Podcast: The Lesson of Smoot-Hawley The Lesson of Smoot-Hawley...
Unless Canada’s prime minister strikes a trade deal on his own terms, Donald Trump’s bullying won't stop.
What happens when private firms have cyberweapons as powerful as those owned by governments?
Increased interest in the continent’s real estate and resources will enhance the bargaining power of governments there—but they need to bargain for the right things.
The Kremlin understands that the best way to undermine the West is through its soft underbelly—the Middle East.
Letting U.S. tourists back into the country would be a small but potent move toward peace.
Harsh rhetoric and trade wars have tarnished a once-promising relationship.
Nicolas Hulot is a combination of Donald Trump and Al Gore—and the French president will regret ever putting him in his Cabinet.
U.S. and U.N. diplomats overlooked atrocity amid hopes of democracy.
When the president eventually exits the White House, the rest of us will quickly have to make sense of the world he's left behind.
The United States has spent far more time obscuring its role in the Saudi-led war in Yemen than in explaining any rationale for it.
Kofi Annan was the epitome of international diplomacy—which is why he was both an inspiration and a disappointment.
On the podcast: The last big American trade war was in 1930. It ended badly for everyone.
Family reunions in North Korea, Independence Day in Ukraine, and Eid celebrations around the world.
Venezuelans fleeing their country’s economic crisis increasingly face border crackdowns and violence as they traverse Latin America.
AI will change everything. Workers must adapt — or else.
The tragic — and totally avoidable — self-destruction of one of the world’s richest oil economies.
Gig work offers a leg up in the developing world.
Job insecurity has always been a fact of life. Just ask chimney sweeps, lectors, and telephone operators.