Prime Minister Narendra Modi's party has stormed to power in West Bengal and retained its hold over Assam and Puducherry.
International courts can apportion legal responsibility, but cannot guarantee justice, safety, or safe return to Myanmar for more than 1 million Rohingya refugees.
"You either work with us or you don't," warns Andrew Puzder
Warsaw follows Paris in adopting temporary restrictions to pressure the Commission
Amb. Ahmed Alattar urges greater clarity and reliability from international partners
Non-paper calls for extending exemption beyond 2030
Hungary's first anti-communist MP hopes Péter Magyar will restore rule-of-law and democracy
As Washington’s rift with Berlin spills into the Aegean, Germany’s foreign minister seeks to reassure Greece while preserving a delicate balance with Ankara over defence ties
In a move that appeared designed to remind people of his existence and enduring political weight, former Chinese premier Wen [...]
The European Union's latest raft of measures targeting Russia adopted on 23 April includes for the first time two Thailand-linked [...]
Whilst the performance of the US intelligence community in terms of its analysis of Iran continues to raise questions in [...]
With Ukraine anticipating a shortage on air defences as the United States redirects its Patriot missile defence systems towards the [...]
Even though the amounts of special funds spent by France's intelligence services are publicly available information, they have nevertheless been [...]
Veterans of the elite French army's "11e Choc" parachute regiment will in a few months choose a new president to [...]
Trump’s tariff mess offers a chance to restore legislative oversight.
Why Xi keeps winning the summitry game.
Why Tokyo is bulking up its defense industrial base.
Doctors and experts push for action as key study lands
The Agreement on Trade in Essential Supplies, which was agreed in October, is the world’s first legally-binding bilateral supply chain resilience agreement.
Les relations germano-américaines traversent une période de tensions. Il y a une semaine, le chancelier allemand Friedrich Merz estimait que Donald Trump n'avait pas de stratégie face à l'Iran et que les États-Unis se faisaient « humilier » au Moyen-Orient. Si d'autres critiques allemandes n'avaient pas suscité de réaction à Washington, le président américain a, cette fois, répondu en critiquant vertement le dirigeant allemand et en annonçant le retrait à venir de 5 000 militaires américains stationnés en Allemagne. Si la nouvelle a jeté un froid, Berlin veut désormais calmer le jeu.
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