Our editor in chief on the summit in New Delhi SEPTEMBER 12, 2023Â Â |Â Â [VIEW IN BROWSER](Â Â |Â Â [SUBSCRIBE]( Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi embraces Comoros President Azali Assoumani, who is also the chairman of the African Union, ahead of the G-20 summit on Sept. 9 in New Delhi. Evan Vucci/Pool/AFP via Getty Images For a second year running, world leaders gathered for a G-20 summit but refrained from posing for the traditional family photo. It turns out several Western leaders didnât want to be seen with a Russian officialâeven if that person was Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and not President Vladimir Putin, who didnât travel to New Delhi. Nor did Chinese President Xi Jinping, in a sign of growing tensions between China and India. Thatâs not stopping New Delhi from spinning the weekend convening as a success. Contrary to expectations, the summit produced a joint statement. But it contained only a glancing mention of the war in Ukraine, with no reference to Russiaâs aggression. Predictably, Moscow sees that as a diplomatic win; Kyiv is upset. It makes sense that the worldâs divisions would show up in a big global summit. There were, however, some important advances. The G-20 agreed to induct the 55-member African Union, dramatically expanding the groupâs remit and dragging its center of gravity toward the global south. Perhaps as a result, one legacy from the weekendâs summit could be the start of moves to reform multilateral banks such as the World Bank, and the provision of more equitable loans to countries facing sovereign debt crises. (Read[Darren Walkerâs essay]( on this in FP.) Weâre in the thick of summit season. Weâve now concluded the summits of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, and the G-20; up next is the United Nations General Assembly. Thereâs a familiar feeling of same-old, same-old to these gatherings. Does anything ever get done? Our [fall print issue](, âThe Most Important Alliances Nowâ, is online today and takes on that very question. And to whet your appetite, you might want to try out G. John Ikenberryâs [take on why]( the G-7 has become what the White House calls âthe steering committee of the free world.ââRavi Agrawal, editor in chief New & Noteworthy - Samantha Power on the U.N. General Assembly: In her role as the administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), Samantha Power is often thrust to the forefront of some of the worldâs biggest crisesâfrom steering U.S. humanitarian efforts in Ukraine to figuring out how to get aid to cash-strapped Sri Lanka. Power is also a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and plays a crucial role in the Biden administrationâs foreign policy and diplomacy. Power joins FP editor in chief Ravi Agrawal on Sept. 15 for an FP Live conversation on the global food crisis, Russiaâs war in Ukraine, strengthening democracy, and USAIDâs climate strategy. [Register now.](
- A Chance for Mekong Diplomacy: âItâs not about containing China,â U.S President Joe Biden [said]( from Hanoi on Sunday, of his visit to Vietnam. âItâs about having a stable base.â As Vietnam elevates the United States to its highest diplomatic status of âcomprehensive strategic partner,â Brian Eyler [writes]( that Bidenâs renewed strategy in the Southeast Asian nation should center on a vital regional river: âSome critics worry that China and Russia, two of Vietnamâs other comprehensive strategic partners, could punish Vietnam for its choice to upgrade relations with the United States. But Vietnam can come out of this complicated diplomatic competition a clear winner by centering the U.S.-Vietnam collaboration on the Mekongâthe mighty river that keeps both Vietnam and much of the rest of the world fed.â
- 2024 Looms Over U.S.-Mexico Relations: A spiral of escalatory rhetoric and next yearâs near-simultaneous elections on both sides of the border spell danger, but there is a way out, [argues]( Ryan C. Berg. âThe bilateral relationship will need to weather the storm of concurrent elections while ensuring a relationship robust enough to last long after the campaign rallies have faded from the headlinesââand that relationship should focus on repairing the essential economic relationship between the United States and its top trading partner. FP EVENT [Defending Democracy]( As youth populations around the world are increasingly disillusioned by establishment politics, this new generationâs leaders are turning to activism to drive institutional democratic change. [Register]( to join Foreign Policy and the National Democratic Institute today at 10 a.m. EDT to highlight these youth leaders and explore what the future of democracy will look like. Speakers include: - U.S. Rep. Sara Jacobs (D.-Calif.)
