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The United Federation of Planets Has a War College Now — Are We Gonna Talk About It?
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The United Federation of Planets Has a War College Now — Are We Gonna Talk About It?

Featured Essays Star Trek The United Federation of Planets Has a War College Now — Are We Gonna Talk About It? Are we acknowledging Starfleet’s hierarchical makeup here, or attempting to cover it up? By Emmet Asher-Perrin | Published on March 18, 2026 Image: John Medland/Paramount+ Comment 0 Share New Share Image: John Medland/Paramount+ Star Trek exists in an interesting fictional place, at the moment. If stories about the future are often mirrors to the present, then Trek has the strange double duty of working two futures at once—one that scratches a nostalgic itch for the series’ classic era (40-60 years ago depending on your preference), and another that’s clearly hoping to imagine a future more in line with our present. That’s the unenviable task that Starfleet Academy finds itself undertaking: establishing a brand new future, 900 years ahead of The Original Series, that allows writers to shake things up for the Federation in ways that feel more true to the current cultural moment we occupy.  Though this era was introduced to audiences in the latter seasons of Star Trek: Discovery, Starfleet Academy is where the powers that be will build it, shaping this new time period of the Trek universe into a (hopefully) stable platform for many new stories to springboard off of. Setting the stage for this period is a cataclysm known as The Burn, in which all active dilithium sources in the galaxy ignited at once, resulting in millions of deaths and the dissolution of the Federation as a cohesive galactic presence. As the Federation rebuilds over a century later—thanks to Discovery’s hard work in assuring another event like The Burn won’t happen again—the reactionary isolation of the more recent generations is in need of correction.  The first and most obvious point of correction on that course is the rebuilding of Starfleet, and the relaunch of the Academy. But doing so points to the difficulty of the intervening years and what they wrought—after all, Starfleet still had officers post-Burn. So where did they come from? Enter: The War College. A moment here to fix on the name because, though you likely don’t need reminding (you just read the words), it’s a school dedicated explicitly to war, as a practice. Not a military academy, or a space naval training facility, or even a place for a Federation’s armed forces to convene. It’s a place where you go to learn about war in preparation for being at war with… well, presumably everyone. That’s what the Federation has used as a replacement for Starfleet Academy for over a century. Image: John Medland/Paramount+. Upon the rededication of the Academy, we learn that the War College (being both its headmaster and student body) have something of a chip on their collective shoulder over the idea of being supplanted. The show’s goals—as far as we can discern them now, with the first season wrapped—seem to be aiming for either mutual understanding on this front (a “we can’t get along without each other” theme) or a reabsorption back to the old status quo where a War College wasn’t needed for Starfleet to function. But this supposed dichotomy ignores something fundamental in Star Trek’s makeup: Starfleet is, at its core, a military organization. It’s a part to that future that rankles for many-a-fan because it seems to betray the core principles of the exercise: Our golden socialist space utopia still relies on having a very big stick and being “unafraid” to use it. Starfleet itself cannot function without hierarchy that places certain people’s judgement and decisions above others. In emergencies and even out of them, rank and file are the rule of the day. This doesn’t actually have to be a bad thing because, as I mentioned at the start, Star Trek is still ultimately an ongoing exercise in examining where we are and where we would like to be. We can’t imagine our way out of these concepts if we don’t contend with them, and Trek sometimes does a brilliant job on those terms; Deep Space Nine considered what it might feel like to be forced into war in order to avoid galactic servitude to one species; Voyager regularly put Captain Janeway in positions where she had to exert her beliefs over the crew’s because her primary goal was simply getting everyone on board home safe; Picard attempted to wrestle with the reactionary element alive and well within Starfleet in showcasing an incident that led to a ban on synthetic life. We’re aware of the fact that military structures enforce a rigidity that does not align well with everyday decision-making, cooperation, and complexity—hence the frequency with which Starfleet officers and crews go against orders and are rewarded for their insubordination (or have it swept under the rug). But on its face, the War College isn’t in a great place to help us examine similar ideas. In fact, it seems better situated for helping us separate out the militaristic aspects of the Federation at whim, leaving Starfleet untouched by the ugliness of its imposed stratification and adherence to command—get your codified and sorted nuts out of my freewheeling chocolate, if you will. This draws a similarity to another piece of Federation history that some fans would like to write out of existence: the ever-unpopular Section 31. Image: CBS / Paramount+ Attempts to make the Federation’s icky, invisible espionage wing a ragtag crew of cool kids notwithstanding, Section 31 is a blight on the history of Federation because it (potentially) answers to no one. There are those who find its existence inevitable—it’s noted within Trek itself that many other governments have their own dubious intelligence agencies—but many more who point out that an entire arm of shadow ops that acts autonomously from the rest of its governing body does, in point of fact, go against everything the Federation claims to stand for. The