What in the World?

Test yourself on the week of May 30: Malta votes, Japan responds to militarism accusations, and Iran pauses talks with the U.S.

Foreign Policy
75
6 min read
0 views
What in the World?

Test yourself on the week of May 30: Malta votes, Japan responds to militarism accusations, and Iran pauses talks with the U.S.

By Drew Gorman, a deputy copy editor at Foreign Policy.

Riot police are deployed during a protest in Santiago, Chile.
Riot police are deployed during a protest in Santiago, Chile.
Riot police are deployed during a protest in Santiago, Chile, on June 3. RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Politics

    June 5, 2026, 12:26 PM

    Summer is right around the corner in the Northern Hemisphere—and so is the World Cup. Have you made sure to keep up with this week’s headlines amid all the excitement?

    Have feedback? Email [email protected] to let me know your thoughts.

    Summer is right around the corner in the Northern Hemisphere—and so is the World Cup. Have you made sure to keep up with this week’s headlines amid all the excitement?

    1. Maltese Prime Minister Robert Abela’s Labour Party won an unprecedented fourth consecutive term in Saturday’s snap elections. Despite the loss, opposition leader Alex Borg celebrated what?

    The snap election was called in April due to Abela’s fear that the war in Iran would erode public confidence in his government, FP’s Alexandra Sharp reports in World Brief.

    2. Japan’s defense minister on Sunday rejected accusations that Tokyo had embraced a “new militarism,” an assertion made by which regional neighbor?

    China’s delegation to the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore over the weekend attempted to stir resistance to Japan’s growing security presence in the region by invoking memories of World War II, FP’s Joseph Rachman writes in Southeast Asia Brief.

    3. Why did Iran say on Monday it was pausing its participation in negotiations to end its war with the United States?

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s attempts to browbeat Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu into following his orders threatens the latter’s political grip on Israel, Aaron David Miller and Daniel C. Kurtzer write.

    4. An international panel of arbitrators formally announced on Monday that it had rejected a multimillion-dollar claim by Rwanda against the United Kingdom concerning a scrapped 2024 deal over what?

    Rwanda argued that it had spent considerable funds preparing to host migrants who had arrived in Britain as part of the deal, FP’s Nosmot Gbadamosi reports in Africa Brief.

    5. U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine on Tuesday claimed in a Senate hearing that the Trump administration’s criteria for striking alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific did not include what element?

    The revelation raises questions about the Trump administration’s claims that its boat strikes are in response to the activity of “narcoterrorists” in the region, FP’s John Haltiwanger reports.

    6. Ukrainian drones hit an oil terminal in which major Russian city on Wednesday? (Hint: Think tsars.)

    Mid-range strike drones have transformed the battlefield in the war between Russia and Ukraine and injected the weary Ukrainian military with some optimism, FP’s Sam Skove reports.

    7. What did thousands of students, teachers, and social organizations protest in downtown Santiago, Chile, on Wednesday?

    Chilean President José Antonio Kast is among a wave of Latin American right-wing figures elected into office with ambitious plans to rein in public spending and crack down on crime, Michael Albertus wrote in December.

    8. To address a recent spate of anti-immigrant violence in the country, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Thursday that Pretoria would do what?

    Attacks on migrants in South Africa are a consequence of government and economic failure, Patrick Egwu argued in November 2020.

    9. A festival concluded on Monday in New Zealand that celebrates a literary and artistic genre that blends Victorian aesthetics with science fiction steam-driven mechanics. What is that genre called?

    The tradition in the town of Oamaru is in its 17th year, The Associated Press reports.

    10. The U.S. Defense Department confirmed on Monday that journalists will no longer have access to the Pentagon’s press office. Why?

    Acting Pentagon press secretary Joel Valdez said on X that there was “nothing controversial” about the move, claiming this Defense Department is the “most transparent” ever.

    You scored

    It’s a big world out there! Brush up on global goings-on by subscribing to World Brief, Foreign Policy’s flagship daily newsletter.

    You scored

    Perfection! You’re a pro who needs the in-depth insights offered in Situation Report, our newsletter on national security and defense.


    Have feedback? Email [email protected] to let me know your thoughts.

  • Politics

    Drew Gorman is a deputy copy editor at Foreign Policy.

