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The deficiencies of Washington’s bloc-based, security-centric approach in the Middle East have long been apparent. With the rise of China and the region’s growing search for multiple partners, the need to revise this strategy has become urgent.
What’s needed to set the relationship on a better path is a new Israeli government minus its hard-line ministers—and ideally, in time, minus Netanyahu, too. Until that materializes, certainly for the Biden administration, relations are going to remain stuck on a shaky plateau.
The green-hydrogen industry is a case study in the potential—for better and worse—of our new economic era.
Pipelines, ports, and cables in and around the Baltic Sea are as critical as they are vulnerable.
Climate change is very unlikely to undermine the complex web of facilities, bases, and operations involved in nuclear programs and their deterrence missions. But even small incidents and accidents are potentially devastating.
India’s recent technical and political activities have boosted the state’s climb to space preeminence. In parallel to several successful launches that showcase the state’s capabilities and flexibility, political initiatives focus the bureaucracy and exhibit a strong vision for India’s future in space.
Reports of the United States' demise are greatly exaggerated. Francis Fukuyama's latest blog post.
Tata chair for strategic affairs at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Ashley J Tellis, believes that Prime Minister Narendra Modi's recent state visit to the US was a great success. Both sides achieved their objectives, and the visit highlighted India's importance to the US.
Yet beneath the rhetoric and confiscated weapons inventory lies a more complex reality. Even before the Jenin incursion—and now certainly after—Israelis and Palestinians remain trapped in a volatile, bloody cul-de-sac with little prospect of a way out.
Western experts are putting forward failed policies rather than reckoning with the damage Israeli apartheid has caused.