
Hungary Is Living the Feminist Dream—the West Refuses To Admit it
Where the Dutch government looks at a young woman and sees a taxpayer it cannot afford to lose, the Orbán government looks at her and sees a mother it wants to support.

Where the Dutch government looks at a young woman and sees a taxpayer it cannot afford to lose, the Orbán government looks at her and sees a mother it wants to support.

Pakistani negotiators managed to ward off a threatened Tuesday night attack on Iranian infrastructure by the United States.

Reception facilities are ready for deportees in Kinshasa, with all logistical and technical arrangements handled by the U.S.—at no cost to the DRC.

Israel’s PM declares that his latest operation targeted infrastructure used for moving weapons and equipment.

Five suspects are in pre-trial detention in Czechia with two others in custody abroad under European arrest warrants, according to police.

Data from the UN show that more than 180 migrants have died or vanished in Mediterranean shipwrecks in just 10 days.

Slovenia’s election result remains contested as coalition talks begin and allegations of irregularities mount.

White House warns that catastrophic destruction could unfold unless Tehran bows to U.S. pressure.

Three years after reducing its dependence on Russian gas, Europe is still heavily dependent on imported oil and on strategic routes. The supplier may have changed. The dependence has not.

José Luis Ábalos’ corruption trial deepens the pressure on a government already surrounded by investigations.