1 to 10 of about 8926
The Biden administration must ensure that it does not give away too much to Riyadh without asking enough from Jerusalem, especially when it comes to the concerns of the Palestinians.
Foreign Affairs has recently published a number of articles on how the United States should engage with the Taliban government in Afghanistan, extremist forces within the regime, how the West can help ordinary Afghans, and the fate of the country’s women.
Ukrainian attempts to force Russian oil from the Black Sea may have unintended consequences for its allies
Maybe most importantly the regulations so far do not bear the hallmark of a classic Xi intervention, which usually means taking a very hard line and potentially unrealistic policy stance that prizes control and Xi’s other priorities over everything else.
On the face of it, the deal is a three-way win-win situation. Upon closer examination, though, the benefits that could accompany such a deal seem far less certain and the risks associated with them rather considerable.
Suyash Rai writes about the recently passed Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Bill.
Amid the uncertainty, one thing is clear: be it in its current form or as an expanded outfit, as a vehicle for collective diplomatic sway or for China to increase its global reach, the BRICS grouping is here to stay.
Sanctions have not breached Russia’s economic fortress, but they have put a time bomb under its foundations.
Deterrence clearly failed in Ukraine. In the run-up to Russia’s invasion in February 2022, America and its NATO allies took steps to warn Russia of dire consequences, including deep sanctions and political excommunication. None of that mattered to Vladimir Putin.
Compared to the U.S., where the attacks of January 6, 2021, seem to only have deepened polarization and increased political risk, the January 8 insurgency in Brazil thus seems to have left fewer scars and can be seen as the apex of political instability.