A discussion of the blockbuster report by the Washington Post, revealing hundreds of scathing interviews with U.S. officials involved in the war in Afghanistan.
In Algeria, former Prime Minister Abdelmadjid Tebboune has been declared the winner of Thursday's presidential vote.
Yezid Sayigh has spent many years closely examining the interdependence of the military and the economy in Egypt. He explains why investors are skating on thin ice putting their money into country and why the military is hiding in the TV market.
NATO played a pivotal role in the arms control treaties that kept a lid on the tensions of the Cold War. But arms control treaties are now expiring.
Recent meetings between U.S. officials and Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov is playing right into Russia’s hands.
Iran is in the middle of the deadliest protests since the 1979 revolution. What do they mean for the Iranian government?
A discussion about the protests in Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon.
Kim Jong Un is savvy, he is smart, and he has basically ruled North Korea with an iron fist since the summer of 2011.
The assumption underlying the Iran policy is that by putting maximum pressure on Iran, that will ultimately bring Iran back to the negotiating table. The counterassumption was that, actually, that approach might lead to even worse and more provocative behavior.
A discussion of the history of the Kim dynasty in North Korea.