The Price of Withdrawal from Afghanistan
If the security transition to national authorities fails, Afghanistan’s women have the most to lose.
If the security transition to national authorities fails, Afghanistan’s women have the most to lose.
Economic growth and stock markets are up while government debts and poverty are down.
A big win for Shinzō Abe’s Liberal Democrats in the capital may invigorate his economic reform effort.
If the north of England is revitalized, it would become less dependent on both the south and public spending.
Whereas Americans care about jobs, their president is working on climate change and gun control.
The former president may be the only man who’s able to unite conservatives. What will they do without him?
The premier doesn’t want to hurt his party in the election but postponing reforms could do just that.
Britain’s chancellor says he can “turn this country round” if it sticks to his economic plan.
The north of England is averse to voting Conservative whereas Labour struggles in the south.
One of the bloc’s founding members believes the time of ever-closer union is over.
Likely prime ministerial candidate Matteo Renzi seeks to imitate Tony Blair’s centrist socialism.
While the United States are concerned about the war, Afghans, including the Taliban, look toward the peace.
Russian economic policy seems increasingly statist under Vladimir Putin’s third term.
Conservative prime minister Antonis Samaras is left with a three-seat majority in the legislature.
The Central Asian country ends the United States’ lease on a transit center that is critical to the Afghan war effort.