List of Geopolitics articles
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A man takes a selfie in front of an abandoned military fort in Kinmen, Taiwan, on Sept. 24. War Over Taiwan Is Nowhere Near Inevitable
Beijing, Taipei, and Washington can find a path forward to peace.
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A man carries his son as they walk past a graffiti on a wall depicting a Ukrainian soldier firing a U.S.-made Javelin portable anti-tank missile system, in Kyiv, on July 29. In Washington, Everyone Wins if Ukraine Wins
How backing Kyiv can bridge the partisan divide and make U.S. foreign policy great again.
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German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio, British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly pose for a photograph during the G-7 summit in Liverpool, England, on Dec. 12, 2021. Turns Out COVID-19 Didn’t Reshape Geopolitics
A profound shock had few lasting effects.
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A U.S. High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) fires during a military exercise. Why Arming Allies Is America’s Smartest, Safest Strategy
Russia’s war has exposed Washington’s reluctance to provide advanced arms as a dangerous misconception.
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Giorgia Meloni, the leader of the far-right Brothers of Italy party, holds a placard reading "Thank You, Italy," after her center-right coalition won a majority of seats in Italy's Parliament, in Rome on Sept. 26. Italy’s Right Is Torn on Ukraine but United on China
Giorgia Meloni has built long-term ties to Taiwan.
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Bahraini, Israeli, U.S., and Emirati leaders attend the signing of the Abraham Accords. Two Years Later, the Abraham Accords Are Losing Their Luster
Divorcing recognition from the Palestinian question has unleashed Israel’s worst angels.
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Chinese President Xi Jinping inspects a British honor guard during a visit to London in 2015. Britain’s Golden Era With China Is Well and Truly Dead
Liz Truss’s administration is the nail in the coffin for friendly ties with Beijing.
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Visitors at a former Finnish fortress Europe Isn’t Bringing the Iron Curtain Down Again
Claims of an East-West split inside the continent are unhelpful.
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Leaders of Shanghai Cooperation Organisation member states pose for a family photo during a summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, on Sept. 16. Kazakhstan Is Breaking Out of Russia’s Grip
The Ukraine war has given Astana a unique chance to frustrate Moscow.
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Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi shakes the hand of Cuban leader Fidel Castro in a black-and-white photo. Why Nonalignment Is Dead and Won’t Return
An old ideology rears its head but offers little for the present age.
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Sebastien-Thibault-US-Grand-Strategy-Illustration-3-2 Revisiting U.S. Grand Strategy After Ukraine
Six months into Russia’s war, seven thinkers outline its impact on foreign policy.
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A mural depicting a female saint-like figure holding a Javelin missile is shown on the side of an apartment block. How to Teach Beijing a Lesson in Ukraine
What China learns from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will inform its decision-making on Taiwan.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks before signing the agreement for Finland and Sweden to join NATO at the White House in Washington on Aug. 9. Here’s What Biden’s New National Security Strategy Should Say
Tossed and rewritten after Russia invaded Ukraine, the document still hasn’t been released.
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Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis (L) and then-Bulgarian Prime Minister Kiril Petkov take part in the inauguration ceremony of the Interconnector Greece-Bulgaria (ICGB) gas pipeline, in Komotini, Greece, on July 8. Energy Is Pulling Bulgaria Back Into Russia’s Orbit
After a break with Moscow, the new caretaker government in Sofia is poised to realign with the Kremlin by signing a new contract with Gazprom.
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Biden, Xi hold virtual summit Biden-Xi Meeting Unlikely to Halt U.S.-Chinese Slide
Compromise is becoming increasingly difficult—especially over Taiwan.