Trump's World Cup Intervention Shows His Sore Loser Philosophy
In sports as in foreign policy, he treats cheating as a virtue. And it doesn’t even work.
In sports as in foreign policy, he treats cheating as a virtue. And it doesn’t even work.
Plus: A federal flip-flop on AI innovation, the beauty of America as seen through World Cup tourists' eyes, and more...
As part of peace negotiations, the U.S. Treasury issued an unprecedented total waiver from Iranian oil sanctions.
Plus: Keir Starmer steps down, Cuba privatizes, AOC inspires a copycat, and more...
The U.S. and Iran have moved to the next stage of the peace process. Hawks on all sides are terrified that it will succeed.
Plus: Anthropic vs. the government, Knicks win, bread and circuses, and more...
The White House keeps insisting that peace is around the corner. Meanwhile, Israel, Iran, and the United States keep shooting at each other.
Bipartisan pressure is keeping the war alive.
After trying to open the Strait of Hormuz by force, the U.S. is ready to accept an Iranian proposal it had rejected.
The Trump administration is stuck in a standoff that is unstable and damaging to the entire world.
What exactly was the point of killing thousands of people and destroying the world economy?
Both sides claim that they’ve agreed to stop fighting and open the Strait of Hormuz, but the fighting is still happening and Hormuz is still closed.
Plus: back to the moon, one year since "Liberation Day," birthright citizenship at the Supreme Court, Jonathan lives, and more...
A former leader of Al Qaeda has convinced Washington that he’s a liberal reformer. Now comes the hard part of following through.
Plus: new tariff threats escalate China trade war, federal layoffs begin amidst the government shutdown, and Democrats face a candidate-quality crisis
Plus: Letitia James' legal trouble, everything's TV (and that's bad), millionaire explosion, and more...
The war in Gaza was already over in January. Trump let it reopen and expand. A ceasefire is good—but it should have happened much earlier.
Plus: Zohran Mamdani's bus plan makes no sense, Kristi Noem's description of antifa makes no sense, and more...
Trump struggles to articulate any foreign policy view with much coherence, and has a fragile ego that makes world conflicts all about him.
Those who pushed for Trump to attack Iran are now moving the goalposts for success.
Sitting on the sidelines let America play neutral mediator and talk down both sides.
Trump has hired a notorious hawk as his national security adviser—and fired that adviser after getting in the way of delicate diplomatic talks—in each of his two terms.
Syrian Kurdish rebels and the new Syrian government have agreed to reunite peacefully. The U.S. military may have helped broker the agreement.
Rep. Adam Smith (D–Wash.) thinks Democrats should return to their antiwar roots—and be open to negotiating with Russia.
The spread of Ultimate Frisbee testifies to a kind of Western soft power in the Middle East, one far friendlier than bombs or bullets.
Hawks from both major parties lashed out at the confirmation hearing for Trump’s nominee for top military strategist.
As world leaders debate, Ukrainian defenders innovate, adapt, and wage defensive war on their own terms.
The spread of Ultimate Frisbee testifies to a kind of Western soft power in the Middle East, one far friendlier than bombs or bullets.
It’s hard to tell how serious his threats are—and maybe that’s by design.
The president says he wants peace in the Middle East. But his plans are all over the place.
Trump wants Arab countries to take in Gaza’s population. The Biden administration already tried, and failed, to bribe and cajole Egypt into doing so.
Trump wants to negotiate instead of bombing Iran. Jilted war hawks are blaming his advisers.
But that doesn't mean he's embracing the doves.
The same ceasefire agreement was almost signed in May 2024. Instead, the pointless violence continued for several more months—at Americans’ expense.
Ukraine’s strategic advantage lies in its autonomy rather than playing into Putin's ploy.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook at 1 p.m. Eastern this Thursday for a discussion with Trita Parsi of the Quincy Institute about the Israel-Hamas war.
The Hamas-embraced idea that Jews have no place in Israel fosters extremism on both sides.
"Christian libertarians" Bayard Rustin and David Dellinger challenged state power and ended up leading the civil rights movement and anti-Vietnam War protests.
The economic historian and Magatte Wade, Alex Gladstein, Mohamad Machine-Chian, Tony Woodlief, and Tom Palmer are challenging authoritarians everywhere.
The higher taxes on small businesses and entrepreneurs could slow growth. Less opportunity means more tribalism and division.
War by Other Means tells the story of those conscientious objectors who did not cooperate with the government's alternative-service schemes.
"A future of bloodless global discipline is a chilling thing."
Don't underestimate the civilization-saving powers of respecting private property and generally minding your own business.
Left unspecified: how many U.S. troops would be coming home, and when
True to form, the presidential hopeful is turning the conversation around war on its head.
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