China’s Concrete Empire in South America
Beijing is gradually linking South America together with its massive investments in infrastructure—right under Washington’s nose.
Beijing is gradually linking South America together with its massive investments in infrastructure—right under Washington’s nose.
Just a few months ago, U.S.-India relations were on an upswing. But that was then, and this is now. Ties between Washington and New Delhi have deteriorated dramatically since, for both political and economic reasons.
In Russia’s view, the Western world has a big problem: It doesn’t like Russians. The reason, in the Kremlin’s telling, is not Russia’s devastation of Ukraine or its nuclear threats. Instead, the culprit is “the propaganda of Russophobia, unleashed by the West.”
Iran’s political opposition is in no position to challenge the regime. That doesn’t mean popular dissent has gone away.
When the international community descends on Manhattan next month for the annual session of the United Nations General Assembly, one issue will loom exceedingly large on the collective agenda: the intention of France, Britain and Canada to imminently recognize Palestine as a state, absent significant changes in Israeli policy.