
Lebanon’s Demining Mission Faces Aid Uncertainty
Cuts to foreign assistance and a fragile cease-fire have made the urgent work more dangerous.

Into the Lions’ Den
A scorching legal thriller from Zambia.

Australia’s First Art Film
“Picnic at Hanging Rock” has kept audiences guessing for 50 years.

A New Era of Undersea Conflict Is Here
Enhanced deterrence will require focused American action.

Hollywood Has a New China Problem
‘Ne Zha 2’ shows audiences are growing tired of formulaic Western films.

Do Human Rights Have a Future?
The strategies that once guided advocacy are no longer adequate in a world led by strongmen.

Can Charities Serve Both God and Trump?
Christian groups are being stripped of aid funding by the U.S. government.

The Cost of Ignoring Geopolitics
Like Napoleon and the Ming dynasty, Europe is paying the price for strategic blindness.

The Periodic Table of States
The org chart for a post-Westphalian world.

A Show About Nothing, This Time From Japan
‘Asura’ is impervious to a succinct pitch, which might be why too few people have seen it.

The Novels We’re Reading in March
From a killing in the West Bank to horror in a postapocalyptic convent.

Trump Can Work Dinner Deals Without Leaving Home
The U.S. can lead the way in culinary diplomacy—at Mar-a-Lago.

Mexico Tariffs Put Guacamole on the Chopping Block
How will America’s favorite cuisine fare in Trump’s cartel fight?

Shooting an Elephant in Botswana
Trophy hunting is uncomfortable for some in the West but a lifeline for many locals.

The Forgotten Bombing
Eighty years on, the focus on the atomic bombs overlooks the impact of the Tokyo air raid.