And it may be indirectly taking a page from Trump’s playbook in the process.
Anti-immigrant populists seek to create a familiar space for their own kind in a world of tumult fomented by strangers.
Calder Walton is an Ernest May Fellow at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, where his research is focused on intelligence history, grand strategy a
The old mainstream parties have been upended by voters who fear immigrants, the “Uberization” of the economy and a split from the EU.
As with Brexit and Trump’s election, the referendum in Turkey exposed a polarized nation but resolved nothing.
And the consequences could unleash something worse than what followed the invasion of Iraq.
Russia and the U.S. return to a “normal” state of icy hostility, a top analyst writes. Ousting Assad would lead to “brutal civil conflict,” a former CIA operati
Khalifa Haftar could be the next Assad if the U.S. and EU don’t act fast.
The global Muslim population is relatively young with a high fertility rate.
Prosperity built upon the U.S.-led open trading order now enables China to consume more American imports and export less.
Just as the internet has connected people beyond borders, weaponized information is reshaping war, espionage and propaganda globally.
And we’re on the verge of doing just that, says Yuval Noah Harari.