Trump’s attorney is among the activists trying to strip Palestinians of their status.| Foreign Policy
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Just tell 'em to get packing.| Foreign Policy
Why you need to read the 25th Amendment now.| Foreign Policy
Activists are speaking out for those imprisoned in Xinjiang—even if their own government doesn’t like it.| Foreign Policy
A more aggressive and unilateral approach leaves less room for diplomacy.| Foreign Policy
A nurse prepares to inject a health care worker with the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at the Tor Vergata hospital in Rome on Dec. 28.| foreignpolicy.com
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Bush and Putin stand side-by-side at the bottom of the image, seen from below eye level in a shot that shows an open expanse of mostly cloudy sky overhead. A bit of blue is visible on the left side of the image. Both men wear serious expressions and button-up shirts without jackets.| foreignpolicy.com
Several children pop out from behind a man and woman as they stand on a stage.| foreignpolicy.com
It’s looking increasingly likely that the world’s richest man got played.| Foreign Policy
Donald Trump has changed course on his widely-condemned promise to bring back torture and kill families of terrorists.| Foreign Policy
Honduras’ brave new economic experiment is buoying an era of development by kicking poor farmers off their land.| Foreign Policy
Pope Benedict XVI at the end of his general weekly audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican.| foreignpolicy.com
Armed militants of Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan pose for photographs.| foreignpolicy.com
A fighter jet flies against a clear blue sky. The jet has a pointy gray nose and the flag of France on its tail wing.| foreignpolicy.com
U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance delivered a rebuke on immigration and alleged censorship to a shocked Munich Security Conference.| Foreign Policy
But Vice President J.D. Vance has mixed messaging on just how far the White House is willing to go.| Foreign Policy
The U.S. president isn’t attending the Munich Security Conference himself, but he’s poised to dominate the conversation nonetheless.| Foreign Policy
NATO wants to help Ukraine for the long term. But Kyiv needs help now.| Foreign Policy
Iranian protocol soldiers stand guard during a ceremony to mark the 27th anniversary of the Islamic revolution at the mausoleum of Iran's late founder of Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in Tehran on Feb. 1, 2006.| foreignpolicy.com
Multifront conflicts have never ended well for the countries that provoked them.| Foreign Policy
Subscribe to Foreign Policy magazine for global affairs coverage you can trust.| Foreign Policy
A drawn illustration shows a chaotic swarm of Eurovision performers surrounded by multicolored disco balls. The performers are encircled by the stars of the EU flag.| foreignpolicy.com
How the United States can rejuvenate the global institutions it created.| Foreign Policy
Mustafa Nayyem, head of the Ukrainian State Agency for Restoration and Infrastructure Development, speaks at an event before the Ukraine Recovery Conference in London.| foreignpolicy.com
The threat comes as Ukraine begins using U.S.-supplied ATACMS to strike Russia.| Foreign Policy
Members of the National Guard patrol the University of California, Berkeley, campus amid protests against the closure of People’s Park in Berkeley, California.| foreignpolicy.com
Even if the great powers could carve up an interconnected world, Washington may not get the result it wants.| Foreign Policy
Franklin Roosevelt warned that even in peacetime, America’s obligations to the world would continue.| Foreign Policy
The meeting caps weeks of tense relations between Kyiv and Washington as they wrangle a deal.| Foreign Policy
Trump needs to “defuse this situation,” said a former director of Russia analysis at the CIA.| Foreign Policy
A fleet of cameras and reporters surround Lindsey Graham outside the White House.| foreignpolicy.com
Read U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance’s remarks at the Munich Security Conference.| Foreign Policy
The actual number could be more than double the current Western estimate.| Foreign Policy
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A photo collage of 2023 newsmakers.| foreignpolicy.com
After years of government investigations, we still don’t know if the former president is actually in Putin’s pocket.| Foreign Policy
A shot of a gray ship docked in a port. On the side of the ship is Russian lettering.| foreignpolicy.com
The U.S. government has experienced what may be the most consequential security breach in its history.| Foreign Policy
And that isn’t bad news for the United States.| Foreign Policy
Masoud Pezeshkian was elected on an ambitious reformist platform, but it’s not yet clear he can deliver.| Foreign Policy
As long as the two countries remain engaged in conflict, they will trade blows—no matter what their allies counsel.| Foreign Policy
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Three battles in medieval and early modern Europe offer instructive parallels to Ukraine’s Kursk offensive.| Foreign Policy
Gina Raimondo has reshaped the Commerce Department for technological competition with China.| Foreign Policy
Central policy and money laundering have created networks that aid traffickers.| Foreign Policy
Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump meet during the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on June 28, 2019.| Foreign Policy
Despite U.S. hopes, Communist Party rule in Havana is not about to collapse.| Foreign Policy
Israelis believed their country’s survival was no longer in question. Not anymore.| Foreign Policy
As the Middle East braces for further escalation, what are Tehran’s options?| Foreign Policy
Evan Gershkovich, Paul Whelan, and 14 others are freed from Russian detention in historic multicountry deal.| Foreign Policy
An increasingly desperate country is no place for foreigners.| Foreign Policy
Many countries perceive a double standard in the West’s contrasting responses to Gaza and Ukraine.| Foreign Policy
The former president’s inflammatory comments could have the positive effect of forcing European leaders to contribute more to their continent’s defense.| Foreign Policy
At the national level, parties insist they won’t work or vote with the far-right AfD—but at the local level, it happens all the time.| Foreign Policy
A worker checks a robot arm at a robotics company during a tour in Xianghe county in China's Hebei province on Oct. 22, 2017.| foreignpolicy.com
Adam Tooze is a columnist at Foreign Policy and director of the European Institute at Columbia University. Sign up for Adam’s Chartbook newsletter here.| Foreign Policy
The United States cannot get grand strategy right if it gets economic policy wrong.| Foreign Policy
Once lethal autonomous weapons systems begin to spread, they will be difficult to control.| Foreign Policy
In future wars, U.S. generals want to send robots to face the enemy’s first bullets.| Foreign Policy
Small coalitions are a smart alternative to cumbersome multilateralism and formal alliances.| Foreign Policy
The ICC should prosecute Israelis responsible for bombing hospitals, denying access to medicines and vaccines, and causing excessive civilian harm.| Foreign Policy
Future conflicts will mostly be waged by drug cartels, mafia groups, gangs, and terrorists. It is time to rethink our rules of engagement.| Foreign Policy
The Biden administration’s hesitance to intervene decisively in the Red Sea is a big mistake.| Foreign Policy
Argentina’s new populist president takes after Trump and Bolsonaro by seeking to destroy democracy from within.| Foreign Policy
A nationwide experiment is abandoned after producing only misery.| Foreign Policy
In the rich, lazy, and happy 1990s, Americans imagined a world that could be just like them.| Foreign Policy