
A new survey shows that the EU’s big member states want to transfer more powers from Brussels back to national capitals.

A British exit from the EU would confirm Germany’s dominance in the bloc. But it is that dominant position that Berlin does not want and cannot exercise.

Whether or not the UK votes to leave the EU on June 23, the referendum will have serious consequences for the whole union.

If Britain votes to leave the EU on June 23, Brexit will have an impact on the security, economy, and stability of Ireland.

The British will soon decide their future relationship with the EU, but the bloc’s foreign and security policies cannot be held hostage to the result.

In part because the UK is not a member of the eurozone or the Schengen Area, leading on defense policy would increase London’s overall political influence in the EU.

Campaigners who want Britain to leave the European Union misunderstand the basic mechanics of globalization.

European defense cooperation is being spurred more by the convergence of national priorities than by the efforts of institutions like the EU and NATO.

The past can be either sanctified or trivialized. A good policy on monuments needs to navigate between those two extremes.

The U.S. rebalance to the Asia-Pacific is well-known but the United States is far from the only country turning toward the region.