Lawmakers won’t face facts about Ukraine because they’re scared of the base. Yet one reason the president’s support remains so indivisible is that few lawmakers have condemned him.
When something real happened, Americans found a way to pay attention.
The government may classify too much intelligence, but that doesn’t mean a low-level employee should be able to see it.
The SpaceX CEO’s much-praised move to help keep the country online isn’t the magical fix it may seem.
In a wide-ranging conversation at his compound in Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky tells The Atlantic what Ukraine needs to survive—and describes the price it has paid.
All sides in the Crimean crisis are invoking the Third Reich. Why?
American allies see a second Trump term as all but inevitable. “The anxiety is massive.”
The president's supporters say it's his opponent who benefited from foreign collusion. Are they right?
The feature about a school of deaf, teenage gangsters paints a bleak picture of life in Ukraine, but is riveting none the less.
A conversation with Jeffrey Goldberg, Anne Applebaum, and Tom Nichols about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Vladimir Putin’s animating worldview, and what the coming days might hold