North Korea Weapons Siezure Raises More Questions
The seizure at Bangkok's airport of 35 tons of North Korean arms being shipped by plane raises a disturbing question: How many weapons is North Korea ...
The seizure at Bangkok's airport of 35 tons of North Korean arms being shipped by plane raises a disturbing question: How many weapons is North Korea ...
AP | Posted 12.13.2009 | World
BANGKOK — Five foreigners were detained and their foreign-registered aircraft impounded after it landed in the Thai capital Saturday with tons o...
AP | ERIK SCHELZIG | Posted 12.12.2009 | Politics
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — It's been the year of the gun in Tennessee. In a flurry of legislative action, handgun owners won the right to take their wea...
The Denver Post | Monte Whaley | Posted 12.10.2009 | Denver
A state Senate Republican leader said there won't be any broad-based retribution against Colorado State University just because the school's administr...
NewScientist | Jim Giles | Posted 11.17.2009 | Technology
Using a Taser to subdue a violent suspect is safer than police batons and fists. That is the surprising conclusion of a study of incidents in which US...
Frida Berrigan | Posted 11.04.2009 | World
For 2010, total military spending is $680 billion, an increase of 3.9 percent, or $26 billion, over 2009. This is not the end of business as usual at the Pentagon.
miamiherald.com | By JUAN O. TAMAYO | Posted 11.02.2009 | World
Whether it's called an ``arms race'' or a ``coincidental modernization'' of existing stocks, a wave of weapons purchases by Latin American nations is ...
Evelyn Leopold | Posted 10.31.2009 | World
The aim is to set standards for the global $55 billion export business in guns, tanks, attack helicopters, jet fighters, missiles and other conventional weapons.
Gloria Duffy | Posted 10.28.2009 | World
The US is entering a season of key international negotiations, during which two arms control treaties that have been languishing for years will hopefully be completed.
Jim Wallis | Posted 10.13.2009 | Politics
The vitriol against Obama's peace prize and "those Norwegians" who gave it to him is much deeper than the president's lack of achievements thus far; it is based on a fundamental clash of worldviews.
Abdulhadi Hairan | Posted 10.15.2009 | World
The world should not just close its eyes to Pakistan and say, 'there is no danger, everything is safe.' There is currently a dangerous vulnerability in officials who still sympathize with Taliban militants.
AP | MARY FOSTER | Posted 11.23.2009 | Politics
Bullet-makers are working around the clock, seven days a week, and still can't keep up with the nation's demand for ammunition.
Shooting ranges, gun dealers and bullet manufacturers say they have never seen such shortages. Bullets, especially for handguns, have been scarce for months because gun enthusiasts are stocking up on ammo, in part because they fear President Barack Obama and the Democratic-controlled Congress will pass antigun legislation – even though nothing specific has been proposed and the president last month signed a law allowing people to carry loaded guns in national parks.
Gun sales spiked when it became clear Obama would be elected a year ago and purchases continued to rise in his first few months of office. The FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check System reported that 6.1 million background checks for gun sales were issued from January to May, an increase of 25.6 percent from the same period the year before.
"That is going to cause an upswing in ammunition sales," said Larry Keane, senior vice president of the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade association representing about 5,000 members. "Without bullets a gun is just a paper weight."
The shortage for sportsmen is different than the scarcity of ammo for some police forces earlier this year, a dearth fueled by an increase in ammo use by the military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
ProPublica | Posted 11.18.2009 | World
"We're spending a lot of money on these rifles, millions of dollars -- where do you think that money is going to?" [1] Ronald Boline, a former Triple ...
Linda Milazzo | Posted 11.12.2009 | Media
Cheryl Biren, OpedNews' Managing Editor: How can press be prevented from recording news in the making? It's shameful. It's anti-democracy.
thenation.com | Posted 09.03.2009 | Politics
A former Blackwater employee and an ex-US Marine who has worked as a security operative for the company have made a series of explosive allegations in...
AP | RICHARD LARDNER | Posted 08.25.2009 | Politics
WASHINGTON — Robert Gates is on a roll. Question is, how long will it last? The politically savvy defense secretary scored big legislative wins...
Jim Wallis | Posted 06.08.2009 | Politics
A new generation of Evangelical Christians launched The Two Futures Project whose mission is "for the abolition of all nuclear weapons."
Queen Noor of Jordan | Posted 05.28.2009 | World
As long as nuclear weapons exist, they will continue to spread. The only solution to the threats of proliferation and nuclear terrorism is global zero. It is urgent to begin now.
Jim Wallis | Posted 05.07.2009 | World
A generation has come of age when "Fall Out Shelter" signs are nothing but rusty remnants of a time long past.
Jerry Zezima | Posted 04.26.2009 | Living
I knew it was only a matter of time before my journalistic crimes landed me in jail. I just didn't think I would end up on Rikers Island.
Sarah van Gelder | Posted 04.23.2009 | World
But if we are clear, now, about the failure of the neoconservative agenda of global dominance, the question remains: How should the U.S. relate to the rest of the world?
Jim Wallis | Posted 04.19.2009 | World
"Never again" has turned into "once again," and history repeats itself with genocide in Darfur.
Nick Turse | Posted 02.16.2009 | Politics
When I got to the 26th Army Science Conference, all that potentially glittered, it often seemed, was nowhere to be found - except, perhaps, in the threads of the unlikeliest of military uniforms.
Donald Steinberg | Posted 05.07.2009 | World
Cluster munitions are particularly evil weapons. On falling to the ground, these bombs and shells separate into dozens of small bomblets, exploding on the enemy and civilians.
Reuters | Posted 10.18.2008 | Home
WASHINGTON - The Justice Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives had 76 weapons and 418 laptop computers lost, stolen or go m...
Christian Science Monitor | Posted 12.15.2009 | World