#economist.com. Israel is keeping open the nuclear option. It has prepared a path to hit Iran’s nuclear sites after America’s election
#Oct.31.2024 ×
#economist.com. Iran needs a new national-security strategy. Will it choose a nuclear bomb or detente with America?
#Oct.28.2024 ×
#economist.com. Another African war looms. An agreement two years ago halted a bloody conflict in Ethiopia but sowed the seeds of new ones
#Oct.27.2024 ×
#economist.com. Israel’s limited missile strike on Iran may be the start of a wider assault. Whatever Iran’s response to the attack, it carries risks for the regime
#Oct.26.2024 ×
#economist.com. Israel’s leaders are watching America’s election closely. Who wins will shape Israel’s approach to its three wars
#Oct.24.2024 ×
#economist.com. Do Israel’s assassinations work?. Why the conventional wisdom about decapitating Hamas and Hizbullah might be wrong
#Oct.24.2024 ×
#economist.com. Mozambique’s ruling party wins a dodgy election. Two opposition figures were murdered days before the result was announced
#Oct.24.2024 ×
#economist.com. How African churches are keeping the faith alive abroad. A revamped version of the prosperity gospel appeals to young immigrants
#Oct.24.2024 ×
#economist.com. Gold is booming. So is the dirty business of digging it up. It is mined in Africa, traded in Dubai and lucrative for warlords and jihadists
#Oct.24.2024 ×
#economist.com. Yahya Sinwar made Hamas his own fief. Will his successor embrace more violence or compromise?
#Oct.24.2024 ×
#economist.com. America’s election and Israel’s wars reach a crescendo—together. An Israeli aerial strike on Iran remains likely in the coming days
#Oct.21.2024 ×
#economist.com. Yahya Sinwar will hold sway over Hamas from beyond the grave. Will his death moderate or aggravate its bloody ethos?
#Oct.19.2024 ×
#economist.com. How Yahya Sinwar’s death will change the Middle East. Gaza’s mastermind of mayhem is dead. A ceasefire may be alive again
#Oct.17.2024 ×
#economist.com. Bad ideas are back on the menu in the Middle East. From a proxy force in south Lebanon to regime change, what’s old is new again
#Oct.17.2024 ×
#economist.com. Lebanon’s army is less useless than its reputation suggests. It is one of the few remaining institutions holding the country together
#Oct.17.2024 ×
#economist.com. Africa’s EV revolution has two wheels not four. E-bikes are cheaper and less likely to choke you
#Oct.17.2024 ×
#economist.com. How Wagner survived Yevgeny Prigozhin’s death. Its mercenary model is still effective in Africa’s most fragile places
#Oct.17.2024 ×
#economist.com. Does Israel’s new plan for Gaza include withholding food?. Israel’s government says no, but America is demanding the ramping up of supplies
#Oct.16.2024 ×
#economist.com. Just inside Lebanon, Israeli soldiers debate how far to go. They are 2km inside the country, but prepared to go farther
#Oct.14.2024 ×
#economist.com. Iran’s leader must choose how to fight his war with Israel. Hardliners may force the supreme leader to escalate the conflict with Israel
#Oct.10.2024 ×
#economist.com. Israel has these four options for attacking Iran. Its politicians, and some generals, are gung-ho that the moment has come
#Oct.10.2024 ×
#economist.com. How to send a cake from New Jersey to Accra. A Ghanaian app hints at the potential and problems of Africa’s diaspora
#Oct.10.2024 ×
#wikipedia.org. Africa. Africa is the world's second-largest and second-most populous continent after Asia. At about 30.3 million km2 (11.7 million square miles) including adjacent islands, it covers 20% of Earth's land area and 6% of its total surface area. With nearly 1.4 billion people as of 2021, it accounts for about 18% of the world's human population. Africa's popul
#Dec.31.2999 ×
Filter: #Oct.31.2024 ×
Showing 1-24 of 30 items - Time: 0.1751 s. Memory: 14.8001 mb.