    Stories Readers Liked

  • Go to slide 1
  • Go to slide 2
  • Go to slide 3
  • Go to slide 4
  • Go to slide 5
  • Go to slide 6
  • Go to slide 7
  • Go to slide 8
  • Go to slide 9
  • Go to slide 10
    A creative illustration against a pale yellow background showing a garden planter containing a dense green hedge. Five human arms emerge from the hedge, with four of the hands holding small flags of China, Russia, the United States, and the European Union, while the fifth hand holds the flag of India.
    A creative illustration against a pale yellow background showing a garden planter containing a dense green hedge. Five human arms emerge from the hedge, with four of the hands holding small flags of China, Russia, the United States, and the European Union, while the fifth hand holds the flag of India.
  • Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump pumps his fist as he walks off stage at the end of a campaign rally at the Santander Arena on November 04, 2024 in Reading, Pennsylvania.
    Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump pumps his fist as he walks off stage at the end of a campaign rally at the Santander Arena on November 04, 2024 in Reading, Pennsylvania.
  • Central Military Commission Vice Chairman Zhang Shengmin raises his right hand in a salute to Chinese President Xi Jinping, who is walking a level lower in a red-carpeted auditorium.
    Central Military Commission Vice Chairman Zhang Shengmin raises his right hand in a salute to Chinese President Xi Jinping, who is walking a level lower in a red-carpeted auditorium.
  • An aerial photo shows Doha in the booming petrostate of Qatar.
    An aerial photo shows Doha in the booming petrostate of Qatar.
  • A man in a white collared shirt raises his right hand as if taking an oath or being sworn in. The image is a black-and-white, close-up shot of his profile.
    A man in a white collared shirt raises his right hand as if taking an oath or being sworn in. The image is a black-and-white, close-up shot of his profile.
  • Visitors walk by a world map carved in stone at a plaza in southwest China's Chongqing municipality on May 19, 2010.
    Visitors walk by a world map carved in stone at a plaza in southwest China's Chongqing municipality on May 19, 2010.
  • An illustration with a world map background texture and fire cutting through three rings in the map with three human figures inside.
    An illustration with a world map background texture and fire cutting through three rings in the map with three human figures inside.
  • An illustration shows semiconductor chips structured like a house of cards with a tiny city with government buildings atop it, ready to topple.
    An illustration shows semiconductor chips structured like a house of cards with a tiny city with government buildings atop it, ready to topple.
  • An illustration collage featuring a profile portrait of a man in a suit on the right side. The left side shows a stylized orange silhouette of his head containing the Great Seal of the United States. The background consists of a dark map of the Middle East with various locations labeled, including Turkey, Syria, Israel, and Iran. The overall color palette uses dark tones with high-contrast red and white accents.
    An illustration collage featuring a profile portrait of a man in a suit on the right side. The left side shows a stylized orange silhouette of his head containing the Great Seal of the United States. The background consists of a dark map of the Middle East with various locations labeled, including Turkey, Syria, Israel, and Iran. The overall color palette uses dark tones with high-contrast red and white accents.
  • Two dozen or so scattered pedestrians walking on a large plaza are seen from overhead. There is a giant world map embedded in the pavement, with China highlighted in a dark red and all the other countries in pale gray.
    Two dozen or so scattered pedestrians walking on a large plaza are seen from overhead. There is a giant world map embedded in the pavement, with China highlighted in a dark red and all the other countries in pale gray.

    Original Source

    Foreign Policy

    Share this article

    Related Articles

    The Lawmakers Fighting to Modernize the Pentagon
    📊Analysis & Opinion
    War on the Rocks

    The Lawmakers Fighting to Modernize the Pentagon

    Congress rarely moves fast, but Reps. Rob Wittman and Pat Ryan are trying to change that. The two lawmakers founded the bipartisan House Defense Modernization Caucus in 2024 and have driven reforms through two consecutive defense authorization acts, targeting acquisitions and other bottlenecks. Jona

    حدود 3 ساعت قبل1 min
    What Beirut’s Port Scanners Miss About Militant Supply Chains
    📊Analysis & Opinion
    War on the Rocks

    What Beirut’s Port Scanners Miss About Militant Supply Chains

    At the Port of Beirut, the new scanners did exactly what they were built to do. They saw the lithium batteries. They saw the drone propellers. They saw the fiber optic cable. They matched the scans against the paperwork, found no obvious deception, and cleared the cargo.That was the problem.The thre

    حدود 3 ساعت قبل9 min
    Trump Is Doing What FDR Could Not
    📊Analysis & Opinion
    Foreign Policy

    Trump Is Doing What FDR Could Not

    But the president’s success at purging his party could cost the GOP in the long term.

    حدود 7 ساعت قبل10 min
    📊
    📊Analysis & Opinion
    RealClearDefense

    Blue Origin Still in Running for Top Satellite Launches

    Anthony Capaccio, Bloomberg Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin LLC remains eligible to be...

    1 روز قبل1 min