In asking for $105 billion in urgent foreign aid, with Ukraine’s share to be more than four times that of beleaguered Israel, President Biden has the pie sliced all wrong, argues columnist Bill Moloney.
Geopolitics could be in for a shakeup if diplomatic mediation in the Middle East has now begun to originate not in Washington but in Beijing, observes columnist Bill Moloney.
In the growing closeness between China and Russia, leaving America as the odd man out, columnist Bill Moloney sees ominous parallels to the destabilizing alliance shifts that occurred just ahead of World Wars I and II.
As America’s proxy war against Russia in Ukraine enters its second year, columnist Bill Moloney wonders if it will take another national humiliation on the scale of Vietnam to remind us what “national interest” really means.
Can the US, as we make proxy war on Russia in Ukraine, succeed where Napoleon failed in 1812 and Hitler in 1941? Columnist Bill Moloney has his doubts.