Vance’s ‘Final Offer’ in Islamabad: How the U.S.-Iran Talks Failed—and What It Means for the World
By Nathaniel Cross, Senior International Affairs Analyst and Contributor to The New York Times, Forbes, and Foreign Affairs. The sun […]
By Nathaniel Cross, Senior International Affairs Analyst and Contributor to The New York Times, Forbes, and Foreign Affairs. The sun […]
He boarded Air Force Two at Joint Base Andrews on a Friday morning and, in doing so, stepped into history.
The ink was barely dry on a fragile two-week truce when the world’s most dangerous oil chokepoint stayed exactly as
On a Late-Night Stage, a Very Washington Reckoning The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is not typically where American grand
Shipping companies are reacting with extreme caution as Hormuz cease-fire terms remain uncertain. Here’s why the Strait of Hormuz standstill
The Strait of Hormuz is bleeding the world. Tehran still holds cards — but the clock is running out to
The scene was meant to project dominance. As President Trump returned to Washington from a weekend in Florida, he boasted
Millions joined the No Kings protests on March 28, 2026, across all 50 states and a dozen countries, targeting Trump’s
Islamabad’s Unlikely Ascent to Center Stage The Persian Gulf has always been a chessboard where empires and regional powers jostle
How a 19th-century admiral’s warning became the defining geopolitical reality of our time—and why the world’s most critical shipping routes
There is a particular audacity to naming a foreign policy doctrine after an intellectual tradition you are simultaneously dismantling. The
A war nobody planned for, on a timetable nobody set, triggered by a crisis nobody fully understood — that was