
U.S. Pressure Worked in Venezuela—Europe’s Didn’t
European citizens walked free only after Washington changed the balance of power, raising hard questions about years of EU diplomacy.

European citizens walked free only after Washington changed the balance of power, raising hard questions about years of EU diplomacy.

The French president is attacking Donald Trump instead of dealing with his own political problems at home.

The Kremlin rejected the legality of Western sanctions and said the ship was sailing lawfully when it was seized by U.S. forces in the North Atlantic.

By pulling the United States out of 66 international bodies, Donald Trump is turning rhetoric into action—and challenging the global system that has dominated since the Cold War.

The vessel, linked to Venezuelan oil exports, was intercepted after weeks of evading U.S. maritime controls, prompting protests from Moscow.

The White House says the Arctic island is a U.S. security priority, prompting sharp pushback from Denmark and Greenland’s leaders.

The change of power in Venezuela brings relations between Caracas, Madrid, and Washington back into focus after years of opaque diplomacy.

The former Venezuelan strongman is set to appear in a Manhattan courtroom as Washington moves to press long-running drug trafficking and weapons charges.

State media now acknowledge increasing organized resistance as protests spread across the country.

Beijing’s large-scale military exercises followed Washington’s approval of a new multibillion-dollar arms package for Taipei.