Carnegie Endowment
William Burns, The Atlantic
Foreign policy should work better for America’s middle class.
Paul Lin, Taipei Times
Late last month, Beijing introduced changes to school curricula in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, requiring certain subjects to be taught in Mandarin rather than Mongolian.
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Kamran Bokhari, CGP
The Trump Administration’s agreement with the Afghan Taliban represents the first-ever substantive peace negotiation effort between the United States and a jihadist movement. The intra-Afghan dialogue component of this process will prove to be extremely difficult because the country is about to undergo another regime change. Assuming the negotiations succeed – which is not a certainty – and given that the Taliban want to...
Iain Martin, Times of London
This government is now so in thrall to science that it has lost touch with commercial reality and the need to pay our way
Hannah Rae Armstrong, Afr. Arg.
Philip Stephens, Financial Times
Russia’s Vladimir Putin is backing Donald Trump. So too are a procession of autocrats and despots across the globe. The US president may have few friends among America's usual allies, but he sweeps the board in the contest with Democratic contender Joe Biden for the authoritarian vote.
Michael Doran, Tablet
The Abraham Accords prove that Trump’s majestic robes are real—at least in the Middle East
Ben Judah, The Critic
A new EU is emerging. Will Ursula von der Leyen lead it to triumph or failure?
George Friedman, Geopolitical Futures
M. Smith, St. Bridge
Given China’s expanding influence and continued efforts to accrue greater regional and global power, the so-called Thucydides Trap remains a favorite sound-bite used by many academic, military, and political leaders to summarize the dilemma the United States currently faces in the Indo-Pacific region. This idea holds that a rising China is on an inevitable course for armed conflict with an...
Sam Tangredi, Proceedings
Proceedings recently asked several frequent contributors how the next conflict might start. This essay is the latest in the series.
B. Glaser, M. Mazarr, M. Glennon, R. Haass, D. Sacks, Foreign Affairs
Should American Support for Taiwan Be Ambiguous?