Foreign Policy Magazine

The Only Way Forward

Can the new world order be saved by humanism?

This year was in many ways one of great-power politics. The resurgence of Russia on the global stage, from Ukraine to Syria to China. The Saudi-Iranian power struggle in the Middle East. China’s assertion of its status as the Middle Kingdom once again, expecting deference from its neighbors in East and Southeast Asia. North Korea’s determined pursuit of nuclear weapons. Even Great Britain’s rejection of the European Union, fueled in part by Tory dreams of Britannia sovereign once again. It is a world of deals and shifting alliances, particularly as Pax Americana seems to wane—a trend that Donald Trump’s stunning election as president threatens to accelerate—and U.S. foreign policy takes a decidedly realist turn.

It is a world of 21 million refugees and 41 million internally displaced people, driven from their homes by war, famine, and tyranny; a world in which a half-million Syrians have been slaughtered in front of our eyes; a world with a conscience that can no longer be shocked by human suffering, whether

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Foreign Policy Magazine

Foreign Policy Magazine3 min read
Green Pathways For Suriname’s Growing Support Sectors
As investment rises into Suriname’s promising oil and gas sector, the local government is focusing on developing its key support sectors with a sharp focus on sustainability and combating climate change. While the lush tropical nation has been a net-
Foreign Policy Magazine2 min read
Maximizing The Potential Of Jamaica’s Rich Resources
With its 50th anniversary looming on the horizon, JBM is building on its enviable experience as a traditional mining powerhouse in Jamaica’s industrial ecosystem to embark on an exciting business diversification strategy featuring the globally demand
Foreign Policy Magazine14 min readWorld
The Promise And Peril Of Geopolitics
Alexander Dugin is a bit of a madman. The Russian intellectual made headlines in the West in 2022, when his daughter was killed, apparently by Ukrainian operatives, in a Moscow car bombing likely meant for Dugin himself. Dugin would have been targete

Related Books & Audiobooks