The politician and former journalist Serhiy Leshchenko says Ukraine needs its own Robert Mueller.
The U.N. agency chief for Palestinian refugees warns funding cuts risk undermining Middle East stability.
Toomas Hendrik Ilves, Estonia’s former president, on what to make of U.S. foreign policy toward Russia.
Former U.S. diplomat Thomas Pickering on Trump, Putin, and the world after Helsinki.
Poland’s former defense and foreign minister explains how Trump left Eastern Europe in the lurch.
Former U.S. ambassador to Russia says Trump can’t hold Moscow accountable by “winging it.”
In Washington this week, the Georgian president talks Trump, the Atlantic alliance, and Saakashvili.
An interview with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.
Google’s Eric Schmidt talks to Foreign Policy about the future of technology, security, and killer robots.
The Booker Prize nominee talks Trump, refugees, and truth.
The ex-president of Georgia, stripped of both Georgian and Ukrainian citizenship, is sitting in a relative’s apartment in the Bronx, plotting his next move.
Lithuania’s president talks to Foreign Policy about Vladimir Putin's "little green men" and whether Donald Trump really believes in NATO.
She won the Nobel Peace Prize and steered her country through the Ebola crisis. But the Liberian president’s proudest achievement will be peacefully giving up power.
Obama’s longtime climate envoy on finally inking a global emissions deal, on China’s future, and what happens to U.S. leadership.
One of Britain’s best-known novelists talks to FP about his radical reinvention of "The Merchant of Venice"