Essays by Martin Indyk, Bill Burns, Ramachandra Guha, Elizabeth Saunders, and more.

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Foreign Affairs
 

March/April Issue Out Now

 

Subscribe to Foreign Affairs now for just $45.95 per year to access our March/April issue . Your subscriber benefits include the following:

  • Six issues available in Print, Audio, PDF, EPUB, and MOBI formats
  • Unlimited access to new articles and audio
  • Access to the Foreign Affairs app (iOS and Android)
  • Over a century of archives online
  • Our subscriber-only newsletter
 

March/April Issue Out Now

 

Subscribe to Foreign Affairs now for just $45.95 per year to access our March/April issue. Your subscriber benefits include the following:

  • Six issues available in Print, Audio, PDF, EPUB, and MOBI formats
  • Unlimited access to new articles and audio
  • Access to the Foreign Affairs app (iOS and Android)
  • Over a century of archives online
  • Our subscriber-only newsletter
 

Our March/April 2024 issue is available online today . It includes a special package on the future of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, featuring former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk on the resurrection of the two-state solution; Marc Lynch and Shibley Telhami on the grim one-state reality; Dalia Dassa Kaye and Sanam Vakil on how regional powers can move the Middle East in a more positive direction; and Haaretz editor Aluf Benn on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s role in the spiral of violence. The issue also covers:

  • China’s ideological transformation under Xi Jinping
  • The fight for liberalism’s future

  • The costs of failing to engage Latin America on trade

  • The Cold War legacy of Henry Kissinger, and more.

 
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Spycraft and Statecraft

CIA Director Bill Burns explains how the Ukraine war has helped the United States recruit more Russian spies.

India’s Feet of Clay

Ramachandra Guha argues that Narendra Modi’s leadership is hindering India’s rise.

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Politics Can’t Stop at the Water’s Edge

Elizabeth Saunders discusses how Washington can make smarter foreign policy choices.

The Age of Amorality

Hal Brands asks whether the United States should transgress its own values in order to defend them.

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Spycraft and Statecraft

CIA Director Bill Burns explains how the Ukraine war has helped the United States recruit more Russian spies.

Image

India’s Feet of Clay

Ramachandra Guha argues that Narendra Modi’s leadership is hindering India’s rise.

Image

Politics Can’t Stop at the Water’s Edge

Elizabeth Saunders discusses how Washington can make smarter foreign policy choices.

Image

The Age of Amorality

Hal Brands asks whether the United States should transgress its own values in order to defend them.

 
 

Books & Reviews

 

In a review of “The Achilles Trap,” by Steve Coll, Gideon Rose discusses the origins of the U.S. war in Iraq—and Washington’s fatal misreading of Saddam Hussein.

 
 

Books & Reviews

 

In a review of “The Achilles Trap,” by Steve Coll, Gideon Rose discusses the origins of the U.S. war in Iraq—and Washington’s fatal misreading of Saddam Hussein.

 

Subscribe today  to access the full issue, plus full access to new and archival content, audio editions, and The Backstory, our subscriber-only newsletter.


Sincerely,

The Team at Foreign Affairs

 

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