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1. The War Room newsletter: Six must-read books on the second world war
2. The UN could run out of cash within months
3. Donald Trump picks the wrong trade fight with China
4. A Trump executive order will unleash a global deep-sea mining boom
5. Why some countries are once again embracing cluster bombs
6. The ugly task of Putin-proofing your border
7. Trump’s red-hot war on terror
8. The coming struggle to choose the next pope
9. Plastics are greener than they seem
10. Xi Jinping’s Trump-sized puzzle
12. There is a vast hidden workforce behind AI
13. The dangers of Donald Trump’s instinct for dealmaking
14. The War Room newsletter: Why B-2 bombers are gathering on a tiny island
15. State capture is a growing threat. Reversing it is hard
16. China debates whether Trump is a revolutionary, or just rude
18. Europe will have to zip its lip over China’s abuses
19. Trump is a problem for Europe’s most important hard-right leaders
20. The right way to fight nativists
21. Donald Trump shoots his own global mouthpiece
22. Donald Trump v the spies of Five Eyes
23. Could Europe replace Starlink if America pulls the plug?
24. Trump’s whims are overriding the national interest
25. Europe thinks the unthinkable on a nuclear bomb
26. NATO’s race against Russia to rearm
27. The War Room newsletter: “Be quiet, small man”—diplomacy, Musk style
28. The tech bros selling drugs by drone
29. America First is a contagious condition
30. America’s self-isolating president
31. Can Europe confront Vladimir Putin’s Russia on its own?
32. Australia prepares for a lonelier, harsher world
33. Will it be Ukraine today, Taiwan tomorrow?
34. Donald Trump is junking the transatlantic alliance
35. China’s stunning new campaign to turn the world against Taiwan
36. Xi Jinping swings his “assassin’s mace” of economic warfare
37. Allies will not appease Donald Trump for ever
38. As adoptions collapse, demand for international surrogacy is soaring
39. A big, beautiful Trump deal with China?
40. Why don’t more countries import their electricity?
41. Trump unmasks American selfishness, say cynics
42. Inside the Houthis’ moneymaking machine
43. Marco Rubio will find China is hard to beat in Latin America
44. Donald Trump has a strong foreign-policy hand, but could blow it
45. Women warriors and the war on woke
46. Why people over the age of 55 are the new problem generation
48. Why warriors should welcome laws of war
49. Is the age of American air superiority coming to an end?
50. What has four stomachs and could change the world?
51. The Art of the Deal: global edition
52. Could the next pope come from Africa or Asia?
53. Will the West betray or save anti-Putin protesters in Georgia?
54. “Tariffers” v “traders”: the new contest for Donald Trump’s ear
55. The world is losing the fight against international gangs
56. Half a loaf, at best, from the climate talks
57. Is your master’s degree useless?
58. The perils of appeasing a warlike Russia
59. The danger zone between two presidents
60. How to avoid Oval Office humiliation
61. King coal is dirty, dangerous—and far from dead
62. The world faces its worst trade wars since the 1930s
63. America’s allies brace for brinkmanship, deals—and betrayal
64. What the world thinks of Trump, Ukraine and Chinese supremacy
65. A surprise new twist in Putin’s currency wars
66. The Telegram: our new guide to a dangerous world
67. Intrigue, greed and hostility burn in the Antarctic
68. Putin’s plan to dethrone the dollar
69. Vladimir Putin’s spies are plotting global chaos
70. Over a billion have voted in 2024: has democracy won?
71. A new “quartet of chaos” threatens America
72. A UN vote on Palestine underlines America’s weakening clout
73. Sport is getting hotter, harder and deadlier
74. How encrypted messaging apps conquered the world
75. The poisonous global politics of water
76. Indian tourists are conquering the world
77. Can Donald Trump’s Iron Dome plan keep America safe?
78. Why the war on childhood obesity is failing
79. Paris could change how cities host the Olympics for good
80. Could America fight its enemies without breaking the law?
81. How China and Russia could hobble the internet
82. Trump and other populists will haunt NATO’s 75th birthday party
83. The rise of the truly cruel summer
84. Brainy Indians are piling into Western universities
85. The new front in China’s cyber campaign against America
86. Is your rent ever going to fall?
87. Iran’s new leaders stand at a nuclear precipice
88. Taiwan’s new president faces an upsurge in Chinese coercion
89. The world’s rules-based order is cracking
90. Beware, global jihadists are back on the march
91. The tech wars are about to enter a fiery new phase
92. Would you really die for your country?
93. Who’s the big boss of the global south?
94. Thirty years after Rwanda, genocide is still a problem from hell
95. Narendra Modi’s secret weapon: India’s diaspora
96. Why young men and women are drifting apart
97. We’re hiring a global correspondent
98. America’s elite universities are bloated, complacent and illiberal
99. Africa is juggling rival powers like no other continent
100. Russian spies are back—and more dangerous than ever
101. 2024 is a giant test of nerves for democracy
102. War in space is no longer science fiction
103. The world is bracing for Donald Trump’s possible return
104. Israel’s judge in The Hague is its government’s bogeyman
105. The genocide case Israel faces is more about politics than the law
106. Welcome to the new era of global sea power
107. How ransomware could cripple countries, not just companies
108. A new Suez crisis threatens the world economy
