The deal in Gaza could permanently change the region for the better—but there are dangers too.
A weekly selection of opinions and analyses from the Arab media around the world. Nearly six years after its outbreak, on May 8, 1945, World War II officially ended in Europe with the surrender of ...
Eric welcomes historian Tim Bouverie, author of Allies at War: How the Struggles Between the Allied Powers Shaped the War and ...
As the world searches for a cure for covid-19, several states are on a parallel quest to end the malaise between the West and Russia. US President Donald Trump’s recent decision to invite his Russian ...
FDR's complicity in Stalin's post-WWII bloodletting started a trend of lies and hypocrisy in U.S. foreign policy. The fact that the Soviet regime had been the most oppressive government in the world ...
Editor’s note: Today marks the 75th anniversary of the commencement of the Yalta Conference, held February 4–11, 1945. The following article was published in the February 19, 1982, issue of National ...
THE Yalta papers could not have appeared under worse auspices. The decision to publish them was colored by partisan political motives. The leakage during the process of selection and editing of ...
This is the twenty-first installment in a series about a journey, by train and bicycle, across Russia to Crimea shortly before the war began. By the time I had biked around Livadia Palace and Yalta, ...
Eighty years ago this month, the United States and Great Britain effectively conceded Eastern Europe and parts of Central Europe to Soviet control at the infamous Yalta Conference held at the Livadia ...
On May 7, 2005, on his way to Russia to commemorate the 60th anniversary of Victory in Europe (V-E) Day, President Bush stopped in Riga, Latvia, to empathize with the Baltic countries because of the ...
This year is the 75th anniversary of the end of World War Two. One of the biggest frauds of the final stage of that war was the meeting at Yalta of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, British Prime ...
After World War I, the political right in Germany developed a myth called the “stab in the back” theory to explain its people’s defeat. Though military leaders had helped negotiate the war’s end, they ...