Foreign Policy
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The magazine for global politics, economics, and ideas | Sign up for our newsletters: https://t.co/vasoTyHsYj
Joined March 2009
What does the future look like for global aid, NGOs, and development diplomacy? Which new approaches in international development should the world move toward? Eight authors tackle these topics in FP’s latest print issue, available to read now: https://t.co/0kvxxcGEt4
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Rights groups warn that the president’s anti-free speech crusade reached an alarming and dangerous new level this week.
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Trump’s attacks hit a “new low,” the head of the Committee to Protect Journalists said.
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The United States is not in an armed conflict with any cartel—let alone 24 of them, argues Benjamin Farley.
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Invoking “non-international armed conflict” does not justify the administration’s drone killings.
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The U.S. created a global order that it’s now obsessed with overthrowing.
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The U.S. made a global order that it’s now obsessed with overthrowing.
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Ten years after the World Health Organization was mandated to raise global awareness of antimicrobial resistance, surveillance has improved, but the response has stalled. However, new research reveals a promising path forward.
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A cheap and practical intervention, given at birth, could save lives in conflict zones and beyond.
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Ukraine faces a difficult decision in the days ahead as the Trump administration pushes the country to embrace a 28-point peace plan that would see it make major concessions to Russia.
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Zelensky said he’s being asked to decide between Ukraine losing its dignity or losing a key partner.
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World Brief: COP30 struggles to find consensus on limiting fossil fuels, Israeli settler violence escalates in the West Bank, and gunmen kidnap at least 52 students and staff in Nigeria.
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A revised draft agreement omits any mention of fossil fuels, the leading cause of global warming.
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Trump’s threats reveal a deepening contest between Washington and Beijing for the allegiance of Africa’s most populous country.
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Trump’s threats leave Nigerians worried about superpower intentions.
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Recent graduates and low-skilled workers in China, already in trouble, are also the most vulnerable to AI.
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Beijing values domestic stability over global competition.
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The situation for Sudanese refugees in Chad is “horrifying” and a “catastrophe,” said Charlotte Slente, the secretary-general of the Danish Refugee Council.
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The head of the Danish Refugee Council speaks about what she learned after meeting Sudanese refugees in Chad.
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On FP Live, @lyricthompson discusses the recent assault of Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and her “perfect” response. Learn more: https://t.co/5n08ZK0xv0
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Amid ongoing bloodletting in Ukraine and the Middle East today, the success of Dayton offers enduring lessons in the very human nature of diplomacy.
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Lessons in peacemaking from 21 days at Dayton.
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Claudia Sheinbaum’s crackdown is unlikely to lower the rate of gender-based violence for ordinary Mexican women, argues Ann Deslandes. https://t.co/305lGVyCgx
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The president’s announcement of a crackdown on gender-based violence ignores its drivers.
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Corruption has a long and sordid history in South Africa, but don’t look to the world’s leading anti-money laundering watchdog to help fight it, write @maxmeizlish and @DavidSamuelMay. https://t.co/f0TKtedNmW
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Why is a leading global watchdog turning a blind eye?
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Speaking of, don’t forget to follow Foreign Policy on TikTok:
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@foreignpolicymagazine 9583 Followers, 12 Following, 30.0k Likes - Watch awesome short videos created by Foreign Policy Magazine
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The foreign-policy community is markedly absent from where young Americans consume information. That needs to change. https://t.co/eBjLEdSQh9
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Kirill Dmitriev, an investment professional who has neither a past in Russia’s security services nor its foreign service, is not your typical Russian negotiator.
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Kirill Dmitriev is a prominent purveyor of the Kremlin’s line—but real power may lie elsewhere.
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Sponsored: As global crises deepen and divides widen, @DohaForum 2025 — on December 6–7 — will explore how to turn “Justice in Action: Beyond Promises to Progress” into meaningful dialogue on cooperation, human rights, and a more just, sustainable future. Explore more:
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To fill the widening gaps in global leadership left by the U.S., Europe would be well advised to take a more nuanced look at the contributions of governments in the global south, argues Sophie Eisentraut. https://t.co/o5JgXzNoHH
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As Europeans debate who will fill the U.S. role on the world stage, an answer may already be apparent.
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For nonnuclear states, building a nuclear-powered submarine is technologically difficult and politically sensitive. South Korea will be put to the test now that the U.S. has given Seoul approval to build this capability. https://t.co/aNmKFWLnGk
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A Trumpian promise may be hard to deliver.
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The two sides are at odds over Riyadh’s continued insistence that it be allowed to domestically enrich uranium.
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The Saudi crown prince’s flashy trip to Washington was not enough to secure a formal atomic cooperation accord.
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