Articles

The brief life and tragic end of the United States of Central America

The brief life and tragic end of the United States of Central America

Two centuries ago, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica formed a national federation. That country’s breakup is a warning for divided societies today.

Ortega in His Labyrinth

Ortega in His Labyrinth

Nicaragua’s president has created an insular dynastic tyranny that eerily resembles the one against which he fought decades ago.

The limits of Biden’s foreign-policy conversion

The president did the right thing in Afghanistan, but that doesn’t mean he’ll abandon his long-standing support for American interventionism.

Diplomacy is the only way forward in Afghanistan now

Diplomacy is the only way forward in Afghanistan now

The Taliban aren’t likely to be America’s friends. But they don’t have to be our enemy either.

The inevitability of the Afghan tragedy

The inevitability of the Afghan tragedy

Two decades of delusion and confusion about America’s endgame in Afghanistan don’t make the Taliban takeover any less of a catastrophe. Just don’t call it a surprise.