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India’s prime minister is being welcomed warmly in Washington despite human rights issues.
An examination of the hidden root causes behind the decline in the number of women participating in political representation.
Central Asia stands at a pivotal crossroads, with the next few months likely to set the course for the region going forward.
Former State Department official Aaron David Miller explains how he thinks President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was able to extend his rule into a third decade by using identity politics to hold on to power.
It’s hard to know where these tendencies will go. But there’s understandably a lot of concern in democratic societies about the kinds of social control the large language models that power AI will potentially enable—both at an industrial scale, in spreading bad information, and in ways that are remarkably customized for persuasion at the individual level too.
Turkey’s presidential elections head into the second round on May 28. If Erdogan wins, it will mean more autocracy, closer ties with Russia and a continuation of disruptive relations with the EU and NATO.
The last year has highlighted just how differently much of the rest of the world sees not only Russia’s war in Ukraine but also the broader global landscape.
During the Erdogan years, the perception of Turkey's place in the world from a geopolitical perspective has become more ambiguous. If the opposition wins the election, a very different conception of foreign policy may emerge.
Aaron David Miller discusses the current state of the Israel, from Judicial Reforms, the relations with the Palestinians, and Israel's dealing with the rest of the Middle East.
The Iranian regime over the last six months had the scare of its life. Really governments like the Islamic Republic of Iran, given their lack of legitimacy, they can only rule with brutality.