fact that Section 31 purports to be an autonomous agency, and that this fact might be a lie to avoid holding the Federation or Starfleet accountable for its actions, is really the key here. From what we’ve seen so far, the War College is similarly positioned, created during a time when hierarchy became king once again and working together was treated as a luxury. As it stands, the War College creates absurdly easy—and poorly rendered—rivalries for the Starfleet kids to act out against. Sure, Starfleet demands adherence to certain codes and behaviors, and has been negligent in their duties for over a century, but at least their cadets are encouraged to think for themselves, and use science and empathy and talking to make some of their points! Not like those War College kids, who think they’re better for being… er, physically hardy and disciplined? Not that I assumed the classic “jocks versus nerds” dynamic was truly dead and buried, but Star Trek sure wasn’t the place where I expected it to exhume and shamble about, begging for another chance at life. In case we are successfully tricked into thinking that this is solely a War College problem, though, I direct you to episode three of the first season, “Vitus Reflux.” Framed as a very tired school-against-school enmity plot, the episode introduces us to a team sport that’s been played by Starfleet cadets for centuries: Calica. While Trek has conceived of its own fair share of odd sci-fi sports—and participated in plentiful average, Earth games like baseball, poker, and darts—Calica is far worse, conceptually speaking. It is nothing but Capture the Flag with unapologetic and bloody war game trappings glorified to the extreme. This is the game we’re told Starfleet has played for ages on its campus. A battle simulation that exists to sharpen cadets for combat, and nothing more. Image: John Medland/Paramount+ And all this after a training montage where First Officer Lura Thok subjects the cadets to a brutal physical training regime that contains no visible difference from an army bootcamp. There were ways around this, if the creative team has simply wanted to include the sequence for humor. We could learn that the program is tailored to Thok’s personal and cultural preferences (being both Klingon and Jem’Hadar), and have her adjust it as the episode goes on. We could even grant an aside about how not every cadet is going to be physically able-bodied in the same way, and show what sorts of accommodations they receive in the physical training department. We are given no evidence of this during the training scenes, however, which begs some very uncomfortable questions about Starfleet’s accessibility policies, which, in turn, makes them appear even more militarized. (You can’t serve in military organizations when you achieve certain levels of disability—while we see at least one cadet in a wheelchair on the campus, there are no additional indications that all manner of disability is accounted for, much less welcome, on the quad.) While the episode does lead to Starfleet Academy winning a prank war against the War College—with a refocus from Captain Ake reminding her cadets that Starfleet’s first goal is to disarm opponents without rising to conflict footing—the questions it opens us up to are never truly resolved. Is the War College meant to be an antagonist that Starfleet Academy can always look good against? Are we relegating military might to one corner of the Federation, away from Starfleet’s more lofty goals, so that it can appear untouched? Are we ever going to contend with the hierarchical nature of Starfleet’s structure in a more meaningful way that leads us out of military pretension? Credit: Paramount+ The answer might lie in the show’s leaders: Captain Ake is a teacher first by her actions and commander second. And the season’s finale potentially shows the way forward when Jett Reno takes command of a group of frightened cadets left on board the Athena in an attempt to save the Federation from the antics of Nus Braka. Reno knows precisely how to guide the cadets in a true life-or-death situation without once ever talking down to them, acting more as a project manager than a commanding officer. This is part and parcel of Jett’s personality, but also the personality of her previous commander, the one who should ultimately serve as a guiding light for all future Trek leadership: Captain Michael Burnham of the Discovery. Captain Burnham had a long road to that bridge chair, and built her command on mutual respect, affection for, and belief in her crew. She was firm in her decisions, but never a tyrant lording over the people in her care. Moreover, she was a deft hand at understanding when disagreement amongst her crew was coming from genuine objection and knowledge, or personal grievance and personality quirks. She was good at people, as the parlance goes, and it made her a far less militaristic commander than many of her forbears and contemporaries. All of which is to say that noting our hierarchical present isn’t at fault here… but failing to imagine ways around and out of it is. We can do better in how we imagine the structure of governance and teamwork, and Star Trek is an ideal playground to begin seeding those ideas. Starfleet Academy is a great series to give those thoughts a go. With these ruminations in mind, I remain uneasy with the War College’s creation and placement in the current Trek milieu. We have upcoming seasons to find out what the writers will make of it—but imagining the future demands more than a siloing of every uncomfortable concept. If we don’t engage with the idea of the Federation creating an entire college dedicated to the worst of our impulses, we’ll never be able to leave it behind.[end-mark] The post The United Federation of Planets Has a War College Now — Are We Gonna Talk About It? appeared first on Reactor.
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US Investment in the Caribbean as a National Security Priority
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US Investment in the Caribbean as a National Security Priority

