With the U.S. and China on the brink of a trade war, Trump is pushing for a fight he cannot win
The Contentious U.S. Presence in Okinawa, Japan
Okinawa residents are tired of bearing the burden of the U.S.-Japanese military alliance
Displaced in Darfur
Millions of people were uprooted by the genocide in Darfur, and they now face violence and limited access to humanitarian aid within camps for the displaced
The Cows Come Home to Qatar
Qatar used to buy almost all of its dairy from Saudi Arabia—but it’s now on its way to becoming a net dairy exporter
Talking Policy: Arsla Jawaid on Iraq’s Yazidi Community
In Iraq, many Yazidi women have escaped Islamic State captivity, but the communities they returned to lack the infrastructure needed to support them
Talking Policy: Corrie Hulse on the Responsibility to Protect
How the international community responds to crimes against humanity
When a Reporter Crossed the Kremlin’s Borderline
Two reporters follow Russian military vehicles into Ukraine—and into Russia’s disinformation war
Talking Policy: Nic Maclellan on Nuclear Weapons Testing
Servicemen and Pacific Islanders are still dealing with the radioactive fallout of Britain’s nuclear tests in the 1950s
In Print: “Freedom From Fear?”
As India decides whether or not to expel its Rohingya community, thousands of lives hang in the balance
RusNet on the Offensive
The Kremlin's efforts to repress the opposition have reached the Internet, but is this a battlefield where the Russian government can win? Our Best of 2015 series looks back at Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan’s exposé on Putin’s campaign against online opposition.