His proposal to end the war isn’t a peace plan—it’s a reward for aggression.
American leaders keep overestimating their control over events in the Middle East, Ukraine, and around the world.
The world’s time, to which all clocks are set, comes from small national labs. Ukraine’s is in Kharkiv, a city under fire.
Supporting and arming Ukraine, and accelerating the collapse of the Russian military, is the most realistic way to end the conflict.
An outdated view of warfare helps explain why the U.S. was slow to supply long-range missiles.
Forecasting a conclusion to an unpredictable conflict
The president’s defenders ignore one possibility: He just likes Putin.
Once U.S. money starts flowing again, the dynamics of the war will change.
Frustrated by Berlin’s robust response to his invasion of Ukraine, the Russian leader is seeking allies who could disrupt the consensus.
The Russian president can’t win his war against Ukraine unless he persuades its allies to betray it.