109. Climate talks at last lead to a deal on cutting fossil-fuel use
110. The pandemic’s toll on schooling emerges in awful new exam results
111. A religious revolution is under way in the Middle East
112. Many small islands have no room for manoeuvre at COP28
113. From Gaza to Ukraine, wars and crises are piling up
114. Why migration is in such a mess once more
115. Israel is more popular than social-media posts suggest
116. The culture war over the Gaza war
117. The three steps on America’s ladder of military escalation
118. Israel needs to resist irrational retaliation
119. The global backlash against climate policies has begun
120. Africa’s coups are part of a far bigger crisis
121. States are becoming more brazen about killing foes abroad
122. Meet the world’s new arms dealers
123. Are Ukraine’s tactics working?
124. The growing global movement to restrain house prices
125. A new nuclear arms race looms
126. Reassessing Obama’s biggest mistake
127. The BRICS bloc is riven with tensions
128. What Ukraine’s bloody battlefield is teaching medics
129. Western values are steadily diverging from the rest of the world’s
130. The Ukrainian army commits new forces in a big southward push
131. Russia is attacking Ukraine’s agricultural exports
132. Is Ukraine’s offensive stalling?
133. What if China and India became friends?
134. What would Europe do if Trump won?
135. NATO is drafting new plans to defend Europe
136. NATO is agonising over whether to let Ukraine join
137. India’s diaspora is bigger and more influential than any in history
138. Should you send your children to private school?
139. The speech police are coming for social media
140. The cost of the global arms race
141. Europe can’t decide how to unplug from China
142. After 12 years of blood, Assad’s Syria rejoins the Arab League
143. The 2023 crony-capitalism index
144. How the war split the mafia
145. The world’s deadliest war last year wasn’t in Ukraine
146. How to survive a superpower split
147. Was your degree really worth it?
148. Which will grow faster: India or Indonesia?
149. How the Iraq war bent America’s army out of shape
150. What does Xi Jinping want from Vladimir Putin?
151. Russia’s friends are a motley—and shrinking—crew
152. Emmanuel Macron’s vision of a more muscular Europe is coming true
153. The biggest obstacle to saving rainforests is lawlessness
154. “You will always be 0% prepared”: Ukraine’s refugees on life far from home
155. Ukrainian refugees remain in limbo
156. Throughout the rich world, the young are falling out of love with cars
157. How a tide of tech money is transforming charity
158. Most children in poor countries are being failed by their schools
159. Open-source intelligence is piercing the fog of war in Ukraine
160. The age of the grandparent has arrived
161. The death of Pope Benedict removes a problem for liberal Catholics
162. Politics will move further to the left in 2023
163. Pope Benedict XVI was an iron fist in a white glove
164. The pandemic’s indirect effects on small children could last a lifetime
165. China’s deep-water fishing fleet is the world’s most rapacious
166. The taboos around sexual health are weakening
167. Should rich countries pay for climate damage in poor ones?
168. The Qatar World Cup shows how football is changing
169. The world’s population has reached 8bn. Don’t panic
170. Donors are already mulling a Marshall Plan for Ukraine
171. How men with guns aggravate global hunger
172. How one pandemic made another one worse
173. Vladimir Putin is dragging the world back to a bloodier time
174. Vladimir Putin says the world’s energy infrastructure is “at risk”
175. Booming cocaine production suggests the war on drugs has failed
176. How pop culture went multipolar
177. Could the war in Ukraine go nuclear?
178. How Russia is trying to win over the global south
179. An election that could make the global internet safer for autocrats
180. Some of the new king’s realms may become republics
181. How covid-19 spurred governments to snoop on sewage
182. Should every schoolchild eat free?
183. Dictators and utopians are fond of fiddling with constitutions
184. Armies are re-learning how to fight in cities
185. Much of Russia’s intellectual elite has fled the country
186. Can rich countries care for the old without going bust?
187. The women’s Euros are selling out stadiums
188. Catholic reformers want big changes to a church marred by sex abuse
189. Covid learning loss has been a global disaster
190. Around the world, bans do not make abortion much rarer
191. Costly food and energy are fostering global unrest
192. Swimming’s ruling on transgender women continues a trend
193. Can tech tackle the global crisis of depression and anxiety?
194. Does the tank have a future?
195. Climate change is harder on less educated people
196. The pandemic has accelerated a global decline in the rule of law
197. Anonymous tipsters, angry at Russia, help detect sanctions-busters
199. The war in Ukraine is spurring transatlantic co-operation in tech
200. Press freedom is under attack
201. How the war in Ukraine is changing Europe’s demography
202. Lawsuits aimed at greenhouse-gas emissions are a growing trend
203. Why so much of the world won’t stand up to Russia
204. Russia’s brutal mercenaries probably won’t matter much in Ukraine
205. How, if at all, might Russia be punished for its war crimes in Ukraine?
206. The invasion of Ukraine is not the first social media war, but it is the most viral
207. How Vladimir Putin provokes—and complicates—the struggle against autocracy
208. America returns to containment to deal with Russia and China
209. Vladimir Putin has rallied the West
210. The West struggles to respond forcefully to Russia’s war in Ukraine