- Lu Argueta, secretary general, Latin American Youth Network for Democracy
- Marina Csikós, project officer, Phiren Amenca International Network
- Abby Finkenauer, special envoy for global youth issues, U.S. State Department Office of Global Youth Issues
- Eliud Luutsa, co-founder, Innobid, and Ye! advisor at the International Trade Centre in Kenya. [REGISTER NOW]( More from FP Live Inside Taiwanâs Foreign PolicyCompetition between the United States and China affects the whole world, but no country is impacted as deeply as Taiwan. What are Taipeiâs expectations of the Biden administration? How does it view Beijingâs ambitions? And as Taiwan gears up for elections at home and in the United States in 2024, how will foreign policy feature in votersâ minds? FPâs Ravi Agrawal will interview Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu on U.S. relations with Taiwan, tensions in the Taiwan Strait, semiconductors, and more. The conversation will be released on Sept. 14. [Submit your questions.]( Historian Heather Cox Richardson on American DemocracySept. 26 | 11 a.m. EDTHeather Cox Richardson has long grappled with questions of how democracy has weakened in the United States and how its citizenry can try to take back control. That topic is the focus of her new book, Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America, and sheâll take questions from subscribers in a conversation with FPâs Ravi Agrawal. [Register here]( Exercise Your Mind On Friday, a foreign intelligence employee from which European nation was charged with treason for allegedly passing secret information to Russia? - Hungary
- Romania
- Germany
- Italy You can find the answer to this question and learn more at the end of this email. Expert voices, intelligent analysis.
[Get FP access today](. Do Policy Schools Still Have a Point? As a new academic term begins, FP columnist and Harvard University international relations professor Stephen M. Walt [considers]( whether modern public programs are able to keep up with âa world that is being transformed in ways that make todayâs knowledge less useful or relevant": Hereâs what I mean. What if we are headed toward a world where AI and other technological developments create far-reaching market disruptions more or less constantly, but on a scale we havenât seen before? Just look at what some new diet drugs (e.g., Ozempic) are doing to the whole diet industry. What if a changing climate makes jet travel prohibitively expensive, environmentally unsustainable, or just too dangerous due to increasing atmospheric turbulence? What if large areas of the planetâcurrently home to tens of millions of peopleâbecome uninhabitable? Are we ready for the day when the satellites on which global communications depend are taken out by a cascading collision of space junk, a malevolent hacker, or the deliberate action of a hostile power? Do you even remember how you used to do things in the pre-digital age? And what if the political effects of all these developments disrupt familiar modes of governance, long-standing alliance commitments, patterns of economic dependence, and the institutional features that have largely determined global politics for the past 75 years or more? My point is that in a world of increasingly rapid and interconnected disruption, some of the familiar verities, principles, and practices that weâve taken for granted (and confidently taught to our students) may not be all that helpful. In these circumstances, what will matter is a leaderâs ability to adapt, to jettison old ideas, to discriminate between sound science and snake oil, and to invent new ways of meeting public needs. Teaching students how things worked in the past, and instilling timeless truths derived from earlier epochs may not be that helpfulâit might even be counterproductive. Am I proposing that we toss out the current curriculum, stop teaching microeconomics, democratic theory, public accounting, econometrics, foreign policy, applied ethics, history, or any of the other building blocks of todayâs public policy curriculum? Not yet. But we ought to devote more time and effort to preparing them for a world that is going to be radically different from the one weâve known in the pastâand sooner than they think. Read Waltâs latest [column](, which includes some proposals on how these programs might improve what they are offering theyâre students. And start your young IR professionalâs career smarterânurture their scholastic life and help them access fresh perspectives on fast-changing global affairs by [giving the gift]( of a Foreign Policy subscription. Most Popular on FP [The Liberian-flagged oil tanker Ice Energy (L) transfers crude oil from the Russian-flagged oil tanker Lana (R), off the shore of Karystos, on the Island of Evia, on May 29, 2022. ]( [Greece Is Making a Killing Selling Ships to Russia]( The worldâs largest ship-owning nation is profiting from the sale of aging vessels, while enabling Moscowâs sanctions evasion. By Elisabeth Braw [Wartime Russians Fall Back on an Ancient Survival Strategy]( Conformism and acquiescence have a long tradition in a culture of chaos and repression. By Alexey Kovalev [Military personnel wearing protective suits remove a police car and other vehicles from a public car park as they continue investigations into the poisoning of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, England, on March 11, 2018. Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images]( [Russiaâs Would-Be Assassins Still Stalk Europeâs Streets]( Moscowâs regular spies have been expelled. Their kill squads are still active. By Amy Mackinnon [Then-U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson shakes the hands of soldiers as he visits troops in Vietnam in 1966.]( [Why U.S. Presidents Really Go to War]( As a new book shows, itâs not always about strategy. By Julian E. Zelizer [Flowers surround the grave of Wagner Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, who was killed in a private jet crash in the Tver region last week, in Saint Petersburg on Aug. 30.
