FOREIGN POLICY

MARCH 17. 2026

Making the U. S. More Resilient to Oil Price Shocks

The U. S. is now a net oil exporter. With the right policy changes, it can protect consumers from high prices.

Kabul Accuses Pakistani Airstrike of Killing Over 400 People

Islamabad maintains that it hit “military and terrorist infrastructure, ” not a civilian drug rehabilitation center.

China’s Hormuz Problem

Beijing must navigate an oil crunch and fragile diplomacy with Washington.

Iranian Kurds Can Fight, but How Effectively?

Political concerns over Kurdish involvement overlook more pressing practical issues.

Ukraine and the EU Need a Fresh Start

“Membership lite” could clear the hurdles to Kyiv’s EU accession.

The Israel Lobby’s Responsibility for the Iran War

The advocates for the U. S. -Israeli special relationship have played a special role.

Will the Iran War Derail Colombia’s World-First Energy Transition?

An economy dependent on fossil fuels planned to wind down, rather than expand, extraction.

Price Hikes at the Pump Destabilize Southeast Asian Politics

Indonesia, for one, has a bloody history of fuel-related riots.

MARCH 16. 2026

Trump Seeks Help to Reopen Hormuz. Europe Says No.

After months of bashing allies, the White House finds itself fighting largely alone.

‘A Moment of Grave Peril’

Aid agencies warn that the Iran war will deepen humanitarian crises across the region.

European Democracy Is Doing Just Fine, Top EU Official Says

Despite White House claims, the EU’s human rights official argues that “democracy is thriving” on the continent.

BRICS Meets Reality in the Middle East War

It’s the latest case study in the persistent failure of transnational solidarity.

Jürgen Habermas, the Last Rationalist

The German philosopher built the 20th century’s most rigorous defense of democratic reason and then watched it tested.

France’s Far Right Now Has a Clear Path to Power

Leftists and nationalists are managing to completely break republicanism.