At the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos on January 21, 2026, US President Donald Trump expressed optimism about a prospective India‑US…
Greenland’s government has issued a new safety and preparedness guide for its people, asking them to be ready to manage on their…
NASA astronaut Sunita “Suni” Williams has retired after an outstanding career that lasted nearly 30 years. One of NASA’s most experienced astronauts,…
President Donald Trump recently posted an altered map online that showed Greenland, Canada, and Venezuela as US territories. The images appeared to…
NASA is preparing to launch Artemis II, its first crewed lunar mission in more than five decades, as early as February 6, 2026,…
India’s Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal met with US Ambassador Sergio Gor and Senator Steve Daines on Monday to discuss trade issues and…
The United States has deployed military aircraft to Greenland’s Pituffik Space Base, a strategic Arctic facility, sparking concerns in Europe amid former…
Chile has declared a state of catastrophe in response to rapidly spreading wildfires in the south of the country, after at least…
Tensions between the United States and the European Union have escalated after US President Donald Trump threatened to impose steep tariffs on…
US President Donald Trump has said that Iran needs new leadership, openly calling for the removal of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.…
The World News section covers foreign policy, international diplomacy, geopolitical conflict, and global events that carry significance beyond their immediate geography. The editorial filter is consequence — stories make it here because what happens next matters, either to India directly or to the international order that shapes India's environment.
Right now, that filter catches an enormous amount of US foreign policy. The Trump administration is running several high-stakes international gambits at once — restraining Israel from striking Iran while Congress moves to limit the executive's war powers, pushing Ukraine aid through the House while proposing new tariffs on India, issuing immigration orders that courts are blocking. These are not separate stories. They are part of a single picture of an administration that is simultaneously reshaping America's relationships with allies, adversaries, and everyone in between.
One of the more striking features of current world news is how many major powers are positioning themselves relative to India at the same time. Putin hailing India as a trusted partner, Trump calling Modi a good friend, and the US simultaneously proposing 12.5% additional tariffs on Indian exports are all live developments running in parallel. These aren't contradictions that cancel each other out — they reflect the reality of India's diplomatic position as a country that major powers want to claim while also pressuring.
The World News section covers these stories together because that's how they should be understood — as a composite picture of where India sits internationally, not as isolated diplomatic moments.
The Israel-Lebanon truce is holding. For now. That caveat matters because the same week, Trump was telling Netanyahu not to strike Iran — suggesting the conditions for escalation remain present even where formal hostilities have paused. The US House voting to limit presidential war powers over Iran adds a domestic political dimension to what is fundamentally a regional security story. These pieces connect, and coverage reflects those connections.
Xi Jinping's North Korea visit — first in seven years — is the kind of diplomatic signal that rarely announces itself loudly. The timing, the symbolism, and the context of US-China competition all need to be part of how it's reported. The 7.8 magnitude earthquake in the Philippines is a different kind of world story — natural disaster, not diplomacy — but it belongs here because the scale and the regional response are genuinely significant.
International diplomacy, foreign policy decisions, geopolitical conflict, major natural disasters, and global economic developments that directly affect India or the international order more broadly. The editorial emphasis is on stories with clear consequences — not every foreign development, but the ones where the outcome actually changes something for governments, economies, or people.
Because the US is generating an unusually high volume of consequential international decisions right now. Trump administration foreign policy — on Iran, Ukraine, immigration, India tariffs, Israel — is shaping outcomes across multiple regions simultaneously. Covering world news honestly in this period means covering Washington heavily. That will shift as the news does.
Yes, as a consistent thread through World News. US-India trade tensions, Russia's positioning toward India, and how India's diplomatic relationships are being managed by major powers all receive sustained attention. India is not covered as a passive subject of foreign decisions — the section tracks how those decisions land and what India's stated position is.
As news rather than as background. The Israel-Lebanon truce is covered for what's confirmed — whether it's holding, what both sides are saying, and what the conditions around it look like. When Trump tells Israel to hold off on an Iran strike, the story is the specific diplomatic communication and its context, not a general conflict recap. Events drive the coverage.
When the scale warrants it. A 7.8 magnitude earthquake in the Philippines that kills people and triggers regional emergency response is international news by any standard. Smaller-scale events are generally covered under relevant category sections when there is a specific India connection. The test is significance, not geography.
Coverage reflects what is confirmed at time of publication. Developing stories — a diplomatic meeting whose outcomes aren't yet clear, a natural disaster where the casualty count is still coming in — are published based on confirmed facts, with updates as the picture becomes clearer. The section doesn't speculate on outcomes or intent beyond what official sources and credible reporting support.