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Blinken warned lawmakers Azerbaijan may invade Armenia in coming weeks He also said State isn’t planning to renew a long-standing waiver that allows the U.S. to provide military assistance to Baku. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, right, speaks during a press conference at the National Palace in Mexico City, on Oct. 5, 2023. | Marco Ugarte/AP Photo Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned a smal
Supreme Court has voted to overturn abortion rights, draft opinion shows “We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled,” Justice Alito writes in an initial majority draft circulated inside the court. Abortion rights supporters and anti-abortion demonstrators rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court on Nov. 1, 2021. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images The Supreme Court has voted to strike down the landmark Roe
The influencers behind the Ukrainian PR machine Lobbyists, lawyers and public relations pros have blitzed Capitol Hill and the media to push Ukraine aid. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivers a virtual address to Congress on March 16, 2022. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images The American public has watched one passionate plea after another from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as he pre
Jessica Pisano is an associate professor of politics at the New School for Social Research and an associate of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University. Now that Russian President Vladimir Putin has launched a ground war against Ukraine that he apparently has been planning for years, many have wondered why he waited until now. After all, the four years of Donald Trum
For many people, watching the Russian invasion of Ukraine has felt like a series of “He can’t be doing this” moments. Russia’s Vladimir Putin has launched the largest ground war in Europe since the Second World War. It is, quite literally, mind-boggling. That’s why I reached out to Fiona Hill, one of America’s most clear-eyed Russia experts, someone who has studied Putin for decades, worked in bot
Google wins major copyright victory The Supreme Court ruling sets new precedent in how U.S. copyright law applies to the computer code underpinning the American tech industry. Google’s victory in the case could provide it with political momentum. | Michele Tantussi/Getty Images After a decade of fierce litigation, the Supreme Court handed Google a win over Oracle on Monday in a closely-watched cop
Opinion | To Counter China’s Rise, the U.S. Should Focus on Xi A proposal for a full reboot of American strategy toward China. In 1946, the American diplomat George Kennan wrote a lengthy cable to Washington—since dubbed the “Long Telegram”—laying out the basis for the next several decades of U.S. policy toward the Soviet Union. He published his work as an article under the simple pseudonym “X.” I
Fiona Hill served as deputy assistant to the president and senior director for European and Russian affairs on the National Security Council from 2017 to 2019. She is currently a senior fellow in the Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institution. Since last Wednesday, people have been arguing what to call what happened at the U.S. Capitol — was it a riot? An uprising? An insu
Joe Biden has been declared the winner, toppling Donald Trump after four years of upheaval in the White House.
Feds may target Google’s Chrome browser for breakup Prosecutors for the Justice Department and state attorney general offices are discussing ways of curbing the search giant’s market power as they prepare to sue the company. Google Chrome, which was introduced in 2008 and has the largest market share in the U.S., has been at the center of rivals’ accusations that the search giant uses the browser&
Virus hunters rely on faxes, paper records as more states reopen It’s the result of years of missed opportunities and a technology blitz that modernized big parts of American medicine but left public health agencies behind. The nation's public health tech system, from the Centers for Disease Control down to local agencies, are relying on technology from the turn of the 21st century that’s slow
Escaping the coronavirus 'petri dish': Doctor, lawmakers seek evacuations from quarantined cruise "This is no quarantine — it's just a pack of people," said a doctor who's stuck on the ship. The quarantined cruise ship Diamond Princess, anchored in the Yokohama Port on Sunday. | Eugene Hoshiko/AP Photo A senior House Republican is pressuring the Trump administration to evacuate over 400 American c
Anti-vaccine protesters are likening themselves to civil rights activists Protesters march through the California Capitol. | Rich Pedroncelli/AP Photo SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A chorus of mostly white women sang the gospel song “We Shall Overcome” in the California State Capitol, an anthem of the civil rights movement. Mothers rallied outside the governor’s office and marched through Capitol corridors
Spies fear a consulting firm helped hobble U.S. intelligence Restructuring efforts have hindered decision-making at key agencies including the CIA, National Security Agency, and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. | Patrick Semansky/AP File Photo America’s vast spying apparatus was built around a Cold War world of dead drops and double agents. Today, that world has fractured and m
