How sabotage of a pipeline in the Baltic and a hurricane in Florida are speeding the world towards a food crisis. (Originally published Sept. 29 in “What in the World“)
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Authorities are bracing for a new food crisis as storms and droughts batter farmland and over-fishing drains the seas (Originally published Sept. 28 in “What in the World“) As Florida
Moscow is rattling its nuclear saber again, but rustling its sheaves might be scarier. (Originally published Sept. 22 in “What in the World“) As Russian President Vladimir Putin doubles down
Even as American rockets help Ukraine eject Russian invaders, it’s rain that’s reshaping the map (Originally published Sept. 15 in “What in the World“) Every war is in retrospect won
After routing Russian forces in the country’s northeast, Ukraine has to convert its initiative quickly into a defensible position—or total victory. (Originally published Sept. 13 in “What in the World“)
After adding Finland to NATO, the U.S. further erodes Russia’s buffer with a big arms buildup in E. Europe The U.S. is beefing up Poland’s ability to defend Europe’s eastern
Putin turns to allies in Beijing, Pyongyang and Tehran as Ukraine presses its counteroffensive (Originally published Sept. 8 in “What in the World“) The Administration of U.S. President Joe Biden
The Solomon Islands, Taiwan and Ukraine are positioned to determine the future of Great Power relations—and conflict (Originally published Sept. 1 in “What in the World“) The Solomon Islands is
The U.S. is shipping more to Ukraine and Taiwan, Russia shifts them from Syria, Pyongyang wants some and the Pentagon is running short (Originally published Aug. 30 in “What in
Russia orders up more troops for U.S. rockets to kill in Ukraine; U.S. troops defend Conoco in Syria (Originally published Aug. 26 in “What in the World“) Russian President Vladimir