Lame-duck periods are meant to be inconsequential, but on Thursday afternoon at the White House, U.S. President Joe Biden got a chance to present one of the most important breakthroughs ...
Russia released Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan on Thursday as part of a multicountry exchange of 24 individuals in the largest prisoner swap ...
In January 2020, Mexico made history as the first Latin American country to adopt a feminist foreign policy. Pioneered by Sweden six years earlier in 2014, feminist foreign policy (FFP) ...
More than a dozen Palestinian factions, including bitter rivals Fatah and Hamas, signed a joint declaration in Beijing on Tuesday vowing to form an interim unity government, although experts are ...
Iranian President-elect Masoud Pezeshkian has signaled an openness to resuming dialogue with Washington on nuclear matters, and senior figures in his administration have indicated their readiness to even negotiate with ...
The Biden administration is launching a new initiative to end the war in Sudan—one of the world’s deadliest conflicts—with fresh peace talks following months of behind-the-scenes negotiations, according to five ...
Few countries are better equipped to interpret the U.S.-China relationship than Singapore. The small but wealthy city-state has extensive contacts with Washington and Beijing and understands both sides. It knows ...
To the surprise of many, a relatively unknown candidate won Iran’s presidential elections. Masoud Pezeshkian, a parliamentarian and former health minister who had next to no name recognition outside Iran ...
Welcome to Foreign Policy’s South Asia Brief. The highlights this week: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits Moscow, a former prime minister of Pakistan forms a new political party, and massive ...
Welcome back to World Brief, where we’re looking at the 75th anniversary NATO summit, the United Kingdom ending its Rwanda deportation policy, and a defense pact between Japan and the ...