The Middle East is on the brink of a geopolitical earthquake. For close to half a century, since the Islamic Revolution of 1979, clerical Iran has been the organizing principle of the Middle East.
The Express Tribune on MSN
India's Taliban gamble meets tyranny of geography
Once viewed in New Delhi as Pakistan-backed proxies, the Taliban are now being engaged as part of India's evolving regional ...
5don MSN
Water shortages, blackouts and air pollution: How environmental damage fuelled Iran's protests
Iran’s protests are often framed as economic, political or ideological. Yet a deeper ecological crisis is eroding the fabric ...
Dr. Ausaf Sayeed, a former Secretary in the Ministry of External Affairs with 34 years of diplomatic service, is a leading ...
To understand Greenland’s re-emergence, one must step away from transactional explanations and look instead at geography, ...
The ongoing protests in Iran against the regime of Ayatollah Khamenei are gaining momentum, but how Trump's involvement might ...
Iran is complex. But a Rutgers professor says there is a clear solution to the U.S. avoiding war and promoting democracy.
Iran is rejecting Islam and is among the least religious nations on earth, according to A. Darius Kamalia a human rights ...
Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian said on Thursday that “any violent or coercive behavior should be avoided” in handling ...
Iran is on the boil again. Protests that erupted in Tehran on December 28 have now spread to more than 280 locations across ...
"It is difficult to discount the role of the U.S. government in shaping the current moment," one Iran expert told Newsweek.
Despite tough talk, military action against Iran carries enormous risks. Regional chaos, economic disruption, loss of life, ...
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