How Washington Should Manage Its Most Complicated Relationships; Why Party Elders Can’t Save the Country From Xi; How Investments in Resilience Can Deter Beijing
Foreign Affairs Today

November 14, 2025 | View in Browser

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U.S. President Donald Trump meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Washington, D.C., October 2025

America’s Quasi Alliances

How Washington Should Manage Its Most Complicated Relationships

By Rebecca Lissner

 

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Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing, September 2025

The End of China’s Old Guard

Why Party Elders Can’t Save the Country From Xi

By Deng Yuwen

 
Reservists training during annual military exercises in Taoyuan, Taiwan, July 2025

Taiwan’s Plan for Peace Through Strength

How Investments in Resilience Can Deter Beijing

By Lin Fei-fan

 

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Biodefense is the intersection of science, security, and policy, addressing threats from pandemics to bioterrorism. The Schar School’s Master’s in Biodefense equips professionals to analyze biological risks, shape national security policy, and strengthen global preparedness through a flexible program located near Washington, D.C.

 

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Leaders of the BRICS countries at a summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, July 2025 

Losing the Swing States

Washington Is Driving the BRICS to Become an Anti-American Bloc

By Richard Fontaine and Gibbs McKinley

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