The World Order Is Dead. Here’s How to Build a New One for a Post-Coronavirus Era.
U.S. and world leaders have a chance to craft an international system that works for this era. But they have to avoid the mistakes of the past.
Five years ago, I represented the State Department in an inter-agency project to evaluate the future of the international order.
It would be foolish to expect President Donald Trump, who is one of the reasons that today’s international order isn’t working, to spearhead planning for a new one. We might have to wait for a more internationally minded president to form the institutions of the new order. But Trump’s presence doesn’t mean that valuable progress can’t happen in the meantime.
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/05/03/the-post-coronavirus-world-order-230042
Projection, this Obama admin guy wants his socialist order, Patriots want the order Potus is building, which excludes [THEM].
One where People possess the Power and Governments are granted power by the people to be utilized for the benefit of the people.
A ideology whereby international organizations are limited and serve at the request of Nations and for the benefit of Nations and their People.
Know thy enemy:
Edward Fishman is an Adjunct Fellow at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), where he focuses on the intersection of business, economics, and national security. His research interests include sanctions and the evolving ways states use economic power to advance their foreign policy interests. He is concurrently a fellow at the Atlantic Council, where he specializes in Europe and Russia.
From 2015 to 2017, Mr. Fishman served at the U.S. Department of State as a member of the Secretary’s Policy Planning Staff. In that role, Mr. Fishman advised Secretary of State John Kerry on Europe and Eurasia and led the staff’s work on economic sanctions, long-range strategic planning, and international order and norms. During his time on the Policy Planning Staff, Mr. Fishman formulated strategic plans on a wide range of issues, including the preservation of transatlantic unity on Russia sanctions, the creation of a new economic pressure campaign in response to North Korea’s nuclear provocations, and diplomacy in Europe surrounding the British referendum to exit the European Union. Mr. Fishman also managed the Secretary of State’s Foreign Affairs Policy Board and represented the State Department at the National Security Council-led Strategic Planning Small Group, an interagency body that conducted wide-ranging strategic assessments of trends in geopolitics, economics, and technology.
https://www.cnas.org/people/edward-fishman-1