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CURRENT ISSUE
September/October 2019
Foreign Affairs
Trending Topics: Middle East China Kashmir Hong Kong Trump Administration
A Hong Kong protester steps on images of Xi Jinping, October 2019Reuters / Athit Perawongmetha
Without Democracy, China Will Rise No Farther
Beijing Can’t Compete With Washington Until It Reckons With Its People
Jiwei Ci
This article is paywall-free.
Mosaic depicting Odysseus and the sirens
An Odyssey Through the Post-Fact World
Truth Is What Moors Us, As Homer Knew
Robert Zaretsky
This article is paywall-free.
Trump at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, September 2019
The Usurpation of U.S. Foreign Policy
How the Trump-Zelensky Call Corrodes American Power
Mira Rapp-Hooper
This article is paywall-free.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
How Japan Could Go Nuclear
It Has the Smarts and the Resources, but Does Tokyo Have the Will?
Mark Fitzpatrick
This article is paywall-free. Most Read Articles The Unwanted Wars Why the Middle East Is More Combustible Than Ever Robert Malley The Usurpation of U.S. Foreign Policy How the Trump-Zelensky Call Corrodes American Power Mira Rapp-Hooper How Japan Could Go Nuclear It Has the Smarts and the Resources, but Does Tokyo Have the Will? Mark Fitzpatrick Putin Welcomes Stalin Back to the Pantheon A New Russian Patriotism Embraces the Soviet Past Andrei Kolesnikov Without Democracy, China Will Rise No Farther Beijing Can’t Compete With Washington Until It Reckons With Its People Jiwei Ci Spotlight: Hong Kong Article imageSusana Vera / Reuters Susana Vera / Reuters How China Sees the Hong Kong Crisis The Real Reasons Behind Beijing’s Restraint Andrew J. Nathan This article is paywall-free. #17457 Will China Crush the Protests in Hong Kong? Why Beijing Doesn’t Need to Send in the Troops Michael C. Davis and Victoria Tin-bor Hui Hong Kong’s Muzzled Generation Cries Out How China Silenced a Movement for Democracy—Until It Couldn’t Anymore Suzanne Sataline Hong Kong's New Citizens Resistance and Democracy in a Changing City John Delury Tiananmen in Hong Kong The Alarming Echoes of 1989 Orville Schell The Latest Rifles and rifts: Houthi rebels in Sanaa, Yemen, December 2018 The Unwanted Wars Why the Middle East Is More Combustible Than Ever Robert Malley This article is paywall-free. China’s Neo-Maoist Moment China’s Neo-Maoist Moment How Xi Jinping Is Using China’s Past to Accomplish What His Predecessors Could Not Elizabeth Economy Russian artist Vasily Slonov poses with works from his project 'History of Russia, 20th century - from Lenin to Putin,' September 2013 Putin Welcomes Stalin Back to the Pantheon A New Russian Patriotism Embraces the Soviet Past Andrei Kolesnikov Current Issue: September/October 2019 SEE ALL New Issue VIEW THE ISSUE PURCHASE PDF SUBSCRIBE GIFT A SUBSCRIPTION VIEW THE ARCHIVE Article imageKevin Lamarque / File Photo / Reuters Competition Without Catastrophe How America Can Both Challenge and Coexist With China Kurt M. Campbell and Jake Sullivan Audio available for this article Article image The Population Bust Demographic Decline and the End of Capitalism as We Know It Zachary Karabell Audio available for this article Article image The Return of Doomsday The New Nuclear Arms Race—and How Washington and Moscow Can Stop It Ernest J. Moniz and Sam Nunn Audio available for this article Article image The Vigilante President How Duterte’s Brutal Populism Conquered the Philippines Sheila S. Coronel Audio available for this article How China Sees the Hong Kong Crisis How China Sees the Hong Kong Crisis The Real Reasons Behind Beijing’s Restraint Andrew J. Nathan This article is paywall-free. Shiite militiamen south of Baghdad, July 2014 The Long Game in Iraq How to Counter Iranian Influence in Baghdad Robert S. Ford and Randa Slim Reckless Choices, Bad Deals, and