Editors' Picks

  • THE LIST

    Global Groundhog Day

    Joshua Keating highlights those ten stories that appear in the papers again and again, but never seem to actually happen.

  • FEATURE

    Plague: The Coming Pandemic

    The best-selling author of Outbreak Robin Cook offers this exclusive thriller about a catastrophe of global proportions. And by the way, it's not fiction.

  • HISTORY LESSON

    Take Me Back to Constantinople

    It is Byzantium, not Rome, says Edward Luttwak, that can help preserve Pax Americana.

  • ARGUMENT

    Obama's European Honeymoon Is Over

    It would seem that Europe's crush on the U.S. president is fading. There's no time like the present, says Peter Rashish, to mend those transatlantic fences.

CURRENT ISSUE

Nov. / Dec. 2009

The Latest from FP

  • Good Riddance, Abbas

    Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, was no good for Palestine. And his exit will make a peaceful solution more likely.

  • All for One?

    The Lisbon Treaty creates an EU president, sure. But it's the new foreign policy czar who might really change the world.

  • The Memory Trap

    Why remembrance of past imperial glory holds back Russia today. Part of an FP series, 20 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

  • J Street Looks for the Middle Road

    The new Israel lobby group made a spectacular entrance, but it now must walk a political tightrope to build its credibility.

  • This Week at War: Why Don't Stryker Brigades Work in Afghanistan?

    What the four-stars are reading -- a weekly column from Small Wars Journal.

  • No Insurgency Here

    Let's be honest: What Afghanistan has on its hands isn't an insurgency, it's a civil war.

  • Who Brought Down the Berlin Wall?

    Reagan? Economics? The CIA? Why the usual suspects get too much credit. Part of an FP series, 20 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

  • Interview: U.N. Undersecretary-General John Holmes

    The top humanitarian official for the United Nations tells FP how to do aid in a time of war. Here’s a hint: it’s not pretty.

  • Energizing Peace

    Natural gas pipelines, not military supply lines, could pave the way for stability in power-starved Central Asia.

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