List of U.S. Government articles
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 From Outcasts to Kingmakers
The improbable tale of how the Houthis seized control of Yemen's revolution.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Shake It Up
Obama needs new blood in the White House.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Advice for the Ice King
5 recommendations for America's new Arctic ambassador.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 ‘No One’s Really in Charge’ in Hostage Negotiations
Insiders and administration officials tell Foreign Policy that efforts to free Americans held by the Islamic State are uncoordinated, inconsistent, and crippled by bureaucratic infighting.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 U.S. Options Limited by Lack of Drones Over Syria
With hardware tied up in Afghanistan, the U.S. military is forced to make tough choices.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Washington’s Secret Back-Channel Talks With Syria’s Kurdish ‘Terrorists’
As the town of Kobani appears poised to fall to the Islamic State, exclusive, previously classified, State Department cables show how U.S. officials tried to both engage and undermine its Kurdish defenders.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Every Time She Thinks She’s Out, They Pull Her Back In
Leon Panetta's new book is yanking Hillary Clinton into a debate she doesn't want to have: whether Obama lost Iraq.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Competence Not Required
Julia Pierson’s ouster is the exception that proves the rule: In Washington it is nearly impossible to get fired.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Leave It to Hillary
The president arrives at a turning point, but it's unclear whether it means a new Obama or a punt to tomorrow.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Too Many, Too Late
Syria’s beleaguered moderate rebels have been begging for U.S. airstrikes for years. Now that the bombs are falling, they wish Washington would send its planes back home.
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fp-placeholder-social-share-3-2 Ties That Bind
From Afghanistan to Mali to Iraq, training and equipping other countries' militaries has a terrible track record. Why would we want to make it a permanent part of U.S. strategy?