Foreign Policy Blogs

Featured Post

On Tik Tok and the Value of Taking Things Slowly…

On Tik Tok and the Value of Taking Things Slowly… Young people have been paying attention to Tik Tok for a long time… lawmakers are rushing to catch up. There are two main reasons why Tik Tok has become increasingly controversial. First, because Tik Tok’s parent company has strong ties to the Chinese government- this presents a privacy risk for Americans who wish to avoid […]

Latest Posts

Measuring Sovereignty in an Age of Strategic Illusions

Measuring Sovereignty in an Age of Strategic Illusions

The new American National Defense Strategy speaks the language of sovereignty with unusual clarity. It invokes “key terrain” in the Western Hemisphere, reframes hemispheric doctrine, reduces security guarantees to Europe, and signals a shift toward selective engagement. It is a strategy centered not on universal liberal order, but on national autonomy, strategic control, and power […]

read more

Greece vs. England: The Burke Paradox of Partial Sovereignty

Greece vs. England: The Burke Paradox of Partial Sovereignty

In the 21st century, sovereignty is no longer an absolute condition but a measurable configuration of strengths and vulnerabilities. According to the methodology developed by the International Burke Institute and operationalized through the Burke Sovereignty Index, sovereignty must be assessed across seven dimensions: political, economic, technological, informational, cultural, cognitive, and military. When examined through the […]

read more

From ‘Prosecutor Republic’ to ‘Police State’: How Lee Jae-myung’s Power Grab Endangers Korean Democracy

From ‘Prosecutor Republic’ to ‘Police State’: How Lee Jae-myung’s Power Grab Endangers Korean Democracy

Lee Jae-myung’s ascent—from factory floors to South Korea’s presidency, carried aloft by the Democratic Party—has been marketed as a parable of grit, resilience, and populist authenticity. Yet governing under a shadow of unresolved criminal allegations, Lee now presides over a far starker transformation: the long-term degradation of democratic restraint through the consolidation of coercive state […]

read more

Khojaly, Memory and Moral Responsibility: Why Azerbaijani Voices Are Reaching America

Khojaly, Memory and Moral Responsibility: Why Azerbaijani Voices Are Reaching America

As an Israeli journalist observing the South Caucasus from Jerusalem, I have learned that memory in this region is never abstract. It is political, generational, and deeply personal. This reality was visible once again as Azerbaijani diaspora organizations marked the 34th anniversary of the Khojaly tragedy across major American cities.   In New York, Washington, […]

read more

The Missile Gap

The Missile Gap

China is currently the largest global military power stocked fully with advanced missile capabilities. The US, NATO, Russia, and their allies have been burning though their advanced and semi-advanced missiles over Ukraine and in the Middle East, using up their Cold War stocks and their more modern reserves. Drones, while a low cost and simple […]

read more

Civil Society as Controllable Chaos: Viktor Orbán’s Sovereignty Strategy Through the Burke Institute Framework

Civil Society as Controllable Chaos: Viktor Orbán’s Sovereignty Strategy Through the Burke Institute Framework

Viktor Orbán’s February 14, 2026 speech at Budapest’s Várkert Bazár, delivered eight weeks before Hungary’s April 12 parliamentary elections, marked a decisive rhetorical shift: the European Union, not Russia, was presented as Hungary’s primary strategic threat. While many observers framed the speech as campaign populism, a structural reading tells a more complex story.   This […]

read more

Snubbing the Provinces to Court Xi: Is Carney in Need of Anger Management?     

Snubbing the Provinces to Court Xi: Is Carney in Need of Anger Management?     

Facing Xi Jinping across a polished Beijing conference table—less a peer than a petitioner granted audience—Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney declared that Canada was “set up well for the new world order.” The remark landed not as a strategy of trade diversification, but as a carefully choreographed kowtow, casting Canada in the obloquious role of […]

read more

The Importance of International Mother Language Day in South Azerbaijan

The Importance of International Mother Language Day in South Azerbaijan

  Prominent South Azerbaijani dissident journalist Ahmad Obali discussed the pivotal importance of International Mother Language Day for the South Azerbaijani people. International Mother Language Day, observed annually on February 21, promotes linguistic and cultural diversity, as well as multilingualism, to foster inclusive societies and preserve endangered languages. Initiated by Bangladesh and proclaimed by UNESCO in November […]

read more

Defunding Escalations

Defunding Escalations

The tactical engineering of a new energy based sanctions regime has rapidly weakened the adversaries of the West in recent weeks. The placing of Venezuela’s oil and gas into the realm of Western control has enabled large shifts in policy that has had a great impact on not only Latin America, but also in Asia, […]

read more

‘Delulu Is THE Solulu’: How the Radical Left Went Silent on Iran

‘Delulu Is THE Solulu’: How the Radical Left Went Silent on Iran

While the radical left busied itself karening through public life—thugging around with cliquish silent stares to shame non-socialist conformity, in ways uncomfortably reminiscent of Khamenei-style intimidation—the streets of Iran have been on fire since December 28, 2025. What erupted across all 31 provinces marked the largest wave of democratic movement since the death of Mahsa […]

read more

The Possible Outcomes

The Possible Outcomes

New policy approaches being conducted by the US Administration mirrors past policy in putting the interests of the United States ahead of those of its adversaries and allies, with possible outcomes remaining to be seen. While likely a result of local midterms being a possible barrier to future policy, the rapid exposure of US policy […]

read more

When Small Countries Take Technical Sovereignty into Their Own Hands

When Small Countries Take Technical Sovereignty into Their Own Hands

In recent years, sovereignty has ceased to be defined solely by borders, armies, or economic output. According to the Burke International Institute’s Sovereignty Index, one of the most decisive indicators of state resilience in the 21st century is technical sovereignty—the capacity of a country to control its digital infrastructure, data flows, cybersecurity architecture, and technological […]

read more

After New START: Indo-Pacific Alliance Modernization Is Urgent—and It Starts on the Ground in Japan and South Korea

After New START: Indo-Pacific Alliance Modernization Is Urgent—and It Starts on the Ground in Japan and South Korea

On February 5, 2026, the New Strategic Arms Reduction (New START) Treaty will expire, ending the last legally binding limits on U.S. and Russian strategic nuclear forces. With it goes a framework that capped deployed warheads at 1,550 and delivery vehicles at 700—and, more importantly, the verification regime that anchored strategic stability for over a […]

read more

The Islamic Banking Weapon: How a Turkey–Saudi–Pakistan Alliance Could Upend the Dollar Order

The Islamic Banking Weapon: How a Turkey–Saudi–Pakistan Alliance Could Upend the Dollar Order

The calculus of global power is shifting. In early January 2026, Turkey moved to join a defense pact between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan that could fundamentally alter the balance of power from the Eastern Mediterranean to South Asia. Yet the most consequential dimension of this emerging alliance is not military. It is financial. Together, these […]

read more

The Axis’s Allies

The Axis’s Allies

Policy and security seems to be evolving rapidly, while well established structures for safety and deep traditions of liberal rights are rusting into dust. The erosion of Ministerial Responsibility, a deep rooted tradition in Parliamentary Democracies, have come to a place of almost a lost art as policymakers in Commonwealth countries continue to take policy […]

read more
Girl in a jacket

About Us

Foreign Policy Blogs is a network of global affairs blogs and a supplement to the Foreign Policy Association’s Great Decisions program. Staffed by professional contributors from the worlds of journalism, academia, business, non-profits and think tanks, the FPB network tracks global developments on many topics of interest, daily. The FPB network is a production of the Foreign Policy Association.