In his first hours in office, US President Donald Trump signed a barrage of Executive Orders reshaping the entire geopolitical scenario worldwide.
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia praised President Trump’s second inauguration, but the American leader did not return the compliment.
Donald Trump has begun a second term as president of the United States on Monday, as the world braces itself for the return of an unpredictable leader. Follow DW for the latest.
The world reacts as President Trump moves to pull the U.S. out of the WHO and the Paris Climate Accords on Day 1 of his second term.
Ovoo, was finally green-lighted with the signing of a $1.6 billion joint investment agreement between its government and French majority state-owned energy company Orano. “Uranium production in Mongolia will contribute both to low-carbon electricity generation and security of supply for our customers,
US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has said that a potential agreement to end the war between Ukraine and Russia must include a deterrent mechanism to prevent Moscow from launching another attack in the future.
On his first day in office, President Donald Trump unleashed a torrent of executive orders. While some of these orders are already being challenged and will almost surely never come to pass
Trump keeps the world guessing, will he take over Greenland and Panama? Will the tariff war affect the world economy?
As U.S. President-elect Donald Trump is set to take office on Jan. 20, Ukraine's fate hangs in the balance. While some potential details of Trump's future peace proposals have been leaked, the overall plan still remains unclear.
Russia signed a strategic partnership treaty with Iran on Friday that follows similar pacts with China and North Korea. All three countries are adversaries of the United States, and Russia has used its ties with them to help blunt the impact of Western sanctions and boost its war effort in Ukraine.
British wartime leader Winston Churchill once said he was an optimist, as there was no point being anything else. The year ahead in Ukraine has given rise to wild, perhaps wilful, positivity from Kyiv and – publicly at least – in parts of NATO that the incoming Trump White House can effect meaningful,