The UN genocide system is broken and needs a shot in the arm from a country willing to stand and be counted.
The EU is caught between making more effective decisions and compromising its smaller members’ interests.
Tensions have been building for the best part of a year, serious skirmishes broke out in June – and America is nowhere to be seen.
From working with Lithuania to enable gas pipelines, to relaxing visas for Belarusians, there’s much we can do to put pressure on Lukashenko’s regime.
Look, too, at the track record of EU Member States. In 2020, Germany’s highest court ruled on subordinating EU law to German law. The EU took no action.
Narrow victories and a poor response to the Covid-19 crisis almost certainly indicate it’s time for Turkey’s leader to bow out.
From looking at a selection of other destinations, it’s clear that England is one of the last to enforce coverings in shops.
As the great eye of the Conservative Party swivels its gaze towards the Far East, it’s in danger of missing other threats that are closer to home.
They deserve more attention in our developing foreign and security policy – since the Middle East matters massively to global peace and prosperity.
The international community must wake up to the threat posed by a destabilised Libya on the shores of the Mediterranean.
Given the EU’s risk levels, its lack of investment in NATO and its poor relations with its neighbours, it is hardly an attractive partner; more of a liability.
There is a Russian bear sitting behind the desk of the Kremlin; we must not let its cubs play in our midst.
The region has been conspicuously absent from our foreign policy discourse, largely attributable to mistrust on intervention caused by the Iraq war.