Why Biden should not support Georgia’s ascension to NATO
Pushing for Georgia’s NATO membership will antagonize Europe at a time when Biden is trying to mend fences.
Pushing for Georgia’s NATO membership will antagonize Europe at a time when Biden is trying to mend fences.
The new administration is promoting the failed idea that sanctions can be used for leverage — and Kim Jong Un is responding predictably.
The first step is to acknowledge our own shortcomings before going out to tell others how it’s done.
He won’t be able to please everyone, so he should reverse Trump’s order getting out of the JCPOA first. That’ll set things off.
During Trump’s tenure, the French president said NATO was in a ‘brain death’ spiral and was talking up a European army.
The Trump’s administration has left the new White House at a crossroads: keep poking Beijing or bring balance back to the situation.
The last four years have given us a real-life lesson in presidentialism run amok. It didn’t start with Trump but it can end with him.
Can Moscow and Washington find common cause against the global scourges of nuclear weapons, climate change, and pandemic?
If post-Cold War US foreign policy wasn’t intended to seek monsters to destroy, it is certainly created them.
There must be a commitment to bringing the insurgents to the table — and stopping foreign support for warring parties.
Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE want a seat at the table but their participation will only muddy the waters.
Europe blames both Tehran and Washington for the tension regarding Iran’s nuclear program.
Aside from big news on Yemen, this turned out to be more of a pep talk, making what sounded like a vigorous case for the pre-Trump status quo.
US will no longer support ‘offensive’ operations, but that won’t be enough to end the war.
An ongoing spat between Iran and South Korea is a direct result of Trump’s failed ‘maximum pressure’ campaign.
A simple goodwill gesture would likely get the ball rolling.
Keeping US troops there beyond the May 1 deadline won’t do anything to help intra-Afghan peace talks.
Our youngest voters aren’t a monolith, but one study finds they have one thing widely in common and it revolves around war.
The 2011 uprisings lacked a transnational movement strong enough to challenge powerful despots and their friends in Washington.
Americans tend to lionize — and Westernize — political dissidents, unaware that they may not be who we think they are.
A new report from a trilateral working group outlines a path forward.