-
+1 +1Venezuelan border with Colombia to be reopened for 15 hours
Yesterday, presidents Nicolas Maduro and Juan Manuel Santos met, and agreed to allow the Venezuelan border with Colombia to be reopened for 15 hours
-
+9 +1'We Don’t Need to Be Alone’: A Political Shift Has Poland Assessing Its Values
Mayor Rafal Dutkiewicz of Wroclaw cites history ancient and modern to argue that Europe is good for Poland.
-
+30 +10Kissinger hindered US effort to end mass killings in Argentina, according to files
Newly declassified files show the former secretary of state jeopardized efforts to crackdown on bloodshed by Argentina’s 1976-83 military dictatorship. By Uki Goñi.
-
+5 +1What Russia’s Ministry of Doping Tells Us About Putin
Vitaly Mutko may be responsible for one of the worst scandals in Olympic history. Here’s why he still has his job — for now.
-
+8 +1The Ghosts of Smolensk
How the divisive legacy of late President Lech Kaczynski still poisons Poland’s politics.
-
+12 +1Donald Trump’s NATO comments are the scariest thing he’s said
They literally make nuclear war more likely.
-
+3 +1Clinton Campaign: Russia Rigging US Election by Exposing How We Rigged Election
Wait, what? By Nick Bernabe.
-
+18 +2What If Russia Invaded the Baltics—and Donald Trump Was President?
A former NATO general imagines a frightening scenario.
-
+9 +2Donald Trump’s Appeal to Russia Shocks Foreign Policy Experts
“Being shocked into speechlessness is not the sort of thing you’re really used to in the business of foreign policy analysis,” said one expert after Donald J. Trump called on Russia to hack Mrs. Clinton’s email server.
-
Analysis+2 +1
With each attack, France nudges rightward on security
Spate of terrorism brings ‘Israeli model’ into the French political debate.
-
+18 +2Why Putin hates Hillary
Behind the allegations of a Russian hack of the Democrats is the Kremlin leader’s fury at Clinton for challenging the fairness of Russian elections.
-
+39 +4Donald Trump Challenges Russia to Find Hillary Clinton’s Missing Emails
Donald J. Trump said Wednesday that he hoped Russia had hacked Hillary Clinton’s email, essentially sanctioning a foreign power’s cyberspying of a secretary of state’s correspondence.
-
+3 +1How DNC, Clinton campaign attacks fit into Russia’s cyber-war strategy
Was it to cover for hack, or part of info-war on NATO? Putin won't tell.
-
+4 +1The Unlikely Origins of Russia’s Manifest Destiny
How an obscure academic and a marginalized philosopher captured the minds of the Kremlin and helped forge the new Russian nationalism.
-
+3 +1How to Start a Clash of Civilizations
If the Islamic State wants to renew the Crusades by attacking churches and killing priests, Catholic France won’t run from the fight.
-
+3 +1Why Putin’s DNC Hack Will Backfire
The Kremlin has a track record of ineptitude when it comes to meddling in foreign elections. And this gambit against Hillary may not play out…
-
+26 +8All Cards on the Table: First-Use of Nuclear Weapons
Recent news that President Obama may be considering changes in nuclear deterrence policy has caused a storm of speculation as to whether the time is right for the U.S. government to declare a no first-use policy… By Al Mauroni and David Jonas.
-
+30 +7Iran reportedly destroys 100,000 satellite dishes, saying they cause divorce and addiction
Iran has wrecked 100,000 "morally harmful" satellite dishes and receivers, AFP reported Sunday, citing an Iranian news agency. "The truth is that most satellite channels... deviate the society's morality and culture," General Mohammad Reza Naghdi, the head of Iran's Basij militia was quoted as saying. "What these televisions really achieve is increased divorce, addiction and insecurity in society." Naghdi said a million Iranians had "voluntarily" handed in their satellite equipment.
-
+1 +1What's next for Turkey after Failed Coup d’Etat?
The mutual fear of a perceived violent mob and an imperious, arrogant, urban elite more than anything has worsened divisions in society.
-
+4 +1Arming for Deterrence: How Poland and NATO Should Counter a Resurgent Russia
The Warsaw Summit is a watershed moment for the NATO Alliance. The twenty-eight member states have a unique opportunity to demonstrate NATO’s enduring relevance and ability to defend Europe and the transatlantic area by laying down a marker to build strong and effective conventional and nuclear deterrence. Poland, in particular, should play an important role in this.
Submit a link
Start a discussion




















