Nearly a month after a cease-fire ended 11 days of intense fighting, neither side is eager for a return to a full air war, according to military and political analysts, although the situation remains volatile. But neither side has been able to break out of the dynamic that has defined their confrontation since the early 2000s.
As President Biden hopscotched across Europe, his most prominent message was the need for democracy to prevail over autocracy. But in fighting for democratic values abroad, he risks seeming as if he is looking past the threats in the U.S.
RetropolisThe Past, Rediscovered
The 13th Amendment outlawed slavery “except as a punishment for crime.” That caveat stands today, allowing forced labor in prisons that disproportionately hold people of color.
Muslim women throughout France — teachers, writers, entrepreneurs, mothers — face challenges around their headscarves every day. Nine of them told The Post their stories.
By Ruby Mellen and France Keyser
Opinion by Libby Copeland
Opinion by Joshua Ziesel
Opinion by Bobbi Dempsey
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As more and more Americans are vaccinated, the U.S. portion of the pandemic seems to be receding.
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The addition of Andy Karsner to the energy company’s board shows how much has changed among Republicans in the energy business,
Story by Scott Wilson and Sarah Kaplan | Photos by Melina Mara
A multistate investigation began after at least 12 people were exposed to a dog from Azerbaijan that was among a group of 33 canines and one cat that arrived in Chicago on June 10.
By Kim Bellware
Russell Henley, Mackenzie Hughes and Louis Oosthuizen share the U.S. Open lead after 54 holes, but a pack of contenders is right behind.
For more than three-quarters of a century, Osceola "Ozzie" Fletcher was not formally recognized for being wounded in action.
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RetropolisThe Past, Rediscovered
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(Erin Patrick O'Connor/The Washington Post)
First grade teacher Kim Byrd’s death from coronavirus set off a national discussion on whether schools should remain closed or reopen in the midst of the pandemic.
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Raisi has expressed a willingness to revive the 2015 nuclear deal, but his presidency was certain to mark a radical departure from the Rouhani era.
By Kareem Fahim
(Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images)
Ethiopia is set to hold a twice-delayed national election on Monday in what the government has heralded as a long-awaited emergence into multi-party democracy.
By Max Bearak
A court in Italy has convicted four African immigrants in the drugging, sexual assault and slaying of an Italian teen in Rome.
By Associated Press
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Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) was in a convertible in the Wilton Manors, Fla., parade on Saturday.(Chris Day/South Florida Sun-Sentinel/AP)
A driver slammed into spectators at the start of a Pride parade in South Florida.
By Associated Press
In Montgomery County, vaccination numbers climb faster than for other age groups as teens became eligible.
D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser and Anthony S. Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, knocked on doors in Anacostia Saturday, seeking more takers for shots.
People from around the Washington region flocked to Black Lives Matter Plaza on June 19, a day after President Biden declared Juneteenth a federal holiday. (Hadley Green/The Post)
The area marked the newly declared federal holiday Saturday with parades, jump rope and joy.
By Karina Elwood, Nicole Asbury and Hannah Natanson
Parades, concerts, tours and hands-on activities celebrate the anniversary of the end of slavery.
By Fritz Hahn
Outdoor film screenings, concerts, happy hours and other events to brighten your week.
By Fritz Hahn and Anying Guo
The District's sandwich scene is stuffed with delicious options.
By Tim Carman
Members of the DC Design Collective, from left, Dennese Guadeloupe Rojas, Charles Almonte, Iantha Carley, Shawna Underwood and Quintece Hill-Mattauszek at the Janus et Cie showroom. (André Chung for The Post)
Members of the DC Design Collective, formed last year, are determined to create change for themselves.
By Christina Sturdivant Sani
By Gabriel Popkin
Readers hate two things the most: poetry and corny old jokes.
The news anchor talks about finding his groove, speaking with authority and confronting racism in America.
By Eric Easter
The premier series of these NBA playoffs ended exactly as it should have, twice down to the final second, before the Milwaukee Bucks outlasted Durant and the Nets.
By Ben Golliver
Katie Ledecky will be in position to win up to six more medals at the Tokyo Olympics. (Toni L. Sandys/The Post)
After the U.S. Olympic swimming trials, Katie Ledecky heads to the Tokyo Games next month facing extraordinary pressure to perform.
By Rick Maese
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I'm on the lookout for my own behaviors that will become a source of their bemused assessment of me. Not so I can avoid the behaviors — so I can accentuate them. Because I want them to remember.
By Sean Smith
You'd like your parents to babysit more. Instead, you get the silent treatment for forgetting to make a bed.
He begins dating 4 months after wife’s death. His family thinks he should slow down.
Readers have been happy to occasionally care for friends’ cats. They worry that they’ll be asked to watch the pup.
Sly Stone, shown performing at the Harlem Cultural Festival in 1969, is featured in the documentary “Summer of Soul.” (Searchlight Pictures)
Like fiction, documentaries grapple with the present by delving into the past.
By Ann Hornaday
Edgar Wright’s documentary explores the bewitching and bemusing charms of Ron and Russell Mael.
By Mina Tavakoli
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