European leaders are learning they cannot rely on Washington, and that the US will act against their interests and at their economic expense.
Brianna “Bri” Heney, owner of Bernini Pizzeria and Wine Bar, has been unusually busy.
As US gas prices climb, politicians are looking at ways to lower them. An economist breaks down what does − and doesn’t − move the number on the sign at the gas station.
Tehran and Washington look to different rules to govern their conduct in the key choke point.
Both countries seem tired of the costs of war and ongoing risks, but successful negotiations will have to overcome deep distrust by both sides.
War is a great engine of change, sweeping aside assumptions, toppling established power relationships, driving new forces into play, rearrangi…
For once, the MAGA pundit had nothing to say.
Countries don’t just switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources. Each takes its own path, depending on its economy, international trade relations and government stability.
US consumers, already feeling pain at the gas pump, can expect higher prices and prolonged shortages for goods of all sorts, including food, as additional consequences of slowed oil production.
The Trump administration’s miscalculation of Iran is the latest entry in an old and lethal tradition in international politics: the catastrophic gap between what leaders believe and what war delivers.
