温馨提示:本站仅提供公开网络链接索引服务,不存储、不篡改任何第三方内容,所有内容版权归原作者所有
AI智能索引来源:http://www.ft.com/philip-stephens
点击访问原文链接

Philip Stephens | Financial Times

Accessibility helpSign InSubscribeFinancial TimesSubscribeSign InHomeWorldWorld HomeMiddle East warGlobal EconomyUKUSChinaAfricaAsia PacificEmerging MarketsEuropeWar in UkraineAmericasMiddle East & North AfricaThe hunt for Iran’s ballistic missile crewsAmerica chose this war — and must now choose how to end itTrump raises stakes in Iran by weighing deployment of US ground forcesMuscat airport limits private jet flights as wealthy leave the GulfSwitzerland votes to end ‘marriage penalty’ in historic tax referendumUSUS HomeUS EconomyUS CompaniesUS Politics & PolicyAmerica chose this war — and must now choose how to end itTrump raises stakes in Iran by weighing deployment of US ground forcesKharg Island: Iran’s oil lifeline that Trump has left untouchedWhich economies will pay the biggest price for the Iran war?China signals it wants a Trump visit despite Iran warCompaniesCompanies HomeEnergyFinancialsHealthIndustrialsMediaProfessional ServicesRetail & ConsumerTech SectorTelecomsTransportMuscat airport limits private jet flights as wealthy leave the GulfOil surges past $100 a barrel for the first time in four yearsG7 to discuss joint release of emergency oil reservesKharg Island: Iran’s oil lifeline that Trump has left untouchedWhich economies will pay the biggest price for the Iran war?TechTech HomeArtificial intelligenceSemiconductorsCyber SecuritySocial MediaKKR eyes multibillion-dollar sale of data centre cooling companySamsung seeks AI deals to challenge Apple’s smartphone leadPalmer Luckey’s $1bn pitch to reboot 1990s video game consolesGoogle gives CEO Sundar Pichai new pay deal worth up to $692mnUS draws up strict new AI guidelines amid Anthropic clashMarketsMarkets HomeAlphavilleMarkets DataCryptoCapital MarketsCommoditiesCurrenciesEquitiesMonetary Policy RadarWealth ManagementMoral MoneyETF HubFund ManagementTradingOil surges past $100 a barrel for the first time in four yearsG7 to discuss joint release of emergency oil reservesKharg Island: Iran’s oil lifeline that Trump has left untouchedWhich economies will pay the biggest price for the Iran war?Think geopolitics is bad? Look at geoeconomicsClimateOpinionOpinion HomeColumnistsThe FT ViewThe Big ReadLexObituariesLettersAmerica chose this war — and must now choose how to end itLiberals should be less shy about saying what they stand forWe’ll always have DubaiWhy it’s time to end the grim march of the touchscreenEurope’s impotence extends to energyLexWork & CareersWork & Careers HomeBusiness School RankingsBusiness EducationEurope's Start-Up HubsEntrepreneurshipRecruitmentBusiness BooksBusiness TravelWorking ItWhy it’s time to end the grim march of the touchscreenGoogle gives CEO Sundar Pichai new pay deal worth up to $692mnYou can turn this to your advantage if every news story has ‘tax exile’ in itPapier founder: ‘I don’t own stocks or shares — it’s too much risk’Business school professors’ picksLife & ArtsLife & Arts HomeArtsBooksFood & DrinkFT MagazineHouse & HomeStylePuzzlesTravelFT GlobetrotterWe’ll always have DubaiThe curse of the ancient lead tabletsPalmer Luckey’s $1bn pitch to reboot 1990s video game consolesTrump’s war on Iran is spreading. Where does it stop?The real-world paths to hellHow To Spend ItHomeWorldUSCompaniesTechMarketsClimateOpinionLexWork & CareersLife & ArtsHow To Spend ItFinancial TimesSubscribeSign InKeir StarmerThe Little England mindset of the prime minister’s criticsStarmer’s restive MPs should acknowledge that Britain’s fortunes are shaped abroadPhilip StephensUK foreign policyStarmer’s dilemma: America or Europe?Trump has laid waste to the Atlantic alliance — the Greenland crisis shows what needs to be donePhilip StephensIrelandPopulists of the left and right unite behind the politics of easy answersIreland’s president-elect Catherine Connolly caught the anti-establishment tidePhilip StephensFT Books EssayPeace, for now: the long history of conflict between Israel and PalestineFollowing this week’s ceasefire and hostage releases, four books offer context on the war and pursuit of a lasting resolution in GazaLabour Party UKLabour needs economic growth before it can build fiscal trustThe fate of Starmer’s government rests on the economy — but an obsessive pursuit of financial prudence could undermine itPhilip StephensPolitical booksBetween The Waves — Britain’s post-empire problem with EuropeTom McTague’s history of the drift towards Brexit takes in Eurosceptic voices from Enoch Powell to Farage, via Thatcher and CummingsHistory booksThe Last Titans: Churchill and de Gaulle — the best of enemiesRichard Vinen’s study of two very different but similarly stubborn national figureheads is intriguing, deeply researched and very well-timedUK immigrationThe UK immigration debate has become a hall of mirrorsKeir Starmer’s task is to deal with facts, not