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Orban’s Fall and Europe’s Rise
The dawn of a strange new European consensus.
Why Mexico’s Cartels Are So Hard to Defeat
The real test of Sheinbaum’s security strategy.
The Not-So-Quiet American
Pope Leo takes the Vatican where Francis could not.
The Not-So-Quiet American
Pope Leo takes the Vatican where Francis could not.
Mao’s China: The Decline of a Dynasty
For a long time it was thought that the way the People’s Republic of China was being governed opened a new chapter in Chinese history. Some scholars argued that the communist system in China was a continuation of Confucianism, but a closer look disclosed little resemblance. The country was subject to spasmodic, repetitious political campaigns; the national economy constantly went through major reshuffles-land reform, socialization, communization, the retreat from communization and the Great Leap Forward. Traditional Chinese values were repudiated or ignored. Even the old Chinese concern for “face” seemed to be disregarded. Everybody was expected to expose in public meetings the evil words and evil deeds of friends and colleagues, of parents and brothers. The traditional Chinese family was severely disrupted, though, as the old Chinese proverb says, it is useless to attack a city if the hearts are not won over. The hearts were not won over, but for a long time it appeared that the régime was solidly established and enjoying general support, if not from love, then from fear.
What the U.S. Military Still Hasn’t Learned From Iraq
It’s hard to win without a plan for the future.
Putin’s Point of No Return
An unchecked Russia will challenge the West.
Israel’s Forever War
The long history of managing—rather than solving—the conflict.
A Test of Wills in Iran
Trump is still underestimating Tehran’s resolve.
A New Order for the Gulf
The region must build its own security, not buy it.