Senior International Correspondent for The Globe and Mail. Now based in London, after stops in Moscow, the Middle East and Beijing.

Joined February 2009
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Oh, and find me here more and more often going forward… bsky.app/profile/markmackinn…

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Mark MacKinnon retweeted
After Putin called Trump to wish him a happy birthday, he launched yet another massive attack on Ukraine. Russian drones and missiles are currently in the skies over Kyiv #Ukraine
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⚡️Explosions heard in Kyiv. Explosions were reported in Kyiv around 1 a.m. local time, according to a Kyiv Independent journalist on the ground. Ukrainian officials have warned of the threat of a large-scale missile and drone attack on Kyiv overnight.
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Sirens in Kyiv, after a lovely long week of quiet. Drones en route, and Russian strategic bombers reported to be in the air…
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Mark MacKinnon retweeted
Following intensive talks, we are pleased to announce that the Peace Deal between the United States of America and Islamic Republic of Iran has been REACHED. Both sides have declared the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon. The official signing ceremony will be on Friday, 19 June in Switzerland. We would like to thank the United States of America and the Islamic Republic of Iran for their commitment to finding a diplomatic solution to the conflict. We would also like to extend our sincere appreciation to our brothers in this mediation effort, the great leadership of State of Qatar, for their support in reaching this agreement. I would also especially thank the visionary leadership of Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Republic of Türkiye for their immense contributions in this regard. With the agreement now in place, mediators will facilitate a series of meetings this week. These pre-implementation discussions will lay the foundation for the technical talks and the official signing ceremony. @realDonaldTrump @JDVance @SecRubio @SteveWitkoff @SEPeaceMissions @drpezeshkian @mb_ghalibaf @araghchi
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The world is a depressing place these days, but somehow @gershonbaskin manages to remain a beacon of persistence and optimism. “Future generations of Israelis and Palestinians will ask whether we acted while there was still time. Let our answer be yes.”
Replying to @AlArabiya_Eng
To the Heads of State and leaders of the G7 Countries: The United States of America,  Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the European Union In preparation for your upcoming summit meeting in Évian-les-Bains, France on June 15-17, 2026: Mr. President, Prime Ministers, Chancellors, distinguished leaders, I come before you not as a government official, but as an Israeli peace activist and negotiator, someone who has spent nearly fifty years working with Israelis and Palestinians, speaking with political leaders, peace activists, ordinary citizens, and, at times, even with those whom governments refuse to speak to. I am here to tell you something that many people no longer believe: Peace between Israelis and Palestinians is still possible. But it will not happen on its own. For decades, the international community has supported a two-state solution in words while allowing realities on the ground to move steadily further away from it. Today we are at the edge of a cliff. The decisions made in the next year may determine whether two states remain possible or whether Israelis and Palestinians are condemned to permanent conflict. The Gaza war has taught us a painful lesson. There is no military solution. Israel cannot bomb its way to security. Palestinians cannot fight their way to freedom. The alternative to a political solution is not victory for one side. The alternative is endless war. The G7 countries possess enormous political, economic and diplomatic leverage. It is time to use it. I also want to speak plainly about the role of the United States and of President Trump. The reality is that no international leader today possesses more influence over Israeli decision-making than President Trump. He has demonstrated repeatedly that when he chooses to make an issue a priority, Israeli leaders listen. He also has significant influence with key Arab partners whose participation will be essential to any lasting peace. If that influence is used not only to stop wars but to build peace, it could become one of the most important diplomatic achievements of our time. The G7 should work in partnership with the United States, helping to create a unified international framework that combines American leadership, European commitment, regional participation, and international guarantees. Only such a coalition has the weight necessary to move the parties beyond the failures of the past. I ask you to support five concrete steps. First, make it clear that the goal of international policy is the creation of a sovereign Palestinian state living in peace and security beside Israel. Not as a distant aspiration. Not as a slogan. As a real political objective with a timetable. Second, support the rebuilding of Gaza under a legitimate Palestinian governing authority that rejects armed militias and is capable of delivering security, services, accountability and hope. The people of Gaza deserve a future beyond war. At the same time, Gaza cannot be rebuilt while armed organizations continue to operate outside the authority of the state. There must be one legitimate governing authority, one security structure, and one monopoly on the use of force. Disarmament must be part of the political process, implemented in a way that provides confidence to both sides and is linked to the broader framework of peace, reconstruction, security, and statehood. Third, insist on security arrangements that guarantee that Gaza and the West Bank will never again be used as launching grounds for attacks against Israel. Israelis must know that peace means security. Palestinians must know that security will not be used as a permanent justification for occupation. Both peoples deserve safety, dignity, and freedom. Fourth, support democratic renewal. Neither Israelis nor Palestinians should be denied the opportunity to elect leaders capable of making peace. Too often, leaders have become prisoners of political survival rather than servants of their people’s future. If current leaders cannot deliver a political future, then new leaders must emerge through democratic means. Fifth, create an international implementation mechanism with real authority, resources, and accountability. We do not need another declaration. We need a process that survives changes of governments and political crises. The conflict has become internationalized. The solution must be internationally guaranteed. Ladies and gentlemen, The