Saudi chairmanship of G20 proves to be mixed blessing
The country and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman saw their chairmanship as an opportunity to showcase the kingdom’s leadership and ability to be a visionary global player.
The country and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman saw their chairmanship as an opportunity to showcase the kingdom’s leadership and ability to be a visionary global player.
Sudan isn’t the UAE; it has a more liberal and secular civil society that will oppose an agreement with Israel.
The deal may undermine years of work toward self-determination for Western Sahara
A failed industrial town is a microcosm of the political divide and why most of us would rather focus on home instead of monsters abroad.
Our leaders and elites have eschewed constitutional restraint and balance of power in favor of an imperial culture.
As another US Census count begins to wrap up, Iranians Americans are once again grappling with what it means to purportedly be ‘white’ in America
Will Washington finally realize that more bombs won’t make us more secure?
Two years after Jamal Khashoggi’s murder, the Quincy Institute takes a broad look at how US policy toward Saudi Arabia needs to change.
The Trump admin has reportedly expressed interest in deploying more nuclear weapons, a move that would only inflame tensions with US adversaries and allies.
America’s capital as a beacon for democracy around the world has already been greatly diminished.
It refocuses Republican politics on families, jobs, and communities, but it needs foreign policies to match.
If there’s one word that best summarizes the Trump administration’s maximum pressure campaign, it’s “failure.”
The Islamic Republic is home to sizeable Azerbaijani community, perhaps one quarter of the population, within which elements have flirted with independence.
While in recent years Tehran has had a strong presence of friendly forces in the vicinity of Israel, now it is Tel Aviv that is encircling Iran more than ever.
Last night’s embarrassing display did not cover foreign policy. And for that Quincy experts are grateful.
A new report shows that Beijing is actually expanding the indoctrination prisons for Muslim citizens in Xinjiang, not closing them.
The DoD says it has yet to confirm Moscow was paying the Taliban to kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan. Why is the media so silent?
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez abruptly withdrew from an event honoring Rabin, sparking debate about his complicated past.
Quincy Institute staff want answers from Biden and Trump on endless war, Russia, nukes, China, and more.
The crimes occurring in Yemen are serious — and the responsible parties demonstrably unwilling or unable to address them.
Whether you’re reading this with your morning coffee, just after lunch, or on the late shift in the wee small hours of the morning, it’s 100 seconds to midnight.