Green campaigners are loudly calling for governments to spend up to 25% of our GDP, choking growth in the name of climate change.
Three years after launching his “special military operation” in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir ... public opinion in Putin’s Russia must be understood not as an unmoving monolith but rather like slow-moving lava that might change direction ...
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists says the United States, China and Russia have the prime responsibility to pull the world back from the brink
In contrast, the Russian Federation has been referred to as an “imitation democracy”. It has institutions that one would find in democratic systems of government (a parliament and a directly elected president). But, among other flaws, these institutions do not function within a genuinely competitive or fair electoral environment.
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists set the clock to 89 seconds before midnight—one second closer to the theoretical point of annihilation.
Protecting and conserving our natural heritage, predicting weather and environmental conditions, preventing and managing pollution, promoting clean growth and a sustainable environment for present and future generations.
Reich also criticises Trump's executive order to end birthright citizenship - where anyone born in the US becomes a citizen - saying it's a violation of the US constitution: "Decent people could lose their citizenship... children could lose their parents...some parents may not have the right papers."
Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th President of the United States on Monday at noon local time (10:30 IST) at a ceremony held inside the Rotunda of the US Capitol.
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Iranian counterpart, Masoud Pezeshkian, signed a broad cooperation ...
The US president says he plans to speak to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, and that he'd "rather not" use tariffs against China. Meanwhile, a judge blocked Trump's order to end birthright citizenship.
The recently published memoirs of former German Chancellor Angela Merkel are fuelling the present-day criticism of her legacy. And it is true that today, Germany does face many great challenges. But a close reading suggests that it would be too simplistic to lay full responsibility at her feet, as many analysts are wont to do.