Skip to main content
Foreign Policy Magazine Foreign Policy Magazine
  • Sign In
  • Give a Gift Give a Gift
  • Subscribe Subscribe Upgrade Upgrade
  • Latest
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Podcasts
  • The Magazine
  • Newsletters
  • FP Live
  • Events
  • FP Analytics
Search Icon

latest

Why Security Cooperation With Israel Is a Lose-Lose for Abbas

West Bank coordination is vital to Mahmoud Abbas’s and the Palestinian Authority’s survival. It’s also hugely unpopular among ordinary Palestinians.

Analysis |
Khaled Elgindy

A Nobel Nominee’s Controversial Call for Engagement With the Taliban

Mahbouba Seraj, a rights activist and nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, says there’s no choice now but to talk to Afghanistan’s new rulers.

Analysis |
Lynne O’Donnell

Austria’s About to Give Russia a Soapbox at the OSCE

Vienna will allow sanctioned Russian parliamentarians to attend the next big security meeting on the anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Report |
Amy Mackinnon, Jack Detsch, Robbie Gramer

The Yemeni Employees the U.S. Left Behind

The U.S. Embassy in Sanaa relocated to Saudi Arabia after the Houthi takeover. Local workers who remained felt abandoned.

Report |
Laura Kasinof
See All Stories
  • FP Events
  • FP Studios
  • FP Analytics
  • FP PeaceGames
  • Subscription Services
  • Group Subscriptions
  • Reprint Permissions
  • Writer’s Guidelines
  • FP Guides – Graduate Education
  • FP For Education
  • FP Archive
  • Buy Back Issues
  • Work At FP
  • Meet the Staff
  • Advertising/Partnerships
  • Country Reports
  • Sign In
  • Give a Gift Give a Gift
  • Subscribe Subscribe Upgrade Upgrade
Search Icon

Photo Essays: Mexico’s Bloody Future Mexico’s Bloody Future...

SHARE: Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn Share on WhatsApp Print this page Share via Email
More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War
More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War

Mexico’s Bloody Future

By Lilian Timmermann
| June 28, 2012, 10:19 PM
Start Slideshow View as a List
More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War
More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War

More from FP

The World in Photos This Week

Rock the Vote

Face Off

Preparing for a Very Cold War

Previous Next Close

Mexico’s Bloody Future

Loading graphics
Foreign Policy Magazine
Foreign Policy Magazine
  • FP Events
  • FP Studios
  • FP Analytics
  • FP PeaceGames
  • Subscription Services
  • Group Subscriptions
  • Reprint Permissions
  • Writer’s Guidelines
  • FP Guides – Graduate Education
  • FP For Education
  • FP Archive
  • Buy Back Issues
  • Work At FP
  • Meet the Staff
  • Advertising/Partnerships
  • Country Reports
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Powered by WordPress VIP
© 2023, Graham Digital Holding Company

Welcome to a world of insight.

Make the most of FP.

Explore the benefits of your FP subscription. Explore the benefits included in your subscription.

Stay updated on the topics you care about with email alerts. Sign up below. Stay updated on the topics you care about with email alerts. Sign up below.

Choose a few newsletters that interest you. Get more insight in your inbox.

Here are some we think you might like. Update your newsletter preferences.

  • Morning Brief thumbnail

    Your guide to the most important world stories of the day. Delivered Monday-Friday.

  • Africa Brief thumbnail

    Essential analysis of the stories shaping geopolitics on the continent. Delivered Wednesday.

  • Latin America Brief thumbnail

    One-stop digest of politics, economics, and culture. Delivered Friday.

  • China Brief thumbnail

    The latest news, analysis, and data from the country each week. Delivered Wednesday.

  • South Asia Brief thumbnail

    Weekly update on developments in India and its neighbors. Delivered Thursday.

  • Situation Report thumbnail

    Weekly update on what’s driving U.S. national security policy. Delivered Thursday.

  • A curated selection of our very best long reads. Delivered Wednesday & Sunday.

  • Evening roundup with our editors’ favorite stories of the day. Delivered Monday-Saturday.

  • A monthly digest of the top articles read by FP subscribers.

Keep up with the world without stopping yours. Keep up with the world without stopping yours.

Download the FP mobile app to read anytime, anywhere. Download the new FP mobile app to read anytime, anywhere.

Download on the App Store
  • Read the magazine
  • Save articles (and read offline)
  • Customize your feed
  • Listen to FP podcasts
Download on the Apple App Store
Download on the Google Play Store

Analyze the world’s biggest events. Analyze the world’s biggest events.

