
Joe Biden will be America’s next president, but relieved European leaders are deluded if they expect a return to the past for the transatlantic relationship.

In an interview, Karim Sadjadpour focuses on how the Biden administration is likely to deal with Iran, and much more.

Nuclear risk reduction efforts in the Euro-Atlantic should begin with the Russian Federation and the United States ensuring they retain what is left of nuclear arms control and transparency.

The rising importance of cloud services and cloud service providers (CSPs) in society has caught the attention of policymakers and regulators seeking to reap the benefits of this new technology while managing attendant risks.

After the firestorm of polarization of recent months, can post-election America heal its divisions? Sobering portents of continued polarization point to the need to manage rather than try to cure the disease.

As long as the order can be certified as coming from the president, and as long as military officials involved in implementing the decision do not object to the order as violating the law of armed conflict, U.S. forces are expected to carry out the order.

Middle Eastern leaders have varied responses to Joe Biden’s victory in the U.S. presidential election. But what they are saying reveals less than what they are doing.

Biden’s election as president won’t change much between the United States and Iran. Can his administration do more than bide its time?

Trump toughened America’s approach to China, but his administration was long on attitude and short on strategy. Many Asian governments want a more systematic approach from Biden.

Latin America will desperately need the support of the United States to deal with its worst crisis in a century, while the White House will be busy tending to more critical geopolitical emergencies.