Ending America’s foolish subsidies for ethanol could aid Ukraine.
As the leader of NATO and of the free world, the United States needs to think much bigger than it has thus far.
The question for world leaders is how to ensure the Russian president is defeated while nevertheless providing him with a route out of the crisis.
Out of the righteous rage of this moment, perhaps a new world can be born.
For reasons to do with history and strategy, India will not abandon Russia.
Smaller-scale tactical nuclear weapons could bring the great powers into a brutal, deadly, and unprecedented conflict.
Four takeaways from American studios’ boycott of Russia
Conflicts, though typically started easily, can be brutal, intractable, and difficult to end.
Some readers say it’s a moral imperative; others say there’s no way to buy oil with a clean conscience.
These books—memoir, fiction, and nonfiction—offer a glimpse into a century of historical context in Eastern Europe.
The GOP seems relieved to have bipartisan agreement—and to distance itself a bit from Donald Trump.
Here we are again, trying to make our way around nuclear terms and concepts as war rages in the middle of Europe.
Our analysis of online comments shows that pro-Moscow posturing is a veil for expressing a deeper critique of U.S. influence.
How to help Ukrainians right now
These are the viral songs of a country under siege.
The world is viewing the Russian invasion of Ukraine with startling intimacy on social media. But how or whether this matters remains unclear.
For centuries, Ukraine’s writers have—surreptitiously, brashly, satirically—fended off attempts to erase their national culture.
Nicholas Mulder, the author of a new book on the history of sanctions, explains the West’s use of the “economic weapon.”
According to Russian state TV, Putin is the good guy. Many Russians believe it.
Like all novel experiments, the group punishment of Russia is a leap into the unknown.