
Monday night’s foreign policy debate may be the capstone of Mitt Romney’s rise in the polls and, if he handles it like the first two, it could be Obama’s Waterloo. And what should Romney do? Very simply, he needs only
by Alfred S. Regnery21 Oct 2012, 9:14 AM PST0

The terrorist attack in Benghazi was never politicized. Not by Mitt Romney, not by President Obama, and not by the press. The terrorist attack in Benghazi is – by its very nature – political, as are all foreign policy failures
by Alfred S. Regnery17 Oct 2012, 4:53 PM PST0

Vice President Joe Biden laughed mirthlessly during the debate as Republican vice presidential candidate Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) coolly unbraided the Obama Administration’s foreign policy–but the joke is probably on Joe. His chipper performance last night may have boosted the
by Alfred S. Regnery12 Oct 2012, 3:08 PM PST0

Just two weeks after the US Embassy in Egypt was ransacked by terrorists and a band of Egyptian thugs, President Obama announced that he would provide Egypt’s new Muslim Brotherhood government with an emergency infusion of $450 million in US
by Alfred S. Regnery3 Oct 2012, 4:36 PM PST0

At a closed-door meeting last week attended by leaders of the conservative movement, discussions centered around development of a “no excuses” list of big-ticket legislative issues to be addressed in the 113th Congress. Win or lose, the consensus among both
by Alfred S. Regnery29 Sep 2012, 3:34 AM PST0

Not long ago I was talking to an old friend who has spent his life in behind-the-scenes electoral politics in Chicago (and as a Republican has never even tried to get elected to anything). He got to know Barack Obama
by Alfred S. Regnery20 Sep 2012, 2:52 PM PST0

As the Romney-Ryan ticket inches ahead in the polls, one of the little noticed implications just may be the avoidance, at least for a time, of World War III. World War III? How does that work? According to high-level U.S.
by Alfred S. Regnery7 Sep 2012, 4:49 PM PST0