Os EUA combaterão o Talibã do ar, mas não há nenhum sinal de que conseguirão controlar os paramilitares em terra
The US will fight the Taliban from the air – but there’s no sign this will check the paramilitaries on the ground
From the populist rhetoric of Germany's far-Right AfD to ISIS’s extremist religious ideology, polarizing discourse has universal features
لخطاب الاستقطاب سمات متشابهة سواء كان شعبويا كخطاب حزب البديل من أجل ألمانيا أو دينيا متطرفا كخطاب داعش
Afghanistan, North Korea, ISIS, Israel and the Gulf States: they’re at best partial successes, but that never stopped him before.
ISIS is enjoying a renaissance and the West is fighting back with a shadow war, free of public debate or political scrutiny.
As the world battles COVID-19, a different war is playing out in Mozambique, home to one of the world’s richest recent gas finds.
There are signs that ISIS has made attacks on the ‘far enemy’ in the West a strategic priority.
Violent extremism, uprisings from Chile to Lebanon – and far-right populism too – are ‘revolts from the margins’ fuelled by anger at elites.
Supporters of the brutal movement are walking out of prison camps in Syria, but it’s the propaganda bonus that may be most significant.
A young follower sees Western policy recruiting the dispossessed from West Africa to India, in the latest of a series imagined by Paul Rogers.
ISIS is winning support, gaining territory and launching attacks far and wide, while western military strategy breeds resentment and rage.