]( [Prigozhinâs Assassination Was Business, Not Revenge]( The Wagner chief broke the deal struck with Putin for his survival. By Dmitri Alperovitch [Greece Is Making a Killing Selling Ships to Russia]( The worldâs largest ship-owning nation is profiting from the sale of aging vessels, while enabling Moscowâs sanctions evasion. By Elisabeth Braw [Wartime Russians Fall Back on an Ancient Survival Strategy](Conformism and acquiescence have a long tradition in a culture of chaos and repression. By Alexey Kovalev [Russiaâs Would-Be Assassins Still Stalk Europeâs Streets](Moscowâs regular spies have been expelled. Their kill squads are still active. By Amy Mackinnon [Why U.S. Presidents Really Go to War](As a new book shows, itâs not always about strategy. By Julian E. Zelizer [Prigozhinâs Assassination Was Business, Not Revenge](The Wagner chief broke the deal struck with Putin for his survival. By Dmitri Alperovitch From Around FP - More Speakers Joining FP at UNGA: As you finalize your plans in New York next week, donât miss these policymakers and experts in conversation with Foreign Policyâs leaders. Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director-general of the World Health Organization, will discuss [accelerating climate adaptation]( for health equity on Sept. 20. Winnie Byanyima, the executive director of the United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, and Dr. Natalia Kanem, the executive director of the United Nations Population Fund, will take the stage at [FPâs Health Forum]( on Sept. 20. And Stéphane Duguin, the CEO at the CyberPeace Institute, and Karim A.A. Khan KC, a prosecutor of the International Community Court, join our [conversation]( on the future of hybrid warfare on Sept. 21. [Register]( for all events and see full agendas for all our conversations.
- Russia's Long-War Economy: Is Russiaâs war economy on the brink of crisis? Or is it settling into a new âlong-warâ mode? FP columnist Adam Tooze writes about the fall of the ruble and the status of the Russian economy in the latest [edition]( of his Chartbook newsletter. Also, listen to his âRuble Rouletteâ conversation with FP deputy editor Cameron Abadi on the latest [episode]( of FPâs Ones & Tooze podcast.
- Insights for Your Team: With group subscriptions, FP has built tools to fit seamlessly into your workflow and, more importantly, your budget. Save time and money with consolidated billing, easy management of users, and volume discounts. Share content with peers or students with unrestricted access across platforms. And stay focused with an ad-free experience on the site. [Get access]( for your organization now. Are you interested in learning more about FP Analyticsâ cutting-edge research services, hosting an FP Virtual Dialogue event, or building a podcast with FP Studios? [Explore partnership opportunities](. Answer: C. Germany. Although the reason behind the employeeâs actions is not yet clear, Adrian Karatnyckyâs [examination]( of treason in Ukraine provides insight into turncoat mentality. [Live from New York]( It's [Global Reboot](! FP Studios, in partnership with the Doha Forum, invites you to join a live taping on Sept. 21, in-person and online. Hosted by editor-in-chief Ravi Agrawal, Global Reboot explores how to rebuild a world upended by disruptive international events. [REGISTER NOW]( [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( [LinkedIn]( Youâre receiving this email at {EMAIL} because you signed up for the FP This Week newsletter. [MANAGE YOUR EMAIL PREFERENCES]( | [VIEW OUR PRIVACY POLICY]( | [UNSUBSCRIBE]( Reach the [right online audience]( with us. [Foreign Policy]( is a division of Graham Holdings Company. All contents © 2023 Graham Digital Holding Company LLC. All rights reserved. Foreign Policy, 655 15th St NW, Suite 300, Washington, DC, 20005.