To achieve long term success former officials say, President-elect Donald Trump will have to find a way to drive a wedge between the two greatest powers in the alignment: China and Russia.
Trump's national press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, told Fox News after Trump was declared the winner of the election that ...
That didn’t take long. Less than a week after the landslide election of former President Donald J. Trump, America’s enemies are running for cover. A Hamas spesman […] ...
In 1969, China and the Soviet Union fought a seven-month undeclared ... Given all this, the argument from breakup boosters that no one, other than President Vladimir Putin, would lose if the Russian ...
It may be horrific and redefine the world order. Or it may be underwhelmingly bluster over substance. But US President-elect ...
Donald Trump has won the presidency but I don't believe he will deliver on his promises. Like other self-interested autocrats ...
When he takes office in January, President-elect Donald Trump will inherit a raft of national security challenges, including ...
President-elect Trump is expected to deploy his trademark mix of belligerent threats and friendly relations with some of the world’s dictators as he seeks to break up the deepening ...
Based on Donald Trump’s first term and his campaign statements, the United States will become less predictable, more chaotic, ...
The second Trump administration will face an emboldened and arguably more dangerous North Korean leader at a moment of acute ...
The longer the war in Ukraine drags on, the more the cost of deterring China goes up. Of course, the downside of bolder U.S.
Taiwan argued that both Russia and China are undermining the international order and pose a serious threat to global peace.