Foreign Affairs Magazine
Turkey’s Quiet Realignment
Russia’s loss is NATO’s gain.
The Fault Lines in China’s Power
America must build—and use—leverage against Beijin...
The End of the Open Internet
Europe lost the plot on online speech.
Don’t Give Up on Global Order
America depends on global order—and can restore it...
How America Lost Command of the Commons
The oceans may soon be tolled.
Greeted as Liberators?
How Americans think about U.S. military interventi...
The Day After in Cuba
What American military force can and cannot do.
Can the UAE Go It Alone?
A risky quest for strategic autonomy in a war-torn...
Iran and the Hidden Cost of Wartime Access
America’s empire of bases makes It easier to blund...
How China Misperceives Itself
Beijing’s blindspots hinder real reform.
The American Military’s Coming Marathon
The Pentagon needs both quantity and quality to wi...
The Transatlantic Crucible
The crisis between Washington and Europe may be a ...
Iran’s New Grand Strategy
How a remade Islamic Republic will reshape the Mid...
The Inertia of Russia’s War
Why Putin can’t end the conflict.
Hezbollah's Trap for Israel
The stark choice between occupation and disarmamen...
Iran Embraces a Forever War
Tehran’s new strategic calculus.
Ukraine Turns the Tide
Why a cease-fire is now a real possibility.
The End of Foreign Aid Is Not the End of Developme...
How the world can do more with less.
How Migration Helps Authoritarians
The costs of democratic drain.