The 2016 arrest of a former National Security Agency contractor charged with a massive theft of classified data began with an unlikely source: a tip from a Russian cybersecurity firm that the U.S. government has called a threat to the country. Moscow-based Kaspersky Lab turned Harold T. Martin III in to the NSA after receiving strange Twitter messages in 2016 from an account linked to him, accordi
The phrases “progressive politics” and “national security” rarely appear together. When “national security” shows up in the pages of leftist political publications at all, it’s usually as an object of criticism. Yet, were the Bernie Sanders wing of the Democratic Party to take over Washington—Sen. Elizabeth Warren, for one, seems to be burnishing her foreign policy credentials—the burden of nation
Solomon Lartey spent the first five months of the Trump administration working in the Old Executive Office Building, standing over a desk with scraps of paper spread out in front of him. Lartey, who earned an annual salary of $65,969 as a records management analyst, was a career government official with close to 30 years under his belt. But he had never seen anything like this in any previous admi
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Happy Valentine’s Day! Fifty years after the sexual revolution, sex in America is in decline. Americans are having less sex, the share of Americans who say they never once had sex in the past year is rising, and—perhaps most surprising—this revolution in sexual behavior is being led by the young. Although this sexual counter-revolution began before the #MeToo movement arose in response to the sexu
“What would you do if we asked you to write something that wasn’t true?” I was sitting in a 10th-floor conference room in the K Street offices of “RIA Global,” otherwise known as the Washington, D.C., bureau of the Russian-owned Sputnik News Service, where I’d come for a job interview. It was in mid-December, just over a month after Donald Trump’s upset election victory, and I’d applied to the com
Allan Lichtman reached meme-status last fall for predicting Donald Trump would win long before anyone else. | AP Photo The professor who took hell for predicting President Donald Trump has a much longer case for predicting President Mike Pence — and it’s all in his new book, out next week. Allan Lichtman, a professor at American University, reached meme-status last fall for predicting long before
As U.S. Tomahawk missiles soared over the Mediterranean toward Syria’s al-Shayrat airbase, speculation was already flying about how the attack would affect the thaw in U.S.-Russia relations anticipated since Donald Trump took office. Was this a first sign that America’s new president was willing to stand up to Putin? Arguably the more critical factor in the equation is Russia. To understand the Kr
The fractured elements of what was once called the alt-right were unified once more on Thursday night in condemning Donald Trump’s airstrike in Syria as a mistake. Or as Milo Yiannopoulos put it, “FAKE and GAY.” This loose confederation of Web-savvy, anti-establishment right-wingers formed an important vanguard of Trump’s online support in last year’s election, and its unified opposition to the ai
Sources say the mood of President Donald Trump in the three weeks since his inauguration has careened between surprise and anger. | Getty Being president is harder than Donald Trump thought, according to aides and allies who say that he’s growing increasingly frustrated with the challenges of running the massive federal bureaucracy. In interviews, nearly two dozen people who’ve spent time with Tru
The first weeks of the Trump presidency have brought as much focus on the White House’s chief strategist, Steve Bannon, as on the new president himself. But if Bannon has been the driving force behind the frenzy of activity in the White House, less attention has been paid to the network of political philosophers who have shaped his thinking and who now enjoy a direct line to the White House. They
Recent findings are reigniting the campaign debate over whether pollsters are accurately measuring President Donald Trump’s popularity. | Getty Just how popular is Donald Trump? Two weeks into the new president’s term, it’s a matter of some dispute. Traditional phone polls that use live interviewers — including some of the most trusted polls in politics and media — report limited support for Trump
U.S. government begins asking foreign travelers about social media The prompt includes a drop-down menu that lists platforms including Facebook, Google+, Instagram, LinkedIn and YouTube. | Getty NEW YORK — The U.S. government quietly began requesting that select foreign visitors provide their Facebook, Twitter and other social media accounts upon arriving in the country, a move designed to spot po
“They believed they were more experienced, which they were. They believed they were smarter, which they weren’t,” said one Democratic consultant. | Getty Everybody could see Hillary Clinton was cooked in Iowa. So when, a week-and-a-half out, the Service Employees International Union started hearing anxiety out of Michigan, union officials decided to reroute their volunteers, giving a desperate tea
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