The Caribbean is one of the most strategically important waterways in the world and serves as the U.S.’ third border, with both the benefits and security concerns that entails. When the Caribbean is left unsecured, drugs, guns, people, and foreign influence find pathways into our country. Strengthening the security of the Caribbean is therefore a core national security interest of the U.S. According to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) more than 12.1 metric tons of cocaine being trafficked from the Caribbean were seized in 2024. The DEA’s Caribbean Division describes these routes used by drug traffickers as “extremely vulnerable,” and this trafficking of drugs has contributed to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Americans. To the credit of the Trump administration, it has taken significant steps in confronting these threats. U.S. forces have conducted joint operations in the Caribbean, targeted drug vessels, seized illicit oil shipments tied to Venezuelan criminal networks, and conducted a historic night-time raid arresting Nicolas Maduro. Investment in the capacity of our partners in the region is also important from the American perspective, as it helps friendly governments stop drugs at ports and in waterways long before they approach the coast of Florida, and because it contributes to the security of the region, lowering crime rates and making these countries safer for business and tourism. The Caribbean–United States Framework for Security Cooperation provides a standing venue to align on firearms trafficking, maritime security, cyber threats, and disaster response. It is reinforced annually by the Caribbean–U.S. Security Cooperation Dialogue, where ministers and senior officials review progress and set priorities for the year ahead. In terms of funding, there is the Caribbean Basin Security Initiative (CBSI). The CBSI is the main vehicle used for training, limited equipment grants, intelligence sharing, and justice-sector support across 13 nations in the Caribbean. This initiative includes Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Dominica, the Dominican Republic, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago. One example of the kind of security infrastructure CBSI funding enables is the CARICOM Crime Gun Intelligence Unit, which strengthens regional capacity to track and disrupt illegal firearms trafficking that fuels violence in the nations of the Caribbean. This U.S.-funded and partnered initiative enhances the ability of Caribbean partners to identify weapon sources, map trafficking networks, and support law enforcement investigations. Funding levels for CBSI, however, have not kept pace with the required weapons, training, logistics, or watercraft needed to effectively combat threats to the Caribbean. The newest authorizing legislation calls for $88 million per year in CBSI funding from fiscal year 2025 to fiscal year 2029. The U.S. should increase CBSI funding. The current $88 million per year is a fraction of what is required to expand the needed maritime surveillance, modernize partner-nation coast guards, improve intelligence sharing, and increase the number of joint U.S.-Caribbean training exercises. Given the level of trafficking and strategic importance of the Caribbean to the U.S., this investment is rational. At the same time, Caribbean nations must also step up their own commitment to the security of their nations and the Caribbean as a whole. True regional security is a shared burden among all nations involved. The post US Investment in the Caribbean as a National Security Priority appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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To Live and Die in LA's Film Industry
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To Live and Die in LA's Film Industry

To Live and Die in LA's Film Industry
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Intel Analysts Hid Fact That China Interfered With 2020 Election
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Intel Analysts Hid Fact That China Interfered With 2020 Election

Intel Analysts Hid Fact That China Interfered With 2020 Election
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Some Networks Go Soft on Antisemitism in the Coverage of Joe Kent Quitting on Counterterror
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Some Networks Go Soft on Antisemitism in the Coverage of Joe Kent Quitting on Counterterror

