U.S. President Donald Trump is set to travel to Beijing on May 14–15 for a high-stakes summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping — the first U.S. presidential state visit to China since 2017. According to a Council on Foreign Relations expert analysis titled "At the Trump-Xi Summit, China Will Have the Upper Hand," authored by CFR fellows Rush Doshi, Chris McGuire, Heidi E. Crebo-Rediker, David Sacks, and David M. Hart, Beijing arrives at the table from a position of considerable strategic strength, while Washington faces mounting vulnerabilities on multiple fronts. The summit was originally scheduled for March but was postponed following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran. It now takes place against a backdrop of soaring energy prices caused by the Strait of Hormuz blockade, an uneasy U.S.-China trade détente, and deepening geopolitical fault lines over Taiwan and artificial intelligence. Beijing's Strategic Advantage Xi enters the summit having successfully fended off Trum...
In a detailed profile published on May 11, journalist Benjamin Roger of Le Monde traces the extraordinary arc of the 72-year-old Tuareg commander who has become the most dangerous man in the Sahel. Iyad Ag Ghali, leader of Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), the Sahel branch of al-Qaida, is widely considered the architect of the sweeping jihadist offensive that has brought Mali's military junta to the brink of collapse. The offensive, launched on April 25, 2026, sent shockwaves across Mali. JNIM fighters mounted coordinated strikes on Kidal, Gao, Mopti, and the capital Bamako itself, also storming the garrison town of Kati — a junta stronghold just 20 kilometres from the capital — killing the defence minister and the regime's second-in-command, General Sadio Camara. By April 28, jihadist forces had retaken Kidal in alliance with the Azawad Liberation Front (ALF), humiliating Russia's Africa Corps by escorting their fighters out of the city without a shot fired....