American Policy in Tatters as Egypt’s Morsi is Charged
If the Muslim Brotherhood is excluded from politics, it could force the Obama Administration’s hands.
If the Muslim Brotherhood is excluded from politics, it could force the Obama Administration’s hands.
Few Conservatives and Liberal Democrats would like it but they might not have much of a choice.
Retired general James Mattis warns lawmakers that intervention in Syria’s civil war won’t be quick and easy.
The president finally accepts a cabinet reshuffle that could have ended the crisis two weeks ago.
The president can ill afford to alienate his own base by proposing sweeping changes to the nation’s pension system.
Radical Islamists should not deter the West from backing rebels that want a democratic Syria.
The ruling right-wing parties are unable to form a “national salvation” pact with the opposition Socialists.
The American secretary of state manages to get the two sides talking again.
The world is awaiting economic reforms while China frets about a more assertive Japan in East China Sea disputes.
Many outlets make Putin seem worse than he is while glossing over the intolerant tendencies of his opponent.
America’s and Britain’s top military officials fear the tide in Syria’s civil war is shifting in the regime’s favor.
The UK has abandoned plans to arm the rebels fighting Bashar al-Assad.
A robust troop presence in Europe allows America to respond rapidly to threats on the continent’s periphery.
The region’s turmoil is reminiscent of the thirty years of political and religious strife in seventeenth-century Europe.
The Italian prime minister agrees the EU needs to change.