As America enters the 2024 presidential campaign this time it is not "economy stupid" but foreign policy that should take precedence since the lists of international conflicts and risks of a doomsday scenario are constantly growing.
Middle East, Ukraine are already on fire, and, as historian Niall Ferguson writes in The Times, “an ideological as well as geopolitical division between the countries of the ‘Rimland’ (the Anglosphere, western Europe and Japan) and those of the Eurasian ‘Heartland’ threatens to become the next crisis in a cascade of conflict that has the potential to escalate to a Third World War especially if China seizes the moment – perhaps as early as 2024 – to impose a blockade on Taiwan.”
Add to this pack the reports about potential major Washington-Moscow conflict escalation due to the Biden administration intentions to seize more than $300 billion in Russian central bank assets stashed in Western nations and handing them to Ukraine.
Nowadays we hear that the recent advances in artificial intelligence could accidentally cause a global conflict. Eric Schmidt, the former Google’s CEO, told the Axios AI+ summit in Washington that there were not sufficient safeguards on AI, and that it was “only a matter of time before humans lost control of it which could pose a risk to humanity on the scale of a pandemic or nuclear war.”
So, is there a way out from these horrors or we are doomed? As the saying goes, it is not over until it is over, and if any elements of democracy in the U.S. still exist then hope is with the results of November 2024 elections. We and the world need a new team of American leaders with the geostrategic vision capable to navigate U.S. foreign policy in these turbulent times.
The current “Magnificent Seven” team- Joe Biden, Tony Blinken, Jake Sullivan, Victoria Nuland, Lloyd Austin, Chuck Schumer, Ben Cardin” – obviously is the problem, not solution. As former Democratic Congresswoman and Presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard speaks of “Biden’s betrayal” since during his inauguration, he promised “to bring our country together, to be a president for all Americans, no matter who they voted for, and he promised to get us closer to peace. Instead he is tearing our country apart, pouring fuel on the fire of divisiveness, and leading us to the brink of World War and nuclear annihilation.”
Biden who portrayed himself as defender of democracy around the world has largely contributed to the degradation of American democracy .
A recent report by the Law Forward “A Democracy Crisis in the Making” presents numerous examples of the increasing attempts to undermine U.S. democracy and surprisingly one doesn’t see the names of Donald Trump or Vladimir Putin responsible for these misdeeds.
The report analyzes the nationwide trend of state legislatures considering —and, in some cases, enacting— laws that would increase the risk of election subversion, and that “These laws could contribute to an election outcome that doesn’t reflect the will of voters.”
The recent decision by the Colorado Supreme Court to remove Trump from the ballots is seen by many experts as unconstitutional. According to Robert F. Kennedy Jr “Colorado Supreme Court ruling makes America look like a Banana Republic. Why doesn’t every American understand that if they can do this to a former U.S. President, EVERYONE is vulnerable to punishment for crimes with which they have never been convicted?”
There is a reasonable expectation that the U.S. Supreme Court overrules this decision but even if it does, and even if Trump wins, this doesn’t guarantee that he would be America’s and the world’s savior since so far, we didn’t hear his clear Peace agenda. He did say that he will stop the war but didn’t explain how.
In conclusion, here is my version of the “Magnificent Seven” team of experts in alphabetical order who have enough knowledge and expertise to design and implement the Peace agenda: Tucker Carlson, Tulsi Gabbard, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, Douglas McGregor, John Mearsheimer, Rand Paul, Jeffrey Sachs. Anyone who wants to add names to this list is welcome to do it.
Donald Trump Should Not Repeat Woodrow Wilson’s Failure
April 30th is an important date in American politics. This is the day 100 for the American President in the White House, and all attention will be on the reports of his achievements and failures. But nothing can be more critical than Peace…
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6 mins read
A Holocaust perpetrator was just celebrated on US soil. I think I know why no one objected.
Russia’s invasion has made ordinarily outspoken critics of antisemitism wary of criticizing Ukrainian Nazi collaborators
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1 min read
Qi Book Talk: The Culture of the Second Cold War by Richard Sakwa
Richard Sakwa has for many years been one of the most distinguished and insightful observers of relations between the West and Russia, and one of the leading critics of Western policy. In this talk with Anatol Lieven, director of the Eurasia program at the Quincy Institute, Sakwa discusses his book, The Culture of the Second Cold War (Anthem 2025). The book examines the cultural-political trends and inheritances that underlie the new version of a struggle that we thought we had put behind us in 1989. Sakwa describes both the continuities from the first Cold War and the ways in which new technologies have reshaped strategies and attitudes.