The recent meeting between outgoing U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Lima, Peru offered a stark illustration of the divergent priorities and perspectives shaping the fraught U.S.-China relationship. While the Biden administration’s...
Foreign Policy
Syrian Civil War Redux
by Dan McKnight | Dec 3, 2024 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
You turn your head for one moment to focus on turkey and stuffing, and all of the sudden the Syrian Civil War restarts. The conflict which erupted during the 2011 Arab Spring, and which over the course of a decade killed over half a million people, has been static...
Donald Trump’s Economic Wars Serve No Purpose
by Daniel Larison | Dec 2, 2024 | Economics, Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
The incoming Donald Trump administration seems determined to wage as many economic wars as it can. The president-elect reportedly plans to pursue another “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran with the goal of “bankrupting” the country. Now he is threatening new...
New Russian Missile Delivers Six Warheads and Three Messages
by Ted Snider | Nov 27, 2024 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
On November 21, just two days after Ukraine acted for the first time on American permission to fire Western supplied long-range missiles deeper into Russia, Russia launched a missile attack on a military base in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro. That base houses the...
Will Armageddon Be Joe Biden’s Final Legacy?
by Ted Galen Carpenter | Nov 25, 2024 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
When the Soviet Union dissolved in late 1991, the world seemed poised for a new, more peaceful era no longer haunted by the fear of a nuclear Armageddon. The principal successor state from the wreckage of the USSR was a noncommunist Russia that was intent on becoming...
All Risk, Little Gain: U.S. Authorizes Long-Range Strikes into Russia
by Ted Snider | Nov 21, 2024 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
On November 17, the United States told the world what they told Ukraine three days earlier: Ukriane had permission to fire American supplied long-range missiles deeper into Russian territory. Not much needs to be said about the risks involved in the decision. They are...
Ukraine’s 1,000 Days of War
by Brad Pearce | Nov 20, 2024 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
Tuesday, November 19 marked 1,000 days since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, though Ukraine’s civil war has been ongoing for over ten years. President-elect Donald Trump has a clear mandate to try and end the war, but with staffing picks like Marco Rubio as secretary of...
A Political Price is Being Paid for Being in the West
by Ted Snider | Nov 15, 2024 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
The concept of “the West” is a complex and difficult one. At times it excludes countries in the geographical west, like Cuba and Venezuela and sometimes Brazil. At times it includes countries not in the geographical west, like Japan and Australia. As Richard Sakwa has...