Paul Richter
writer
Paul Richter covered the State Department and foreign policy for the Los Angeles Times out of its Washington, D.C., bureau. He previously covered the Pentagon, the White House and, from New York City, the financial industry. He was raised in Minneapolis and Washington, D.C., and graduated from Clark University. He left The Times in 2015.
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The presumed Republican presidential nominee has taken diverse positions over his 25 years in Congress, from pragmatic to hawkish. Supporters wonder what he’d do in office.
Pair of attacks are one-two punch to an administration that has been relentlessly upbeat about its ability to tame the region
War: U.S. appears poised to achieve its goals, but possible amnesty deal underscores the limits.
Experts: Elite forces unduly risked on targets of limited value
After more than three weeks of inconclusive bombing in Afghanistan, the Bush administration is facing the same question that reverberated through the last two major U.S. military engagements: Can air power do the job by itself?
After more than three weeks of inconclusive bombing in Afghanistan, the Bush administration is facing the same question that reverberated through the last two major U.S. military engagements: Can air power do the job by itself?
In 1945, the armed forces needed 100 B-19s and an average of 650 bombs to reliably destroy a single ground target.
In a distant echo of Vietnam, some leading conservatives are quietly questioning whether the Bush administration is allowing its political goals in Afghanistan to excessively shape military strategy.
When the Reagan administration made a controversial decision to send shoulder-fired missiles to Afghan rebels in 1986, critics warned the move could come back to haunt the United States.
President Obama publicly vowed to “redouble†U.S. efforts against Islamic State hours after the terrorist massacres in Paris, but officials offered few details as to what he meant.