
1843 magazine

1843 magazine | The great pretender: how Ahmed al-Sharaa won Syria
Syria’s new president is a chameleon. Is that enough to rule the Middle East’s most volatile country?

1843 magazine | Tyler Cowen, the man who wants to know everything
He is Silicon Valley’s favourite economist. Does his lust for knowledge have a place in the age of AI?

1843 magazine | Is Putin’s brainwashing of Ukrainians into Russians even a crime?
Occupying forces are trying to rob Ukrainians of their language, culture and identity

1843 magazine | Ukraine’s arteries: trains are the country’s lifeblood
Railways play a critical role in defending the country and bolstering morale

1843 magazine | Why are so many Israeli Jews spying for Iran?
Unprecedented numbers are risking everything to help their country’s bitterest enemy
1843 magazine | The doomsday cult’s guide to taking over a country
How a fringe South Korean church convinced Fijians to embrace its business empire – and ignore its dark side

1843 magazine | Congo’s agony: the fall of Goma
As rebels encroached on the city, anxious residents met to discuss escape plans
1843 magazine | How Tulsi Gabbard became a crusader against the Deep State
Her strange journey from a yoga commune to Trump’s intelligence chief
1843 magazine | The warlord, the oligarch and the unravelling of Russia’s Amazon.com
Before the Ukraine war, Wildberries was a giant of e-commerce. Now it’s caught up in a medieval blood feud

1843 magazine | Wise guys in wheelchairs: why is the FBI chasing elderly mobsters?
Today’s mafiosi are cash-strapped old men. The American government still throws the book at them
1843 magazine | The burned and the saved: what the LA fires spared
As two fires continue to blaze, some pockets of the city contain both rubble and relics

1843 magazine | The wealth whisperers who save super-rich families from themselves
A new caste of consultants is helping to avoid “Succession”-style crises