The Economist
If Alberto Fernndez, the newly elected president, is to succeed, he will have to govern very differently from the Peronists of the past
Michael Beckley, Foreign Affairs
Beijing's newfound assertiveness is a sign of desperation, not ambition.
Michael Rubin, Washington Examiner
Abu Bakr al Baghdadi may be dead and Iraqis across the sectarian spectrum are grateful but a more immediate crisis now looms in Iraq: Protests again spread across Baghdad and major cities in Iraq in recent days.
Catherine Putz, The Diplomat
If it walks like a president, talks like a president, and has powers on par with a president
Alex Kane, Guardian
For Arlene Foster's party, Brexit is less important than protecting Northern Ireland??s union with Great Britain, says the Ulster Unionist party??s former director of communications Alex Kane
Gideon Rachman, Financial Times
After Brexit, the UK could drift into an antagonistic relationship with its continental neighbours
Candace Rondeaux, WP Review
Anyone following the ongoing controversies over Afghanistan's recent presidential election will understandably have a sense of déjà vu. Nearly a month after Afghans voted on Sept. 28, not only is there no clear winner, there is not even any word on when preliminary results will be announced.
Benedict Mander, Financial Times
Argentina's Mauricio Macri has conceded defeat in Sunday's presidential elections, ushering in a return to power for the populist Peronist party that has governed Latin America's third-largest economy for all but six of the past 30 years.
S. Sciorilli Borrelli, Pol. EU
Election in Umbria delivers major blow to Italy's governing coalition.