List of Geopolitics articles
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Oleg Blinov, the 43-year-old Russian captain of the SIRIUS-21 space simulation, shows his T-Shirt promoting the program in Moscow on Oct. 13. U.S. and Russia Find Some Common Ground—in Space
A joint U.S.-Russian experiment to study long-term space travel is a rare bit of cooperation between the two rivals.
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Philippine anti-China potesters Duterte’s Dalliance With China Is Over
The mercurial leader has realigned Manila with Washington as tensions rise in Asia.
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Foreign leaders are seen after signing the Abraham Accords. Why the Abraham Accords Won’t Bring Israeli-Palestinian Peace
Regional cooperation didn’t lead to peace at the 1991 Madrid Conference—and it won’t today.
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Soldiers of the British Indian Army’s Camel Corps stand at attention at an unknown location during World War I. New India Finds an Old Role in a Changing Middle East
This time, India is not supporting another country’s empire but advancing its own interests.
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Iran's President's Ebrahim Raisi remotely addresses the 76th Session of the U.N. General Assembly on September 21, 2021 at U.N. headquarters in New York City. Iran Turns East
Conservative President Ebrahim Raisi, deeply distrustful of the West, looks to deepen ties with China and Russia.
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Then-Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping (left) and then-U.S. Vice President Joe Biden Cleaning Up the Mess of Post-Trump China Strategy
A new book points to how best to handle alienated allies in a growing struggle.
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HMAS Farncomb Collins class submarine Why AUKUS Alarms ASEAN
The bloc is struggling to preserve unity—and can’t decide what to do about the new U.S.-China rivalry.
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A Chinese military band prepares for celebrations. A Dangerous Decade of Chinese Power Is Here
Beijing knows time isn’t on its side and wants to act fast.
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Evacuees from Aghanistan sit inside a military aircraft as they arrive at the airport in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, on Aug. 22. In U.S.-China Standoff, Is America a Reliable Ally?
Sowing doubts about Washington is a potent weapon for Beijing. But even after Afghanistan, U.S. strategy in Asia remains intact.
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Then-U.S. President-elect Joe Biden speaks in Wilmington, Delaware. Biden’s ‘Strategic Competition’ Is a Step Back
A switch from Trump administration language does nothing to clarify U.S. policymaking.
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Onlookers watch the launch of an Indian Space Research Organisation rocket from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota on Feb. 15, 2017. India’s Space Program Inches Closer to America and the Quad
In another strategic shift, Modi has opened space activities to private companies and new allies.
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Scott Morrison and Lloyd Austin attend a meeting. AUKUS Is a Short-Term Mess but a Long-Term Win for Australia
The controversial deal puts Canberra on the right side of history.
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Royal Australian Navy submarine HMAS Sheean China Has Only Itself to Blame for AUKUS
The trilateral partnership was an inevitable result of Beijing’s military growth.
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Royal Australian Navy submarine HMAS Sheean arrives for a logistics port visit on Apr. 1 in Hobart, Australia. Will AUKUS Hit China Where It Hurts?
The submarine deal could reshape the balance of power in the Pacific—and draw Australia into future conflicts.
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French President Emmanuel Macron takes part in a military ceremony. How France Can Avoid Being Reduced to a Symbolic Power
After AUKUS, the French face the same fate on the world stage as the British unless they pursue EU strategic autonomy led from Brussels rather than Paris.