Donald Trump's US presidency will reverberate around the globe, the Ukraine war might just end, and little respite is on the way for Gazans, our correspondents predict.
Walking through the nascent settlement, the sound of children’s laughter is juxtaposed against the sight of multiple sandbagged defensive points where residents can take cover if fighting off
When President Donald Trump returns to the White House, most expect he’ll give Israel a long leash to do as it sees fit in the Middle East. However, that expectation could be tested and might prove to be wrong altogether.
“Trump will solve these problems,” Father Spiridon Sammour told The Media Line this week. Sitting on the chancel in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, the priest lamented the absence of public Christmas celebrations for the second year in a row, overshadowed by the ongoing Gaza war.
President-elect Donald Trump will soon inherit an array of conflicts in Asia, Africa, Europe and even North America.
Israel's wars in the Middle East are unlikely to end in 2025 or for that matter any time in the foreseeable future. The immediate reason for that is that Benjamin Netanyahu needs to prolong the ghastly war in Gaza to avoid standing trial at home on corruption charges which carry a prison sentence.
Western interests would do well to prioritize this anchor, and Donald Trump’s reelection offers new opportunities to redefine diplomacy through an innovation-driven lens. His results-oriented, transactional approach to international relations aligns naturally with the principles of innovation diplomacy — namely,
The upcoming change in the White House has created uncertainty in the Middle East, with President-elect Donald Trump standing as an unpredictable element.
Donald Trump’s unexpectedly decisive victory in the 2024 presidential election will have global consequences. Foreign policy was not the centerpiece of either candidate’s campaign, but the two could scarcely have presented more diametrically opposed views.
The problem that has been exposed is that the court needs its member countries to agree to make its arrests, and a growing list of European countries don’t want to do it.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog met President-elect Donald Trump's designated special envoy for hostage affairs at his official residence in Jerusalem on Wednesday in a further sign of progress towards a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.