In the early phase of the Syrian civil war, Iran denied the presence of its forces on Syrian soil despite evidence to the ...
Greenland’s surprising elections; movement toward a peace deal in Ukraine; and destabilizing violence in Syria, among others.
The era of liberal internationalist foreign policy is dead, and the sooner European leaders realize this, the better off the European Union will be.
The Northern Sea Route holds out the appealing possibility of circumventing shipping chokepoints like Suez and Malacca, bringing Russian exports to new markets in South Asia. But the logistics of ...
The idea of the Kra Canal – a bypass for the Strait of Malacca – dates all the way back to 1677. But though the technical ...
Examining the scope of President Trump’s new China tariffs, their likely consequences, and how they match up to previous rounds of the US-China trade war.
The PKK’s unilateral disarmament marks a potential turning point in Kurdish relations with the Turkish state, but challenges ...
US-led reprisals against Houthi attacks in the Red Sea have not diminished the group’s military capacity and regional weight. If anything, they have emerged stronger than before.
Through its association with Saudi Arabia and other Middle East states, Japan must find a way to lead on human rights again. The growing partnership with Riyadh stands as a critical test.
The Sudanese Armed Forces have recently seized the initiative in the battle for Khartoum, but an end to one of the world’s bloodiest conflicts remains as elusive as ever.
Minor though tenacious pockets of inflation risk an enduring political headache for the second Trump administration.
Examining the central importance of security guarantees in Ukraine peace talks, why Kyiv continues to push for NATO membership, and what an eventual compromise might look like.