Leaving Afghanistan
What happens to the country and its people after the forever war ends?
Review: How the United States Terrorized Itself How the United States Terrorized Itself...
A few weeks after militants took over Kabul and the country, Afghanistan has gone back to a past it didn’t miss.
“Reign of Terror” is an important, heated look at America’s post-9/11 wars.
The lone superpower inadvertently taught the rest of the world how to fight it—and win.
We asked seven of our contributors what’s different after 20 years.
A historic breakthrough has been dragged into partisan politics.
Beijing thinks the junta will win—but it’s not sure.
The legislation could also force a ruling on whether the military junta committed genocide against the Rohingya.
Meanwhile, Nigeria teeters on the path to failed statehood.
Washington and Beijing need to protect the global seabed—and address the staggering loophole in greenhouse gas reporting.
Beijing has dropped its own usual excuse to oppose a coup for practical reasons.
A new type of fear gripped the United States 20 years ago—and never stopped spreading.
It will take an all-out diplomatic blitz to block the director-general’s impending reelection.
What the world has misunderstood about the German chancellor.
If he succeeds, the president will cast 40 years of economic doctrine on history’s ash heap. But that’s a big if.
The amateur painter still shows an eye for spin.
One word perfectly captures the clash between Nigeria’s leaders and its booming young population.
Even as disasters strike daily, politics will keep obstructing solutions.
In Nigeria’s carefully designed capital, urban enforcers harass ordinary citizens.
North Korea’s resumed activity at Yongbyon has reawakened calls for Seoul to go nuclear.
The extremist group seeks to destabilize South and Central Asia.
Zaki Anwari represented what a free Afghanistan could achieve. His gruesome death is a vivid reminder of the human toll of U.S. abandonment.
Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya didn’t set out to challenge a brutal dictatorship.
One of the regions hardest hit by climate change is also one least equipped to deal with it.
Putin’s pursuit of influence, arms sales, and mercenary meddling in the Central African Republic has left Moscow mired in a quagmire.
The Taliban’s takeover in Afghanistan, earthquake devastation in Haiti, and extreme weather around the world.
In some Afghan towns, women are fleeing ahead of insurgent takeovers.