Benoit Faucon is a Middle East correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. He focuses on the geopolitics of oil, Iran and Russia's involvement in Africa and the Middle East. He has also strayed ...
They carved up the Middle East map with the stroke of a pen, and we have lived with the consequences ever since. The San Remo Conference in 1920 codified colonial interests out of the remains of ...
The world is watching to see if the Middle East is on the brink of monumental ... as what was seen with the “fall of the Berlin Wall.” “The ripple effect of this is just going to be remarkable.
Unconcerned with casualties, Netanyahu’s talk of “changing the face of the Middle East” has found ready echoes across much of the Israeli media. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ...
Here, 24/7 Wall St. is taking a closer look at these Middle Eastern air forces, with a focus on their strike and attack aircraft. To determine the Middle Eastern countries with the most attack or ...
The Middle East nation was the only bid for the 2034 soccer tournament, with Amnesty International saying the decision is "reckless." ...
Incumbent head of state Zoran Milanović took more than twice as many votes as centre-right challenger Dragan Primorac and is ...
He previously worked for the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal ... of the Assad regime in Syria opens the way to a new Middle East. This path will have to go through Saudi Arabia.
Photo: Getty Images The Middle East never ceases to surprise—and disappoint. These days the region looks like a model for much of the world, and current events complicate President-elect Trump ...
Explore the intersection of Donald Trump's business interests and his presidency, raising ethical concerns and potential ...
Will Syria be different? If you have a mental map of the Middle East, rip it up. The overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad of Syria by a coalition of Islamist fighters changes everything.
Snow maps have shown the exact day a huge 550-mile wall of snow is set to hit the UK as the British Isles are hardly visible.