On Tuesday morning, Joe Kent, President Trump's Director of The  National Counterterrorism Center, resigned his post, and stated he was doing so because he is opposed to the war with Iran, claiming that Iran posed no imminent threat to the U.S., and that we started the war due to, "pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby." Kent, who has been accused of having ties to white nationalists, also accused some in the American media of misinformation on the Iran threat, so how would the media cover this? It was a mixed bag for the nightly newscasts, some more comprehensive than others in giving viewers information  on Kent.  ABC's World News Tonight's Rachel Scott seemed to cover more than most in her report. SCOTT: Tonight the the Administration's top counterterrorism official resigning in protest over President Trump's war with Iran, declaring Iran posed no immanent threat to our nation. Joe Kent Director of The National Counter Terrorism Center writing, 'I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran. It's clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.  Kent's accusing Israel of a misinformation campaign to deceive Trump into believing that Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States, and that 'should we strike now, there was a clear path to swift victory. This was a lie.' President Trump who has long supported Kent's political career, despite Kent's controversies and past associations with anti-Semites, today brushing off his resignation. TRUMP: I always thought he was a nice guy. But I always thought he was weak on security. Very weak on security. I didn't know him well. SCOTT:  Today the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee Mark Warner saying, "Joe Kent's record is deeply troubling. But on this point, he is right. There was no credible evidence of an imminent threat from Iran." On CBS Evening News, Reporter Ed O'Keefe read from Kent's post, "It's clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby." No mention of past accusations against him. Over on NBC Nightly News, White House correspondent Gabe Gutierrez read Kent's accusations about Israel's "pressure" and its "powerful American lobby" and reported, "Kent's statement also drawing rebukes for alleged anti-Semitic overtones," citing Republican congressman Don Bacon's post on Kent's departure: "Good riddance  anti-Semitism is an evil I detest, and we surely don't want it in our government." PBS NewsHour foreign-affairs correspondent Nick Schifrin mentioned Kent's attack on the media.  SCHIFRIN:  He (Kent) publicly resigned in protest, writing to President Trump directly, saying quote, early in this administration, high-ranking Israeli officials and influential members of the American media deployed a misinformation campaign that wholly undermined your America First platform and sowed pro-war sentiments to encourage a war with Iran. This echo chamber was used to deceive you into believing that Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States, and that should you strike now, there was a clear path to a swift victory. This was a lie.".... Kent is an army veteran who deployed 11 times, and whose wife was killed by ISIS in Syria. Schifrin did not mention that in his resignation letter, Kent blamed Israel for his wife's death in 2019, that she was killed "in a war manufactured by Israel." Fox News's Special Report With Bret Baier probably had the weakest coverage, with White House Correspondent Aishah Hasnie giving it some 30 seconds. HASNIE: Today the Director of the National Counter Terrorism Center, Joe Kent, resigned, claiming Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and that Trump bowed to pressure from Israel. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said, quote, the President had strong and compelling evidence that Iran was going to attack the United States first. TRUMP: I always thought he was weak on security. Very weak on security. HASNIE: Two sources from inside the administration confirm to Fox News Kent was not involved in briefings about Iran.  None of the reports came right out and called Kent's post anti-Semitic. The New York Post Editorial Board noted that Kent had said back in 2020, that Trump should have attacked Iran's nuclear and ballistic capabilities, How did they all miss that one? Not one network went there.
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Parents enraged over adult illegal alien allegedly molesting Virginia high school girls
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Parents enraged over adult illegal alien allegedly molesting Virginia high school girls