people I meet on both sides are exhausted. Israeli parents want their children to live without fear. Palestinian parents want their children to live with dignity and freedom. These are not contradictory aspirations. They are complementary aspirations. The future I believe in is simple: Israel as the democratic nation-state of the Jewish people with full equality for all of its citizens. Palestine as the democratic nation-state of the Palestinian people with full equality for all of its citizens. Mutual recognition of the historic connection of the Jewish people to the Land of Israel and of the Palestinian people to the Land of Palestine. Open borders for cooperation. Strong borders for security. Regional integration. Economic partnership. And an end to the belief that one people can achieve its national aspirations by denying the aspirations of the other. History will not judge us by the speeches we give. History will judge us by whether we had the courage to act when action was still possible. The choice before us is clear: Two states, mutual recognition, security, and peace. Or perpetual war. I ask you to help make the right choice. The window for a two-state solution is not closed, but it is closing. Future generations of Israelis and Palestinians will ask whether we acted while there was still time. Let our answer be yes. Thank you, Dr. Gershon Baskin
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US-Israel relations, mid-2026…
🚨President Trump told me: "Why did Bibi have to do a fucking attack? I was so pissee off. I let him know. He has no fucking judgement. I let him know that"
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Mark MacKinnon retweeted
You won't read a better piece on the war in #Ukraine, in the NYT or anywhere, than this by the Globe and Mail's @markmackinnon
#Ukraine’s fight is longer than the First World War, and looks similar in the trenches /via @globeandmail theglobeandmail.com/world/ar…
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Mark MacKinnon retweeted
Netanyahu has decided to accept the Iranian deal. Security officials are despondent and see it as a disaster. Ynet brings some high level quotes from them: 1) A senior Israeli official said "Nobody is happy with this. We understand it is not good for us, and that it harms Israeli interests. What is troubling is that Israel cannot influence it. Its voice is not being heard." 2) The anger at Trump is palpable.: "Trump screwed us, we took the hit. We're no longer in the loop and can't really influence anything." 3) Israelis fear Iran will be economically revived: "They've blown money on the Iranians, who are getting everything they want. They'll build a missile corps, and we'll have to pour money into interceptors." Israel sees oil revenue flowing back into the exact capabilities the war was meant to degrade. 4) They don't believe a deal will adequately deal with the nuclear issue: "The real test of the deal is removing the uranium and destroying it. If that doesn't happen, the sense of a bad deal will turn into something more concrete." 5) They fear this will embolden Iran: "Iran has smelled that it can achieve things by force, and it will use that against its neighbors and against us." 6) The deepest worry is not military. It is perception. After months of direct fire, Iran is seen across the region as the side that took the pressure and did not fold: "the regional working assumption will be that it was signed under Iranian pressure and American capitulation, rather than the reverse." Israel is concerned that Iran will be stronger, the US will be weaker and that the future for it will be bleak in the region. This war has been a disaster for Israel.
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Mark MacKinnon retweeted
⚡️An Iranian official tells me there are still two outstanding issues on the proposed MOU and depending on the position the U.S. takes on these, an agreement could be signed swiftly. He declined to elaborate on specifics. Iran assesses Trump wants to sign before the G7 summit.
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Mark MacKinnon retweeted
Look what I found: After USAID's Food for Peace program was moved to the USDA last year, Food for Peace seems to have stripped food aid from all Muslim-majority countries. To this amazing chart from @CFR_org, I added a column showing the % of the population that is Muslim:
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Today’s front page of @globeandmail - the World Cup, summer books, and the trenches of eastern Ukraine… theglobeandmail.com/world/ar…
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Mark MacKinnon retweeted
Rats, trench toilets, and brothers-in-arms dying beside you. The war for Ukraine has now lasted longer than the First World War. And for all that’s changed, some things about today’s trench warfare are grimly familiar. My report from the Kharkiv region theglobeandmail.com/world/ar…
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Rats, trench toilets, and brothers-in-arms dying beside you. The war for Ukraine has now lasted longer than the First World War. And for all that’s changed, some things about today’s trench warfare are grimly familiar. My report from the Kharkiv region theglobeandmail.com/world/ar…
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With great photography by @olgaivash4enko
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A new threat from Belarus has forced Ukraine to fortify its northern frontier. That means yet more scars to the country's tortured Chornobyl region. My report from the Exclusion Zone, with photographs from @olgaivash4enko theglobeandmail.com/world/ar…
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Mark MacKinnon retweeted
This is an astonishing turnaround in public opinion, one of the legacies of Bibi Netanyahu. And because it is most evident among younger Americans, it is not yet fully felt in the political system.
For the first time in two decades of polling, more Americans sympathize with Palestinians (41%) than Israelis (36%), a reversal from 55% to 26% in Israel’s favor before to the October 7th attacks. Even 57% of Republicans aged 18 to 49 now disfavor Israel.trib.al/dcUq28Q
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Among the settler organizations targeted for Canadian sanctions is Nachala. I recently spent some time reporting on them and their dream of a “Greater Israel”… theglobeandmail.com/world/ar…
Canada continues to oppose the expansion of settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Today, together with Australia, France, Norway and the U.K., we announced coordinated sanctions targeting those supporting extremist settler violence against Palestinian civilians. As we impose this fifth round of sanctions, we remain committed to a comprehensive, just and lasting peace where Israelis and Palestinians can live in peace and security. canada.ca/en/global-affairs/…
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