Netanyahu meets with American progressives and dodges their questions.
America and the World
Not Yet an Intifada
Recent attacks in Israel do not represent an uprising, but despair expressed with knives.Â
The Foreign Policy Debate Missing From the Democratic Race
Liberals may have snickered at the recent Twitter battle between Donald Trump and Jeb Bush over George W. Bush’s national-security record, a debate CNBC said was “so dumb it’s genius.” But as childish as it seemed, at least they were debating national security, something on which the Democrats have made few firm proposals. This was […]
What’s Next for the TPP: Clyde Prestowitz in Conversation with David Dayen
The mammoth trade deal, completed at last, now heads to a divided Congress and a tough election season.
The European Prospect (Fall Preview)
With all the pathologies of the 1930s resurgent, Europe’s experiment in economic and social union has never been more at risk.Â
America’s Collapsing Trade Initiatives
Trade deals with Asia and Europe are faltering under their own contradictory goals. Â
Our Incoherent China Policy (Fall Preview)
The proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership is bad economics, and even worse as containment of China.
The Larger Meaning of Jeremy Corbyn
Europe’s center-left parties have ceased to be credible opposition.
Refugee Blues
Right-wing, anti-immigrant nationalism has been on the rise in Europe. Can EU leaders still learn from history?
Netanyahu Has Lost on the Iran Deal, But Won’t Leave the Table
Will the Iran fight make it easier for Democratic politicians to criticize the occupation?Â

