Europe's appetite for criticizing American excess has been thoroughly satisfied over the past few years, thanks to the 2003 Iraq War — without a United Nations mandate — belligerent diplomacy fueled by neoconservative ideology, and XXL spying on the entire world in the name of security.
But Americans know how to reflect on their mistakes and sometimes learn a few lessons from them: hence the reform that was adopted on May 13 in the House of Representatives, which aims to ban the National Security Agency from the mass collection of data in the United States. It's an act of contrition, and without a doubt, the first one of this scale since Sept. 11, 2001, when emergency legislation, like the famous Patriot Act, disrupted the balance between security and defending civil liberties.
The new USA Freedom Act, which must now move on to the important step of approval in the Senate — not a given — demonstrates that, after Edward Snowden revealed the extent and illegality of NSA spying, the United States wishes to return to a more sensible time.
This about-face is not only about stopping abuses. It is also because of the loss of confidence in American Internet providers after their alleged cooperation with the security agency.
This plan will not guarantee protection for the rest of the world. Of course, a judge will decide on the extent of the surveillance of and data collection from telecommunications providers, but only for Americans.
This change of heart should make the most ardent students who hurried to copy U.S. surveillance methods reflect. These methods are starting to be questioned.
Secretary Rubio’s ‘diplomatic masterstroke’ in Delhi unintentionally transformed political damage control into an involuntary roast of his own boss.
During the Cold War, the United States occupied the apex of this triangular dynamic, pitting China and the USSR against each other. Today, it is Beijing that occupies that apex.
History has never witnessed a leader quite like Donald Trump — a mix of ignorance, arrogance immorality, brazenness, insensitivity and sheer stupidity.
The challenge for Washington is no longer whether it possesses sufficient capabilities, but whether the political system can align those capabilities behind a coherent long-term priority.
The Beijing summit did not produce a major agreement between the great powers on the region, but it firmly established that Middle Eastern crises are now deeply tied to the great-power dialogue.
European autonomy - military, technological, economic, and financial - is beginning to take shape as Europe hedges against current and future fluctuations in [U.S.] policy.