Jessica Elgot & Rowena Mason, Guardian
Anna Soubry, Sarah Wollaston and Heidi Allen leave party, citing Brexit and lurch to right
Stephen Bush, New Statesman
Rashmee Roshan Lall, The National
India and Pakistan have returned to a level of hostility not seen in decades after the attacks in Pulwama in Kashmir
Sumit Ganguly, Foreign Policy
India and the United States must pressure Pakistan to stop sponsoring terrorism, but New Delhi could do much more to quell the anger fueling unrest
M. Freund, Jer. Post
As two democracies in a sea of tyranny, India and Israel face a similar threat from Islamic jihadist terrorism.
Jawed Naqvi, Dawn
There are less demonstrative ways to share grief than to shout inanities at the top of one's voice against a real or
Happymon Jacob, The Hindu
Every response is fraught with uncertainty. Can the government take such risks before an election?
Pres. Paul Kagame with Pamella Sittoni, The East African
'What hurts is keeping quiet. And, of course, things are not improving because of that.'
Eoin Drea, Irish Times
Britian's departure from the EU offers Ireland an opportunity to emerge from its neighbour's shadow
Francisco Toro, Washington Post
Omar, and all Americans rightly appalled by the use of such terror tactics, ought to be on the side of the victim's families.
Stanislav Andreychuk, Riddle
Stanislav Andreychuk on the Russian authorities' attempts to control the country's youth
Amy Mackinnon, Foreign Policy
As Brexit looms, Edinburgh may forge its own path on the world stage.
Tanja Mller, WPR
Timothy Ash, Kyiv Post
Ukraine votes in a March 31 presidential election, with a likely second round runoff vote three weeks later on April 21, and then parliamentary elections are due by October. I thought it perhaps useful to discuss how a foreign investor views this set of elections, and the Ukraine story, in a question-and-answer format. Q: What
Fandos & Mazzetti, NYT
House Democrats say a proposed nuclear power venture in Saudi Arabia could expose conflicts of interests in the Trump administration and possible violations of law.
Tridivesh Singh Maini, NoL
Recent days have been witness to important events; The Middle East Conference at Warsaw, co-hosted by Poland and the US State Department on February 13 & 14, and the Munich Conference. Differen
Michael Rubin, The Hill
Flooding Mogadishu with cash fuels corruption that undermines its recovery.
Giles Tremlett, Guardian
Internal strife has left room for the far right to creep in, says Madrid-based writer Giles Tremlett
Justin Sherman, Foreign Policy
The British model of filtering data rather than content can protect citizens while preserving an open internet.
Leonid Bershidsky, Bloom. View
Despite cracks in Europe-U.S. relations, Russia remains too untrustworthy a partner.
Thomas de Waal, Politico EU
Informal government and behind-the-scenes power plays are more dangerous than Moscow.
Jacob Shapiro, Geopolitical Futures
Shimon Samuels, Jerusalem Post
The call has been addressed to party and municipal authorities in large cities across France, including in Lyons, Marseille and Nice.
Alex Massie, Spectator
The first thing to note is that it's not about policy. The not-so secret seven MPs who left the Labour party this morning have not changed their policy preferences. They have not become Tories. Nor
Tom Watson, Labour List
Tom Watson has released a video reacting to the news that seven MPs have quit the Labour Party