News

The stock market is still rising even as Trump creates more and more economic landmines. And if the U.S. economy falls, the ...
With Russia’s economy buckling and military production struggling, Putin’s newfound interest in diplomacy reflects weaknesses ...
After Trump curbed sales to China of Nvidia’s H20 AI chips in April, the company’s CEO personally convinced Trump to reverse ...
Superman has long represented an idealized postwar U.S. foreign policy. The character’s new film may offer a lesson for what ...
The neutrality that has long benefitted European countries like Switzerland is coming under increased pressure in a new ...
Far from collapsing, the nuclear taboo remains strong and by some indicators is getting stronger as a result of developments ...
Global outrage is continuing to mount following Israel’s targeted killing of four Al Jazeera journalists in a drone strike in ...
Argentina’s Fernandez, Brazil’s Bolsonaro and Colombia’s Uribe have maintained their political influence, despite their ...
Although the atomic bomb hasn’t been used in war since it was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the possibility of its ...
Ramaphosa was already damaged goods after last year’s elections. Now, as South Africa finds itself in choppy waters, more are ...
Greetings, everyone. This is Elliot Waldman, WPR’s new editor-in-chief, writing from my home office in Brooklyn. I wanted to share a few thoughts on my first day on the job.
That’s because starting Monday, I’ll be passing the baton to Elliot Waldman, who will be directing WPR’s coverage of global ...