This past year reordered domestic politics. 2025 will remake the world’s geopolitical map, argues Matt Kaminski.
For foreign leaders, the US presidential transition to Donald Trump has already happened, Paul Poast writes—for better and for worse.
"Netanyahu made some sounds today that perhaps this will maybe push Hamas to deal. We'll see," Cécile Shea tells WGN.
Over the next four years, Paul Poast writes, the world will see the United States as the flawed power it has always been.
"The pernicious part of tariffs is the people who spend the highest percentage of their incomes on things like food, and clothes, and books end up paying most of this tax," Cécile Shea says.
Nonresident Fellow Joshua Busby unpacks what a Trump administration could mean for Korea.
Trump’s reelection will redefine US power, Daniel Drezner writes.
We have four years to find out whether policies Washington pursues on the global stage are the product of who is in office or of the country’s position in the international order, Paul Poast writes.
"When the US inaugurates Donald J. Trump as its 47th president, the country and world will be very different because of it," Ivo Daalder writes.
Paul Heer weighs in on the Sino-US rivalry and the prospects of war over Taiwan.
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