusing on how it would contribute to emissions overshadows the large risk of spills -- and diverts attention from more effective ways to cut down on carbon.
Reid

6 (More) Reasons Why Americans Hate Washington

In a moment of eloquence almost unprecedented in the malapropistic career of Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader said Thursday, “Just when you thought things couldn’t get worse, it gets worse.”
mobile soccer brazil

You Probably Have the Seventh Most Expensive Data Plan on Earth

Every time my mobile phone bill arrives, it's impossible not to think I've been robbed. There’s no way a data plan should cost as much as it does. And I’m on a budget carrier! But it could be worse.
Saudi Arabian Flag

How Obama Wants the U.S. to Be More Like Saudi Arabia

You’ve heard that the U.S. could, in the coming decade, produce more oil than Saudi Arabia. In his State of the Union speech, Barack Obama asked the country to act more like big oil producers such as the Saudis and Norwegians by skimming off some of that oil money and investing it in programs to bolster prosperity when the oil is gone. To wit,
anti-nuclear power rally

Why Japan Can't Quit Nuclear Power

Since the Fukushima meltdown, the country has tried to reduce its reliance on nuclear reactors. But with nearly a third of its energy needs powered by the atom, change is difficult.
waterboarding

Is Obama's Drone Policy Really Morally Superior to Torture?

Bush was condemned for waterboarding. But this administration kills from above.

GOP Insiders Give Obama's State of the Union a Solid C

Democratic Insiders give Sen. Marco Rubio's response Tuesday night the same grade.
Syria

Water and the Slippery Slope to Conflict in the Middle East

Experts are drawing a connection between an important natural resource and tensions in the Middle East. In this case, it's water, not oil.
Hagel

Hagel Not Withdrawing, Despite Renewed GOP Opposition

Hagel spokesman acknowledges he could be defeated, but insists the former senator is not withdrawing. 
Obama Gives the 2013 State of the Union

Obama's Isolationist Turn

The president spent most of his time avoiding foreign policy during his State of the Union address.
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