Biden’s support of Israel could come at a cost to U.S. foreign policy
America’s partners and allies are increasingly frustrated that the United States isn’t using its leverage to protect Palestinian lives.
America’s partners and allies are increasingly frustrated that the United States isn’t using its leverage to protect Palestinian lives.
Giovanni Angelo Becciu, once considered a viable candidates for pope, was the first cardinal to be tried by the Vatican’s little-known criminal court.
The deaths of the three hostages underscored the perilous risks to civilians in Gaza, where Israel is waging a war against Hamas militants.
The emir’s three-year rule was dominated by his efforts to ease political tensions inside Kuwait.
The new proposed constitution Chileans are voting on this weekend was influenced by, among other things, conservative Catholic legal thinkers at Notre Dame.
The death of Hani Jnena has intensified calls within the Biden administration to hold Israel’s military accountable for rising toll among aid workers.
Wael al-Dahdouh, Al Jazeera bureau chief in Gaza, was treated for shrapnel wounds after being hit in the same Israeli drone strike Friday that killed cameraman Samer Abu Daqqa.
The Key Takeaways From COP28Here’s what the summit did—and didn’t—change.
Europe’s push to abandon capitalism is motivated by optimism about politics—and pessimism about everything else.
Karen Pierce was the first woman to take up the U.K.’s seat at the U.N. Security Council, and likely the first person to do so in a feather boa.