Robert Carlin, 38 North
A. Radin & R. Cohen, WOTR
They've been called political warfare, measures short of war, gray zone warfare, and a host of other terms. Whatever the preferred term of art, Russia has
Daniel DePetris & Richard Sokolsky, CNN
Ahead of this week's Trump-Kim summit in Vietnam, Daniel R. DePetris and Richard Sokolsky write that the wrong standard to assess success is North Korea agreeing to denuclearize. It is certainly necessarily for peace and security, but it is not enough.
N. Clark, The Sun
FURIOUS Labour MPs have lashed out at Jeremy Corbyn's calls for a second referendum warning 4.5million Labour Brexit voters will NEVER forgive him for it. Voting to overturn the refer
Asad Hashim, Al Jazeera
India claims airstrikes destroyed 'Jaish-e-Mohammed camp', while Pakistan says munitions struck uninhabited countryside.
Simon Wren-Lewis, New Statesman
I fully share the anguish of so many people over the madness of Brexit. All the evidence points to not leaving the EU, and the reasons given for leaving are generally vague or false. The vote on which this crazy policy is based was deeply flawed. As an economist I can clearly see the damage Brexit is doing, and will do. While I could see the rationale for Labour's triangulation strategy over Brexit before and immediately after the 2017 election, it stopped making... Читать дальше...
Harry Kazianis, National Interest
Unfortunately, we can assume that most European societies would not behave differently, were they facing similar circumstances today.
Matthew Zweig, RealClearWorld
Adam Day, World Politics Review
"The most important political event of the twentieth century," wrote Irving Kristol in 1976, "is not the crisis of capitalism but the death of socialism." Plenty of self-described Marxist and socialist regimes existed throughout the world, Kristol recognized. It was rather the ideas behind such regimes that had reached a moral and intellectual endpoint. Nor was this passing away entirely to be cheered. "For with the passing of the socialist ideal," Kristol went on... Читать дальше...
Neil Hauer, Moscow Times
The deportation of the Chechens and Ingush turns 75, with little sign of justice.
Matthew Continetti, Free Beacon
"The most important political event of the twentieth century," wrote Irving Kristol in 1976, "is not the crisis of capitalism but the death of socialism."
Alex Shephard, New Republic
Bernie Sanders rehabilitated the word. Now Trump is using it as a slurand the press is following his lead.
Anthony Cordesman, CSIS
NATO has started 2019 with yet another round of growing divisions between the U.S. and Europe over what are meaningless arguments about burdening sharing. It is time to put an end to one of the most pointlessly divisive debates in NATO's history, and focus on what is really needed to deter Russia and deal effectively with the key threat to Western security. The United States and its European allies have fixated on one of the most meaningless and truly stupid strategic debates in modern history... Читать дальше...
Tom Rogan, Washington Examiner
On Sunday, Russian state television offered an absurd argument as to how Russia would destroy the U.S. in a nuclear war.
Robert Shrimsley, Financial Times
Secretly hoping the leader will cost his party electoral success is not much of a strategy
Polly Toynbee, Guardian
Jeremy Corbyn has at last promised a public vote. He needs to campaign hard for remain, says Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee
Rachel Sylvester, Times of London
Theresa May is the political equivalent of Maurizio Sarri, the Chelsea manager who tried and failed to substitute his goalkeeper in the Carabao cup final match on Sunday. Like the football coach...
Ivan Briscoe, Foreign Affairs
Maduro's supporters in government claim they are united behind him. But some suggest that the Chavista leadership can and even should change. Is there room for compromise?
Amanda Sloat, Brookings
With barely a month remaining before the United Kingdom is scheduled to leave the European Union (EU), London is no closer to having a ratified deal, an agreement to extend negotiations, or preparations in place to manage a hard exit.
Pieter Cleppe, Spectator
As 29 March gets nearer and Theresa May tries to get a Brexit deal through parliament, preparations for no deal continue in both London and mainland Europe. It's been well-documented that the UK
Eli Lake, Bloomberg View