World News Insights: Opinion Articles

When I became the supreme military commander at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in 2009, the alliance was focused on the war in Afghanistan. But one of the first senior delegations to visit me came to discuss Russia: the military chiefs of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. I’ll never forget…

James Stavridis

There are two kinds of negotiations with Iran for a nuclear deal. We have the negotiations of the meeting in Vienna and what I called the Vienna meeting’s shadow negotiations. The former is attended by Iran, the US and Western powers. As for the negotiations in the Vienna meeting’s shadows,…

Tariq Al-Homayed

In the lobby of a Riyadh hotel, a Danish tourist approached me to ask where I was from. I pretended that I came from a normal country, but later confessed. He asked me about my job and why I was in Riyadh. I told him I am a journalist and was following Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's tour…

Ghassan Charbel

Recently, on Twitter, the political scientist Lee Drutman issued a challenge to his followers and readers. “I’m all for envisioning doomsday scenarios so we can better prepare to avoid them,” he wrote. “But I’d also like to read more scenarios about how American democracy improves, and really…

Jamelle Bouie

Most of the dire forecasts of the effects of rising carbon emissions and global warming assume no significant human response. Rising sea levels will flood the coastal cities to which people have increasingly moved. Crops will wither due to too much summer heat. Perhaps the dinosaurs died out…

Gary Shilling

It feels ominously like 2014 again. Back then, Russian troops and tanks rolled into eastern Ukraine while the West, in shock, looked on. This year, Russia has once again raised the tenor of anti-Ukraine propaganda and assembled nearly 100,000 military personnel along Ukraine’s border, plus tanks…

Alexander Vindman

It could have been a scene straight out of an apocalyptic horror movie. When the World Health Organization declared the Omicron variant of the coronavirus a “variant of concern” in late November, borders closed, markets tumbled and warnings spread about how this new threat could ravage the world’s…

Adam Grant

If elections are held in Lebanon, a crisis of identity could burst into Lebanese political life, or what is left of it. However, even if those elections are not held, the outcome would likely not be very different. At least three political forces are facing this crisis: the Aounists, Harirists, and…

Hazem Saghieh

One of cryptocurrency’s spiritual forebears, Timothy C. May, predicted in the 1990s that untraceable digital cash would allow online casinos, bank secrecy and money laundering to flourish. Although laws would be dodged, he said, the individual anonymity and freedom would be worth it — at least,…

Lionel Laurent

Elon Musk doesn’t want subsidies. “Just delete them all,” he said Monday at the Wall Street Journal’s CEO Council Summit, referring to state backing for the electric vehicle market. But that doesn’t mean that Tesla Inc. hasn’t benefited from incentives, or that other companies have no need for them…

Anjani Trivedi

From container-ship pileups at West Coast ports to the Ever Given’s viral weeklong blockage of the Suez Canal to shortages ranging from the quirky (cream cheese) to the catastrophic (semiconductors), the supply chain has never been as top of mind as it was in 2021. Case in point: The best…

Brooke Sutherland

Forget the debate over how scared we should be of omicron. What matters is putting our energy into solutions that work — taking action that matters on a personal level and demanding effective actions from world leaders. Scientists are already scrambling to learn how well our existing vaccines…

Faye Flam