Mette Frederiksen stresses that America doesn’t call the shots on the strategically important Arctic island’s future.
Global strife and domestic electoral tensions made this year a bonanza for outlandish worldviews and self-justifying explanations
Not for the two millennia since — actually, longer. Plato, four centuries before the Crucifixion, spent much time arguing what we know and how we know it. So as the United States of America prepares to inaugurate,
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) argued President-elect Trump’s continued talk about expanding the United States is a distraction from the Cabinet picks and nominees he’s chosen to staff his second
How Trump, GOP will handle the budget Trump’s legal dramas continue Worst wildfires in Los Angeles history kill five Businesses brace for U.S.-China tariff clash
He doesn’t believe anything. That’s why he wins. L ast week, President-Elect Donald Trump nominated Morgan Ortagus, a longtime State Department official, to serve as a deputy special envoy for Middle East peace—and immediately undercut her.
As the anniversary of the Jan. 6 riot passes, America prepares for a second Trump presidency. Where will the truth land?
Trump’s obsession with claiming Greenland and its people for the US is just a new version of the same old imperialist story.
President-elect Donald Trump has been active since seven in the morning and now gazes at the six advisers sitting before him at his lavish Mar-a-Lago estate. On this night, the incoming president is highly engaged.
The president-elect’s musings about annexing Canada, Greenland, and the Panama Canal may just be bluster—or misdirection. But they could have chilling implications on the global stage.
What are the biggest challenges and opportunities facing Trump and his team in foreign policy and national security?