Stephen Wertheim is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a longtime advocate for ending so-called forever wars.
ut more likely, if the worst of the right-wing extremists’ agenda comes to pass, the Biden administration and Netanyahu will enter a bad patch far worse than the Obama years. And Biden—with no choice but to push back—may well find himself in the middle of a nasty fight that he doesn’t want or need.

The climate and energy policies of the United States and African countries should build on three shared interests—and address three strategic tensions.
Aaron David Miller on The Briefing with Steve Scully.
The aspirational language in the AI roadmap forged by the EU and United States under the Trade and Technology Council is welcome. But crucially, the initiative should align the EU and U.S. positions on the technical dimensions of AI and setting global technological standards.

Based on preliminary research and stakeholder discussions, this article features four areas of biosafety and biosecurity that could potentially become concrete agenda items for collaboration between the United States and India under the iCET.

The chancellor has rescued his country’s reputation with its allies while upending its relationship with Moscow.
Sophia Besch sits down with Stewart to unpack the recent announcement of Germany supplying Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine and the future of European defense strategy.

The familiar Anglo-American model of power projection from a far-flung constellation of military bases is not the only—nor even the likely—pathway for China to achieve its objectives of building a world-class military and becoming a great maritime power.

Yoon Suk-yeol’s call to develop nuclear weapons is fundamentally a call for South Korea to know it can protect itself in a changing security environment.