Foreign Policy Magazine - home page
Primary featured article section
Trump Is Not a Revolutionary
Not all political upheaval is created equal.
Why Medicaid Is Republicans’ Third Rail
On the chopping block is a “big government” program that covers medical costs for millions of Americans.
Trump’s Deportation Machine Takes Shape
The White House is using client states to carry out illegal and unconstitutional expulsions.
The Latest Russian Missile Is Bad News for NATO
Oreshnik is a different beast from its predecessors.
Asia & the Pacific
Can South Korea Join the Frontier AI Race?
China
What China Wants From Iran Nuclear Talks
Middle East & Africa
The Global South Must Back Sudan’s ICJ Case Against the UAE
Europe
The Periodic Table of States
Americas
Will Trump Use the Federal Reserve as Leverage, Too?
In the Magazine
America Is Locked in a New Class War
Money and education no longer explain voting patterns.
Trump Is Ushering In a More Transactional World
Countries and companies with clout might thrive. The rest, not so much.
Hollywood Has a New China Problem
‘Ne Zha 2’ shows audiences are growing tired of formulaic Western films.
Updates on U.S.-Canada Tensions, New Tariffs
Reports and analysis from staff and contributors.
FP Live Events
Join in-depth conversations and interact with foreign-policy experts. Upcoming Past Insider Access About
How Europe Can Navigate the Trump Challenge
Two former foreign ministers, Spain’s Arancha González and Lithuania’s Gabrielius Landsbergis, on the changes European leaders can make as the Trump administration upends the... READ MORE
Subscribers’ Picks
How Trump Is Killing the U.S. Defense Industry
It turns out that abandoning allies and tossing out security guarantees is bad for business.
Europe Is Now Led by Its North
The Nordics and Baltics are together inspiring visions of a stronger continent.
Trump Is Trying to Remake the United Nations
Washington has signaled that it wants the international body to focus on preserving peace, but it could be looking to rubber-stamp its bilateral priorities.
Trump’s Concert of Kingpins Won’t Work
A globe carved up by strongmen isn’t any world order at all.
The Novels We’re Reading in March
From a killing in the West Bank to horror in a postapocalyptic convent.
In Case You Missed It
A selection of paywall-free articles
America’s Zero-Sum Economics Doesn’t Add Up
Industrial policy and subsidies are nothing new and can be useful. But shutting off from the world will have consequences.
-
A photo illustration shows Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden posing on pedestals atop the bipolar world order, with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and Russian President Vladamir Putin standing below on a gridded floor.
Visual Stories
The Mood on the Front Line, Three Years On
Ukrainian troops watch with anxiety as the United States moves closer to talks with Russia over the war.
How Tourism Trapped Tibet
The region is becoming a theme park for the Chinese nation.