The Biden Agenda
A sortable guide to the administration’s policies—and the people putting them into practice.
Obituary: Donald Rumsfeld, Iraq War Architect, Dead at 88 Donald Rumsfeld, Iraq War Architect, Dead ...
The two-time defense secretary’s hubris helped shape twin quagmires for U.S. forces.
With more weapons likely, it’s time to go back to arms talks.
Snazzy weapons mean a lot less if you don’t have friends.
One hundred years since its founding, the party commands more control inside China than ever before.
Washington’s myopic focus on Berlin and Brussels is a grave mistake.
This year, it plans to become a republic—here’s why, and what that means for others in the region.
A U.S. State Department czar should lead a campaign to stop China and Russia from gaining control of multilateral agencies.
And why it’s not enough to recover its history.
Loss of privilege has driven an ugly turn to the hard right.
Volunteers struggle with trauma and loss after months of efforts.
Biden opened the door for talks with Kim Jong Un, but Pyongyang is playing hard to get.
Scientists say it’s safe for vaccinated people to travel, but the politics of fear is keeping borders closed.
France developed a plan to save its former colony. It went wrong from the start.
The blockchain holds the key to sustainable development for the world’s poorest people.
Various countries have outlawed the practice—but the laws don’t seem to be working.
Sitagu Sayadaw once protested for democracy but now preaches nationalism.
To understand the administration’s new stance, look to the South Korean semiconductor firm Magnachip.
Populist politicians love to belittle experts, but when it’s a matter of life and death, the precautionary principle and expertise are what counts.
Backed by the G-7, Japan’s prime minister will likely go ahead with the games. How they play out will determine his survival.
How our understanding—or misunderstanding—of other countries’ perspectives shapes global order.
We asked 25 experts to grade the administration’s start on foreign policy
The U.S. treasury secretary and the Italian prime minister have spent decades shaping this economy. But can they control what comes next?
What the new president really thinks about the military—and what the military really thinks about him.
Just like Roosevelt, Biden must show that government still works.
Ignoring the central role of race and colonialism in world affairs precludes an accurate understanding of the modern state system.
International relations theorists once explored racism. What has the field lost by giving that up?
Tangled questions of Asian identity need answers that aren’t defined by U.S. terminology alone.
Nearly half of international relations scholars spent more time in class on race and racial justice—but with key demographic differences.
A devastating condominium collapse in the United States, a deadly airstrike in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, and a respite for wild elephants in China.
The “change government” of Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid promises little more than an end to Netanyahu.