Zalmay Khalilzad, the Trump administration's special representative to the Afghan peace process, brokered a so-called peace deal with...
Richard Grenell, a Republican operative known for his polarizing views and controversial work for foreign governments, is an outspoken Trump...
Donald Trump's second attorney general, William Barr has been an extreme Trump loyalist, going to extraordinary lengths to shield...
While the UN is seeking a step away from foreign interference in Libya, focusing on transforming the unofficial ceasefire into
There is no significant anti-war movement in America because there’s no war to protest
Neoconservatives and like-minded hawks have sought to burnish their public images in the wake of President Trump’s bumbling
What if this administration’s chaos-sowing proves an end in itself, one that coheres with the millenarian fantasies of
The 1992 draft Defense Planning Guidance (DPG), crafted by then-Defense Department staffers I. Lewis Libby, Paul Wolfowitz, and Zalmay Khalilzad, is widely regarded as an early formulation of the...
Founded shortly after 9/11, the now defunct Americans for Victory over Terrorism championed “victory” in the “war on terrorism,” in part by promoting “research about Islam and Islamism” and “attacking those who would blame America first.”
Founded by AIPAC heavyweight Morris Amitay, the Coalition for Democracy in Iran is a defunct pressure group that helped push anti-Iran resolutions through Congress.
The Committee for the Liberation of Iraq was a short-lived yet influential group that strongly promoted the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
The Committee on the Present Danger (CPD) is a neoconservative Cold War-era pressure group the was re-launched in 2004 to focus on the “war on terror.”
Affiliated with Frank Gaffney’s Center for Security Policy, Family Security Matters offered hawkish, anti-Islamic rhetoric under the guise of “empowering” Americans and protecting families.
The Foreign Policy Initiative was a Washington D.C.-based advocacy group founded in 2009 by several high-profile neoconservative figures to promote militaristic U.S. policies in the Middle East.
The defunct Project for the New American Century, a key promoter of the decision to invade Iraq, was at one time regarded as the foremost purveyor of neoconservative thinking on foreign affairs.
The Standard was the flagship journal of neoconservative opinion for more than two decades, before shuddering in 2018.