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Is There Such Thing as a Global South?
The category is emotionally powerful but fundamentally flawed.

The Climate Envoys Who Could
John Kerry and Xie Zhenhua have forged a close working relationship as the superpowers they represent have drifted apart.

The Global Credibility Gap
No one power or group can uphold the international order anymore—and that means much more geopolitical uncertainty ahead.

How Will This War End? How Can the Next One be Prevented?
FP asks experts two questions about the fighting between Israelis and Palestinians.
Asia & the Pacific

India’s BJP Scores as National Elections Loom
China

China Hawks Are Putting the Green Transition at Risk
Middle East & Africa

New Lifesaving Malaria Vaccines Need to Be Available Now
Europe

The Shortest Path to Victory in Ukraine Goes Through Crimea
Americas

Commerce Needs Cash to Curb China’s Chips
In the Magazine


A New Multilateralism
How the United States can rejuvenate the global institutions it created.
NATO’s Remarkable Revival
But the bloc’s future could look very different from its past.
Weekend Reads

What Ridley Scott’s ‘Napoleon’ Gets Wrong About War
The film’s ideas have poisoned military thinking for centuries.
Subscribers’ Picks

Chinese Hospitals Are Housing Another Deadly Outbreak
Authorities are covering up the spread of antibiotic-resistant pneumonia.

Henry Kissinger, Colossus on the World Stage
The late statesman was a master of realpolitik—whom some regarded as a war criminal.

The West’s False Choice in Ukraine
The crossroads is not between war and compromise, but between victory and defeat.

The Masterminds
Washington wants to get tough on China, and the leaders of the House China Committee are in the driver’s seat.
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The Song and Dance of American Secrecy
Espionage law hasn’t changed much since William Howard Taft—yet recent presidents have wielded it as a cudgel more than ever before.
Visual Stories

How China and the U.S. Are Competing on Trade
Most big economies are inextricably tied to both Washington and Beijing.

King of the Dammed
Turkish President Erdogan’s mega-infrastructure projects are enriching construction companies while reshaping his country’s waterscape for the worse.