From wartime Japan to American casseroles, the story of one breadcrumb’s rise — and the science behind why it stays so crispy ...
During World War II, Japan’s fleet was large and qualitatively peerless, but unsupported by a broader defense-industrial base. The United States finds itself in the same position today.
Tensions in the Taiwan Strait have reached heights unseen since the end of the Cold War.
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto spent years in the United States studying American industry, oil production, and manufacturing power ...
The bombing of Darwin was the largest single attack ever mounted by a foreign power on Australia soil. On that day, 180 Japanese Aircraft, in two separate raids, attacked the town of Darwin, and its ...
Two historical scenarios suggested by two keen observers of global politics highlight the need for the United States to revive its defense industrial base. James Holmes, a professor of strategy at the ...
The atmosphere of hospitality between President Lee Jae Myung and Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in January will energize ...
As victory in Europe was secured in May 1945, the war in the Pacific raged on with undiminished ferocity. Facing Japan’s refusal to surrender and the horrifying projections of Operation Downfall, ...
Never has it won as decisively as it did in a snap election on February 8th, when it took almost 70% of the seats in parliament’s powerful lower house. Takaichi Sanae, the triumphant prime minister, ...
By Bill Emmott, independent writer, lecturer and international affairs consultant When handling domestic political affairs, ...
The recent victory of Japan’s Sanae Takaichi is a boon for the U.S.-Japanese relationship. Takaichi and her Liberal Democratic Party won a mandate in the snap elections. And Washington might have won ...