What Western Intervention in Syria Might Look Like
Western powers should be able to achieve air superiority over Syria, although its defenses are formidable.
Western powers should be able to achieve air superiority over Syria, although its defenses are formidable.
The prospects of Scottish independence and a European exit make the English feel more insular.
Ukraine’s otherwise pro-Russian president says association with the EU will modernize his country.
The president cautions against direct military intervention but says Syria’s civil war requires more attention.
Britain and Turkey insist chemical weapons were used in Syria. France urges the world to respond.
European integration may no longer achieve the prosperous and stable continent the United States hope for.
Tunisia’s ruling Islamist party agrees to let more secular politicians into the government to stave off further unrest.
Troops loyal to Bashar Assad push back a rebel offensive in the heartland of his Alawite sect.
Reducing American assistance for a military that is suppressing Islamist dissent might not affect its behavior.
Tighter border checks of Ukrainian exports will not convince Russia’s former satellite state to fall in line.
Lawmakers’ outrage over the Egyptian army’s suppression of the Muslim Brotherhood could force the president’s hand.
The government must cut deeper to keep its shortfall under the European treaty limit.
Spain is accused of raising tension with Britain to divert attention away from its own problems.
Neither the military nor supporters of deposed president Mohamed Morsi are willing to compromise.
Trade has surged since an ASEAN-China trade agreement, but Vietnamese exports are lagging behind.