Exporting the Islamic Revolution As Israel pushes deeper into Gaza and prepares for war with Hezbollah in the north, “Iran’s campaign against the Jewish state and the U.S. is approaching an inflection point,” warns Seth Cropsey in the WSJ. Mr. Cropsey, president of the Yorktown Institute, warns that a new strategy is needed in Jerusalem […]
Germany Should’ve Listened
Trump Told You So The world does not seem to be going Germany’s way. Walter Russel Mead reports that Germany just authorized the use of cannabis and, as Mr. Mead notes in the WSJ, Germany’s leadership is going to need all the mellow it can get. Being higher than a kite might help Germany forget […]
Bending Foreign Policy
“Uncommitted” Come this November, Michigan again will be a contested state. In 2020, President Joe Biden beat Donald Trump by only three percentage points, reports the editors at the WSJ. The Democratic left is trying to send President Biden a message about the war in Gaza, and the effort already seems to be changing U.S. […]
Biden’s Russia Disconnect
At the Cato Institute, our friend and former colleague, Justin Logan, Cato’s Director of Defense and Foreign Policy Studies, explains why Joe Biden’s newest sanctions on Russia will probably fail the same way his previous sanctions have done. Logan writes: The Biden administration marked the two‐year anniversary of the war in Ukraine by announcing a new round […]
Is It Time to Dollarize Argentina?
President Javier Milei of Argentina has been hit with his first legislative defeat since taking office. At the Cato Institute, Daniel Raisbeck, Gabriela Calderon de Burgos and Caleb O. Brown discuss Milei’s plan to dollarize Argentina’s economy in the Cato Daily Podcast. Listen below:
Can Ukraine Win the War with Its Own Weapons?
In a discussion of the future of the war in Ukraine in Foreign Policy magazine, Fraz-Stefan Gady, a consulting senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, discusses a much-overlooked part of Ukraine’s ability to defend itself—the country’s own weapons production. Rather than relying on foreign aid, Gady explains, Ukraine can make many weapons […]
Would Russia Risk a War Against NATO?
In Foreign Policy, Jack Detsch and Robbie Gramer discuss the potential for Russia to start another war in Europe against a NATO country. They write: Welcome back to Foreign Policy’s SitRep! This is the last of our special on-the-road editions at the Munich Security Conference (MSC). Thanks for coming along for the ride. We’ll be […]
Who Was Alexei Navalny?
Russian activist Alexei Navalny has died in prison in Siberia at 47 years old. Amy Mackinnon discusses Navalny’s life and death in Foreign Policy, writing: Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has reportedly died in a penal colony in the Arctic Circle, according to the Russian prison service. Navalny was serving a 19-year prison sentence in the […]
China Absent Amid Middle East Chaos
Since China completed its victory lap for brokering a peace deal between Saudi Arabia and Iran, the Middle East has fallen into chaos, and now China is nowhere to be found. Jon B. Alterman details China’s absence in Foreign Policy, writing: Last March, it was hard to miss the sense of satisfaction on the face […]
Milei’s Moment to Dollarize Argentina Is Now
According to Daniel Raisbeck and Gabriela Calderon de Bugos of the Cato Institute, the recent defeat of President Javier Milei’s legislative omnibus bill opens up the perfect moment for him to advance one of his signature campaign promises, the dollarization of Argentina. They write: Since Milei ordered the bill to return to committee, the government […]
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