The Western world will have to prove that it has not become all of the things Vladimir Putin has long believed it to be.
How long can the Kremlin sustain the nationalist euphoria whipped up by its actions in Ukraine?
Russia’s invasion threatens to unravel decades of scientific collaboration in the Arctic.
An indifferent response to a warlord’s march on Moscow heralds the dawning realization that Russia has no good way out in Ukraine.
America has become too accustomed to thinking of its side as stymied, ineffective, or incompetent.
I asked several experts to share the indicators they’re tracking most closely to determine whether Russian nuclear use in Ukraine is imminent—and to help us all separate the signal from the noise.
In response to its recent moves against Ukraine, he canceled his meeting with Vladimir Putin. But the decision probably has more to do with his own troubles at home.
Freezing out his attorney might make political sense for the president, but it would also require him to admit something went wrong in Ukraine.
Even in a democracy, geopolitical strategy is determined mainly by the personal preferences of its leader. American voters should take note.
Shortly after invading Ukraine, Russian forces took over the site of the world’s most devastating nuclear accident. Not for the first time, Chornobyl became a strategic nightmare.