Israel Flores-Ortiz, an illegal alien from El Salvador who stole into the U.S. in 2024 and was subsequently released by the Biden administration, is accused of molesting at least nine girls at Fairfax High School in Virginia where he was enrolled in the 11th grade, even though he is at least 18 years old.Adding insult to injury, the school allegedly downplayed the scandal.'They have attempted to sweep it under the rug.'The alleged offenses took place as recently as Feb. 25. Flores-Ortiz was arrested on March 7 and has been charged with nine counts of assault and battery."There's a group of about 12 individuals that have reported this assault," a mother of one of the victims told WJLA-TV. "It was all perpetrated by a single individual who is a stranger to the girls. He just sneakily walked up behind them and put his hand in between their legs. It was not just a butt smack or a butt grab. It was a groping of a private area. It had been occurring for several months."Two of the victims' mothers said that the school was doing a terrible job handling the situation."Abysmal, abysmal," said one of the mothers. "I think from the very beginning, Fairfax County has attempted to diminish what happened to these girls."Fairfax High School principal Georgina Aye reportedly waited over two weeks after the incidents were reported to notify parents in an email, "We are writing to share the news of the recent arrest of a student who was charged with inappropriately touching other students at school. These incidents involved the student touching students’ buttocks while they were transitioning in the hallways."RELATED: ICE arrests child-diddlers and ecstasy traffickers while Dems try to 'score brownie points,' DHS says Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger (D). Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images.Parents lashed out over Aye's claim that the alleged molestation was simply a matter of a "student touching students’ buttocks.""Yeah, no, I would not be here for butt slapping," one mother told WJLA. "I would, I mean, I would be upset about that, but this wouldn't be my second day this week here at the courthouse for that. It was a clear violation. He put his hand in between my daughter's legs, and the butt was actually the last thing that he touched."Another mother said, "The girls have experienced harassment and bullying from peers at school, including people that they once thought were their friends, and the letter that they sent out, referencing it only as buttocks touching, just adds fuel to rumors that they were just attention seeking.""They have attempted to sweep it under the rug," said one mother.The City of Fairfax School Board, which oversees Fairfax High School in partnership with the FCPS, said in a statement on Monday that it "takes the recent situation at Fairfax High School very seriously.""We support the students who have been directly affected and encourage members of the Fairfax High School community to support one another during this difficult time. Inappropriate conduct has no place in our schools, and we understand the concern and distress this incident has caused for students and families," said the school board. "We also want to express our support for Principal Dr. Georgina Aye, a student-centered leader who has devoted her career to serving and supporting students. We have confidence in her leadership."In addition to receiving what one victim's mother described as "a completely sanitized letter" from the school's purportedly "student-centered leader," parents were allegedly informed by Fairfax County Public Schools that upon his release, Flores-Ortiz would return to school.FCPS told WJLA in a statement, "While Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) is unable to comment on specifics due to federal and state privacy laws, we prioritize student and staff safety and we fully investigate any time someone shares that an incident has occurred at school, or that they do not feel safe at school."FCPS did not respond to a request for comment from Blaze News.ICE issued a detainer for Ortiz, the agency told WJLA, "to ensure this violent criminal is removed from our country so he can never claim another victim again."Fairfax County Sheriff Stacey Kincaid's (D) office told Blaze News in a statement:Israel Flores Ortiz remains in the custody of the Sheriff’s Office in the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center (ADC). While it is still too early in the process to know the outcome of his case, ICE has been notified of Ortiz’s location at the ADC, and they are able to execute their detainer by responding to the ADC and taking Ortiz into custody if and when he is ordered released.The Fairfax County Sheriff’s Office does not obstruct or prevent ICE from acting on their civil detainers.Flores-Ortiz reportedly requested to be released on bail. Fairfax County Commonwealth's Attorney Steve Descano's (D) office told Blaze News that there was a bond hearing, but "after listening to arguments, the judge decided to hold him. He is being held."Judge Dipti Pidikiti-Smith reportedly denied Ortiz's request on Friday after reviewing surveillance video of one of the incidents."This 19-year-old criminal illegal alien should NOT have been attending a Virginia high school and allowed to prey on innocent teenage girls. He now faces nine counts of assault and battery. This is yet another example of the Biden administration’s failed open border policies," DHS Deputy Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis said in a statement."We are calling on Fairfax County sanctuary politicians to NOT release this predator from jail back into our communities to assault more teenage women," continued Bis. "Unfortunately, Governor Abigail Spanberger ended cooperation with ICE and is siding with criminal illegal aliens over American citizens."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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At Least He's (Accidentally) Honest: Jeff Merkley Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About the SAVE Act
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At Least He's (Accidentally) Honest: Jeff Merkley Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About the SAVE Act

At Least He's (Accidentally) Honest: Jeff Merkley Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About the SAVE Act
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Rand Paul Blocks Fellow Repub Katie Britt From Introducing Markwayne Mullin at DHS Confirmation Hearing
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Rand Paul Blocks Fellow Repub Katie Britt From Introducing Markwayne Mullin at DHS Confirmation Hearing

Rand Paul Blocks Fellow Repub Katie Britt From Introducing Markwayne Mullin at DHS Confirmation Hearing
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Houston, We Have a Creepy Dem House Candidate: Bobby Pulido's Plane Pervert Video is a Total Yikes Fest
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Houston, We Have a Creepy Dem House Candidate: Bobby Pulido's Plane Pervert Video is a Total Yikes Fest

Houston, We Have a Creepy Dem House Candidate: Bobby Pulido's Plane Pervert Video is a Total Yikes Fest
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GOP's Blowout Win Has Virginia Democrats Sweating Their Gerrymander Gamble
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GOP's Blowout Win Has Virginia Democrats Sweating Their Gerrymander Gamble

GOP's Blowout Win Has Virginia Democrats Sweating Their Gerrymander Gamble
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