illusions, and restore public trustPhilip StephensThe Weekend EssayIreland and the ‘British question’Few now discount the prospect of unification. Yet the Republic still struggles to imagine the changes that would be needed to accommodate unionistsUK foreign policyPrinciples must not be the victim of Starmer’s embrace of realpolitikThe government is right to push up defence spending, but hard power isn’t everythingPhilip StephensHistory booksIs economics the driving force behind all wars?Duncan Weldon’s ‘Blood and Treasure’ argues that following the money is the best way to understand the roots of conflictEU foreign policyPlacate or retaliate? Starmer and Carney are both right on TrumpThe long goodbye to the US-led world order means leaders must tread carefullyPhilip StephensUK foreign policyBritain is struggling to accept the end of AtlanticismThe ‘special relationship’ has underpinned the UK’s security since the Suez Canal debacle — but the world has changedPhilip StephensLabour Party UKThere is a way out of the doom loop for LabourBut Keir Starmer needs his government to show an organising purpose that has been absent so farPhilip StephensUK defence spendingBritain’s national security demands more than a defence reviewAs the international order cracks, the nation’s capabilities must adjust to a new worldPhilip StephensFT Books EssayThe Revelation of Ireland: 1995-2020 — a tumultuous quarter-centuryDiarmaid Ferriter’s history of modern Ireland chronicles the dramatic social, political and economic shifts that have taken place within a generationGeopoliticsEurope shouldn’t count on a Harris White HouseWhatever the outcome in November, governments will have to take more responsibility for their own securityPhilip StephensUK general election 2024The Big Read. How Starmer can succeedThe new prime minister will need to use the political capital that comes from a huge majority if he is to keep populism at bayPopulismIgnore the populist noise, Britain’s moderate mould won’t breakTory radicals see a revolution as the path back to power but the pattern has been firmly set since 1922Philip StephensUK foreign policyStarmer must recognise that great nations need not be great powersRealism is not defeatism — Britain has plenty to offer when it concentrates its resourcesPhilip StephensIrelandIreland’s politics is transformed, with or without VaradkarThe old rules were rewritten by the Good Friday peace agreement of 1998 and the global financial crashPhilip StephensNorthern IrelandNorthern Ireland revisits the success of ‘constructive ambiguity’Politics in the province cannot be forced into straight lines — this week’s deal follows the lessons of its historyPhilip StephensNorthern IrelandWhat unionists could learn from Ireland’s nationalistsThey should give up abstentionism and try persuasion insteadPhilip StephensIsrael-Hamas warThe Israel-Hamas war has held up a mirror to European powerlessnessEU governments could once claim to be players in the Middle East — no longerPhilip StephensBrexitThe EU is doing more — lots moreContrary to some expectations, the forces of change in Europe have been centripetal rather than centrifugalPhilip StephensHelp CentreContact UsAbout UsAccessibilityCareersSuppliersTerms & ConditionsPrivacy PolicyCookie PolicyManage CookiesCopyrightSlavery Statement & PoliciesShare News Tips SecurelyIndividual SubscriptionsProfessional SubscriptionsRepublishingExecutive Job SearchAdvertise with the FTFollow the FT on XFT ChannelsFT SchoolsPortfolioFT AppFT Digital EditionFT EditAlerts HubBusiness School RankingsSubscription ManagerNews feedNewslettersCurrency ConverterFT Live EventsFT ForumsFT Leaders AcademyMore from the FT GroupFT Editorial Code of PracticeUKSubscribe for full accessHomeWorldMiddle East warGlobal EconomyUKUSChinaAfricaAsia PacificEmerging MarketsEuropeWar in UkraineAmericasMiddle East & North AfricaUSUS EconomyUS CompaniesUS Politics & PolicyCompaniesEnergyFinancialsHealthIndustrialsMediaProfessional ServicesRetail & ConsumerTech SectorTelecomsTransportTechArtificial intelligenceSemiconductorsCyber SecuritySocial MediaMarketsAlphavilleMarkets DataCryptoCapital MarketsCommoditiesCurrenciesEquitiesMonetary Policy RadarWealth ManagementMoral MoneyETF HubFund ManagementTradingClimateOpinionColumnistsThe FT ViewThe Big ReadLexObituariesLettersLexWork & CareersBusiness School RankingsBusiness EducationEurope's Start-Up HubsEntrepreneurshipRecruitmentBusiness BooksBusiness TravelWorking ItLife & ArtsArtsBooksFood & DrinkFT MagazineHouse & HomeStylePuzzlesTravelFT GlobetrotterPersonal FinanceProperty & MortgagesInvestmentsPensionsTaxBanking & SavingsAdvice & CommentHow To Spend ItSpecial ReportsAlphavilleFT EditLunch with the FTFT Globetrotter#techAsiaMoral MoneyVisual and data journalismNewslettersVideoPodcastsNews feedFT SchoolsFT Live EventsFT ForumsFT Leaders AcademymyFTPortfolioFT Digital EditionCrosswordOur AppsHelp CentreSubscribeSign In

智能索引记录