Foreign Policy Live

Each week, Foreign Policy Live will feature a substantive conversation on world affairs. Host and FP

Episodes

Total: 121

This year closed out with ongoing conflicts in Gaza, Ukraine, and Sudan, and numerous incumbents for

Top humanitarian aid official and longtime diplomat Samantha Power discusses lessons learned from he

The incoming Trump administration is expected to gut a key piece of President Biden’s climate legacy

Inside a nontraditional war: the chip wars. Can Trump’s tariffs stop China’s efforts to catch up on

For most Middle East watchers, the big news last week was that after nearly 14 months of war, Israel

The global target of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius looks increasingly unlikely. What appro

U.S. President-elect Donald Trump is the self-proclaimed “tariff man.” On the campaign trail, he tal

Trump’s election can be interpreted as a change election, signaling the rejection of things as they

U.S. President-elect Donald Trump is moving rapidly to nominate loyalists to key administration posi

What was supposed to be one of the closest elections in history ended early Wednesday morning with a

As China’s influence grows in Asia and around the world, how will the next U.S. president manage Was

Judging by the way Latin America is discussed in the U.S. presidential elections, Americans view the

Africa has been neglected by recent administrations; the last presidential visit was in 2015, though

Among foreign policy issues, how the United States should approach its relationship with Europe migh

Every day this week, FP Live will have a new episode focused on a different part of the world and ho

Last week, a regular Israeli patrol in southern Gaza chanced upon the person they had been hunting f

An Alliance of Autocracies?

2024/10/18

North Korea and Iran are fascinating countries for many reasons, but also because they're part of an

October 7, One Year On

2024/10/7

On Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas launched a brutal attack on Israel and set in motion a new cycle of violence

Unrest, even violence, could be a concern heading into the U.S. presidential election in November. W

South Africa’s allegations of genocide against Israel at the International Court of Justice draw on