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Between now and 2014, the 50 countries participating in the NATO-led mission in Afghanistan will have to empty their military bases and leave the landlocked country.

The impact that America’s next president will have on various areas of French national interests will likely be less significant than in the past.

Propping up the euro through contentious fiscal and banking arrangements, all without adequate guarantees from countries on Europe’s periphery, may not produce the long-term stability that is in the interest of both sides of the Atlantic.

Europeans prefer Barack Obama to Mitt Romney, but, whoever wins in November, America is turning its gaze eastward.

Barack Obama’s ratings may be low in Europe but his star is already beginning to shine again, all thanks to Mitt Romney, his Republican challenger.

The development of a NATO-Russia joint missile defense system is not currently viable, primarily because of political constraints and a lack of trust between the two sides.

Europeans and Americans need to pay attention to the dangerous terrorist threat that is developing in sub-Saharan Africa.

European leaders feel uneasy with the United States' frequent use of unmanned drones to target what it says are terrorism suspects, but many officials are reluctant to speak out about their doubts.

Moving emerging security challenges closer to the center of NATO’s agenda will require a cultural change that is only just beginning. The road ahead will be long, but it remains a road worth traveling.

At its Chicago summit, NATO reaffirmed its commitment to its European-based arsenal of tactical nuclear weapons.