Dangerous Provocations Reckless Choices, Bad Deals, and Dangerous Provocations Trump’s Foreign Policy Is in a Downward Spiral Toward 2020 Hal Brands SPONSOR CONTENT Graduate School Forum Adapting to the New Rules of International Affairs Sponsor Logo Editor's Pick Just and Unjust Leaks Michael Walzer When to Spill Secrets READ THE FULL ARTICLE Audio available for this articleRobert Marchante / Reuters Women in front of election posters for Mozambique's ruling party, Frelimo, in Maputo August 2019. Peace Is a Losing Strategy in Mozambique Why Elections Could Cause Another Civil War Corinna Jentzsch “America First” Means a Retreat From Foreign Conflicts “America First” Means a Retreat From Foreign Conflicts In a Muted UN Speech, Trump Commits to Pulling Back Charles Kupchan U.S. President William Clinton, a Democrat, next to House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, two Republicans, April 1995 How Americans Were Driven to Extremes In the United States, Polarization Runs Particularly Deep Thomas Carothers and Andrew O'Donohue Book Reviews SEE ALL The Population Bust The Population Bust Reviewed by Zachary Karabell Zachary Karabell reviews two new books on population decline, arguing that the world is headed toward a population bust that could destroy capitalism as we know it. CONTINUE READING More Book Reviews On Press: The Liberal Values That Shaped the News Normandy ’44: D-Day and the Epic 77-Day Battle for France The World’s Most Prestigious Prize: The Inside Story of the Nobel Peace Prize Nationalism: A Short History Central American migrants walk through the Suchiate river, the natural border between Guatemala and Mexico, in their bid to reach the U.S Guatemala Is No Safe Third Country Why the Asylum Deal Is a Mistake Adriana Beltrán Iran Is Testing the Trump Administration Iran Is Testing the Trump Administration Tehran Thinks There Are No Rules, No Limits, and Anything Goes Dennis Ross A fishing boat at Disko Bay, Greenland, 2008 The Arctic Spring Washington Is Sleeping Through Changes at the Top of the World Heather A. Conley This Day in History SEE ALL OCT 5, 1989 Dalai Lama Wins Nobel Peace Prize The religious and political leader is honored for his nonviolent efforts to end Chinese control of Tibet. READ MORE Flickr Climate Change Is Already Killing Us Climate Change Is Already Killing Us How Our Warmer and Wetter Planet Is Getting Sicker and Deadlier by the Day Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus This article is paywall-free. A replica of the so-called Tsar-Bomb, the biggest-ever detonated Soviet nuclear bomb, on display at an exhibition in Moscow, August 2015 Will Nuclear Weapons Make A Comeback? Why the Global Nonproliferation Regime Is Fraying Eric Brewer Indian paramilitary soldier in Srinagar Winning Kashmir and Losing India How Modi Is Gutting Indian Democracy Pratap Bhanu Mehta This site uses cookies to improve your user experience. Click here to learn more. CONTINUE Subscribe GET THE MAGAZINE Save up to 55% on Foreign Affairs magazine! SUBSCRIBE FOREIGN AFFAIRS Weekly Newsletter Get in-depth analysis delivered right to your inbox. SIGN UP ABOUT About Us History Staff Careers Events CONTACT Customer Service Contact Us Submissions Permissions Advertise Press Center Leave us Feedback SUBSCRIPTION Subscriptions Group Subscriptions My Account Give a Gift Donate Download iOS App Newsletters FOLLOW COUNTRY FOCUS GRADUATE SCHOOL FORUM Council on Foreign Relations From the publishers of Foreign Affairs The Most: Recent Shared Viewed Cyber Week in Review: October 4, 2019 by Adam Segal The Legacy of Nigeria's 1999 Transition to Democracy by John Campbell Is Russia Winning the Ukraine Scandal? by Stephen Sestanovich Published by the Council on Foreign Relations Privacy PolicyTerms of Use ©2019 Council on Foreign Relations, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Foreign Affairs |