Join in-depth conversations and interact with foreign-policy experts with FP Live logo Join in-depth conversations and interact with foreign-policy experts with FP Live logo

More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War
More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War

The Balloon and the U.S.-China Relationship

February 10, 2023  |  11:00am ET
Register now Ask a Question Ask a Question
✓  

Registered

  |   Ask a Question Ask a Question   |   Add to Calendar
  1. Only FP subscribers can submit questions for FP Live interviews.

    Subscribe

    ALREADY AN FP SUBSCRIBER? LOGIN

  2. Only FP subscribers can submit questions for FP Live interviews.

    Subscribe

    ALREADY AN FP SUBSCRIBER? LOGIN

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken canceled a much-anticipated visit to China after the discovery of a Chinese surveillance balloon flying over U.S. territory. The very public spat over ...Show morealleged spying is just the most recent example of strains in the world’s most important relationship.  Beyond the kerfuffle over the balloon, what are the broader impacts on Washington’s China policy? How much of a setback does the incident represent? What are the global ramifications to watch out for?  Join FP’s Ravi Agrawal for a discussion with Emily S. Weinstein, a research fellow at Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology, and James Palmer, a deputy editor at Foreign Policy and the author of FP’s weekly China Brief newsletter. FP subscribers can send in their questions in advance. 

More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War
More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War

Israel’s Democratic Decline

February 13, 2023  |  11:00am ET
Register now Ask a Question Ask a Question
✓  

Registered

  |   Ask a Question Ask a Question   |   Add to Calendar
  1. Only FP subscribers can submit questions for FP Live interviews.

    Subscribe

    ALREADY AN FP SUBSCRIBER? LOGIN

  2. Only FP subscribers can submit questions for FP Live interviews.

    Subscribe

    ALREADY AN FP SUBSCRIBER? LOGIN

The new Israeli government is said to be the most far-right, religiously extreme, and ultranationalist coalition in the country’s history, led by Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-ser...Show moreving prime minister.  Is Israel’s democracy really at risk? What would the government’s planned judicial overhaul mean for Israel’s standing, global cooperation, and economic investments? How does the new government complicate matters for U.S. President Joe Biden’s national security strategy?  Join FP’s Dan Ephron in conversation with Amir Tibon, a senior editor and writer at Israel’s Haaretz newspaper. They’ll discuss Israel’s new far-right government, its plans to overhaul and weaken the judiciary, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ongoing corruption trial, and U.S. policy on Israel under President Joe Biden. 

More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War
More from The World in Photos This WeekRock the VoteFace OffPreparing for a Very Cold War

Do U.S. Sanctions Work?

February 6, 2023 | View Now

When Washington seeks to curtail Beijing’s ambitions or punish Moscow for its war in Ukraine, it often turns to a familiar tool: sanctions. In the last two years, the Biden administration ...Show morehas deployed unprecedented muscle in the form of sanctions as part of its foreign-policy arsenal. The question is whether those sanctions work effectively. In which countries are they achieving their desired impact? Where are they less successful? And how does the use of sanctions impact U.S. power more broadly? Join FP’s Ravi Agrawal in conversation with two experts: Agathe Demarais, the global forecasting director at the Economist Intelligence Unit and author of Backfire: How Sanctions Reshape the World Against U.S. Interests, and Nicholas Mulder, an assistant professor of history at Cornell University and author of The Economic Weapon: The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War. Together, they will explore how sanctions impact U.S. interests today and whether policymakers need to change course.

See what’s trending. See what’s trending.

Most popular articles on FP right now. Most popular articles on FP right now.

A close-up photo of Netanyahu and Putin standing face to face and smiling at each other.
A close-up photo of Netanyahu and Putin standing face to face and smiling at each other.

The Deeper Reason Netanyahu Won’t Arm Ukraine Against Russia

Jerusalem’s ties to Moscow are partly about security. They’re also about illiberalism.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is saluted by members of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is saluted by members of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.

Japan’s Long-Awaited Return to Geopolitics

Tokyo’s abandonment of its post-1945 security stance is another fallout from Russia’s war.

Abbas sits in a chair frowning with his chin resting in his hand.
Abbas sits in a chair frowning with his chin resting in his hand.

Why Security Cooperation With Israel Is a Lose-Lose for Abbas

West Bank coordination is vital to Mahmoud Abbas’s and the Palestinian Authority’s survival. It’s also hugely unpopular among ordinary Palestinians.

Mahbouba Seraj, a journalist and women's rights activist in Afghanistan.
Mahbouba Seraj, a journalist and women's rights activist in Afghanistan.

A Nobel Nominee’s Controversial Call for Engagement With the Taliban

Mahbouba Seraj, a rights activist and nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, says there’s no choice now but to talk to Afghanistan’s new rulers.

My Account