Lt. Col. Douglas A. Pryer reviews Nancy Sherman's new book "Afterwar: Healing the Moral Wounds of Our Soldiers."
Forest Grace analyzes how differences in Eastern and Western religions have played a role in the development of religious conflict.
Second Lieutenant Luke J. Schumacher and Joshua Shapiro examine one of the key areas to winning the peace in Iraq and Syria when the guns fall silent - water.
Peter Storey argues that the Taliban's siege and brief capture of Kunduz lays bare a disturbing development in the Afghan War.
In the third and final part of his series, Jim Purvis addresses some of the arguments that have been made in the debate surrounding women in combat.
In the second part of his series on women in combat, veteran and academic Jim Purvis looks at how full gender integration in the military is now inevitable.
Chris Miller explains why, on the heels of the Arab Spring, NATO decided to intervene in Libya, but not Syria--leading to the stalemates today in both countries.
Collin Hunt analyzes the results of NATO's military intervention in Libya which toppled Muammar Qaddafi and finds it has very little to point to in the way of successes four years on.









