Free Beacon Natalie Johnson

Natalie Johnson is a staff writer at the Washington Free Beacon. Prior to joining the Free Beacon, she was a news reporter at the Daily Signal. Johnson’s work has been featured in outlets such as Newsweek, Fox News and Drudge Report. She graduated from James Madison University in 2015 with a B.A. in political science and journalism. She can be reached at johnson@freebeacon.com. Her twitter handle is @nataliejohnsonn.


Syrian rebel fighters battle government forces

Report: Arms Supplied by the U.S. to Syrian Rebels Often Fell into the Hands of ISIS

Roughly 90 percent of weapons and ammunition deployed by ISIS were manufactured in China, Russia, and Eastern European countries

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani

Former U.S. Ambassadors Warn Iran Has Become Top Threat to Middle East

'With the ISIS threat destroyed, malign Iranian interference is now the primary security challenge'

US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley unveils previously classified information intending to prove Iran violated UNSCR 2231 by providing the Houthi rebels in Yemen with arms

Trump Admin. Unveils Material Evidence of Iranian Missile in Yemen

U.S. envoy Haley says missile proves Tehran's violation of U.N. resolutions

US President Donald Trump sits beside National Security Adviser HR McMaster

Trump to Unveil U.S. National Security Strategy on Monday

White House national security adviser H.R. McMaster previews new doctrine

Kim Jong-Un visiting Samjiyon County in Ryanggang Province

Report: Global Arms Sales Hit Record High Due in Part to North Korean Threat

Global weapons sales by top 100 companies rose to $375 billion

Members of Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah movement salute

U.S., Foreign Leaders Warn of Terror Groups Converging With Organized Crime in Latin America

South America's tri-border region has longstanding presence of Hezbollah militants

U.S. Secretary of the Navy Richard Spencer

U.S. Navy Squandered $4 Billion Due to Congressional Failure to Pass Budget

Taxpayer money lost due to inefficiencies caused by continuing resolutions