211. How Russia has revived NATO
212. Covid-19 has pushed governments to find new ways to help the poor
213. Will China dominate the world of semiconductors?
214. Divorce in the rich world is getting less nasty
215. Do tips make for better service?
216. The world’s religions face a post-pandemic reckoning
217. Are video games really addictive?
218. The Omicron variant advances at an incredible rate
219. Politicians are sending mixed signals about private car ownership
220. A tussle for control of Interpol pits good cops against bad
221. Why the Omicron variant is not a punishment for vaccine inequity
222. BioNTech’s boss, Ugur Sahin, remains sanguine about Omicron
223. Vast satellite constellations are alarming astronomers
224. The Glasgow summit left a huge hole in the world’s plans to curb climate change
225. Was COP26 in Glasgow a success?
226. In the West, assisted dying is rapidly becoming legal and accepted
227. COP26 ends with a pact that is neither a triumph nor a trainwreck
228. What happened at COP26?
229. The first week of COP26 was less substantive than it seemed
230. If the world loves forests, it should put a price on their carbon
231. Weak commitments from the G20 cast a shadow over COP26’s opening
232. Why vaccine passports are causing chaos
233. Broken promises, energy shortages and covid-19 will hamper COP26
234. Governments are finding new ways to squash free expression online
235. A Russian editor says he won the Nobel because his slain colleagues could not
236. The IEA warns much more ambition is needed to curb global warming
237. Two journalists who have exposed human-rights abuses win the Nobel peace prize
238. The pandemic will spur the worldwide growth of private tutoring
239. The military draft is making a comeback
241. Measures to prevent the spread of covid-19 have also fended off flu
242. The strategic reverberations of the AUKUS deal will be big and lasting
243. What does the Australian submarine deal mean for non-proliferation?
244. The Gates Foundation’s approach has both advantages and limits
245. Societies that treat women badly are poorer and less stable
247. From Congo to the Capitol, conspiracy theories are surging
248. As a rich-world covid-vaccine glut looms, poor countries miss out
249. Climate change will alter where many crops are grown
250. Why America keeps building corrupt client states
251. The world needs a proper investigation into how covid-19 started
252. Travel chaos will last well beyond summer
253. At 70, the global convention on refugees is needed more than ever
254. The pandemic has exacerbated existing political discontent
255. Attitudes towards experimenting on monkeys are diverging
256. As wildfires continue to ravage America, floods are wreaking havoc elsewhere
257. America, China and the race to the Moon
258. As the death penalty becomes less common, life imprisonment becomes more so
259. As lockdowns lift, media firms brace for an “attention recession”
260. Covid-19 has stymied governments’ efforts to collect data
261. Economically, covid-19 has hit hard-up urbanites hardest
262. Social media are turbocharging the export of America’s political culture
263. The G7 sketches a development-finance initiative to counter China’s
264. AI helps scour video archives for evidence of human-rights abuses
265. A backlash against gender ideology is starting in universities
266. Assessing the theory that covid-19 leaked from a Chinese lab
267. Joe Biden orders his spooks to investigate the origins of covid-19
268. How the pandemic has upended the lives of working parents
269. France is confronting its history in Algeria
270. New technology has enabled cyber-crime on an industrial scale
271. Diplomacy has changed more than most professions during the pandemic
272. The West’s armies are getting more serious about climate change
273. Female soldiers are changing how armed forces work
274. India has proved to be a popular—and clever—investor in poor countries
275. Covid-19 is fuelling a Zoom-boom in cosmetic surgery
276. Love them or hate them, virtual meetings are here to stay
277. When brawn and technology ruin the spectacle of sports
278. Almost one billion doses of covid-19 vaccines have been produced
279. Brain injuries are startlingly common among those who have committed crimes
280. UN peacekeeping is hamstrung by national rules for its troops
281. The pandemic has changed the shape of global happiness
282. Nicaragua shows how poor countries can reduce domestic violence
283. Violence against women is a scourge on poor countries
284. Poor countries struggling with debt fight to get help
285. As covid-19 vaccines spread, so do underhand ways to get them
286. How far-right extremism is becoming a global threat
287. Is it time for “ecocide” to become an international crime?
288. Covid-19 has persuaded some parents that home-schooling is better
289. The pandemic made the world realise the importance of human contact
290. Censorious governments are abusing “fake news” laws
291. Even before covid-19, nightclubs were struggling
292. Repressive regimes are tightening their grip on their citizens abroad
293. Surrogacy reform is spreading in the rich world
294. Why do some people risk their lives for fun?
295. Messaging services are providing a more private internet
296. Digital media fuel global protests but can be used against them
297. Political theorists have been worrying about mob rule for 2,000 years
298. The expulsion of Donald Trump marks a watershed for Facebook and Twitter
299. Wikipedia is 20, and its reputation has never been higher
300. The Capitol riot is a godsend for America’s critics
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