O que é este blog?

Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida.

sexta-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2025

Trump sabotages his own idea for lasting peace in Ukraine - Lee Hockstader (The Washington Post)

Trump sabotages his own idea for lasting peace in Ukraine

If this is the president’s art of the deal, it’s artless — and extremely unlikely to work.
Lee Hockstader
The Washington Post, January 30, 2025
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/01/30/trump-ukraine-europe-musk-troops-war/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&utm_campaign=wp_opinions

BERLIN — Winston Churchill is said to have quipped that all he needed to ensure Europe’s defense was one American soldier, “preferably dead.”
Donald Trump would be unpersuaded.
The president is reluctant to send more aid to Ukraine, let alone U.S. troops; nor does he want Ukraine admitted to NATO. As for overseeing an eventual ceasefire and guaranteeing Ukraine’s security — without which an armistice would be meaningless, given Moscow’s neo-imperialist ambitions — he sees that as Europe’s problem.
Fair enough: Many Europeans regard Russia’s war in Ukraine as an existential threat; far fewer Americans do. So it made sense when, according to the Wall Street Journal, Trump suggested European boots on the ground in Ukraine, once a ceasefire is agreed upon, to protect Ukrainian sovereignty by deterring future Russian attacks.
But Trump might be sabotaging his own goal of ending a cataclysmal war now nearing its third anniversary: “He doesn’t connect the dots,” Jan Techau, a German security analyst, told me.
Trump is rightly pushing Europeans to boost spending on their militaries and take far more responsibility for their own security. But what he’s demanding now goes much further. Persuading Europeans to risk direct confrontation with Russian forces would be the biggest ask a U.S. president has made of America’s allies in living memory.
How big? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says at least 200,000 European soldiers, in addition to Kyiv’s own forces, would be necessary to deter future Russian attacks. That would be almost an impossibly large force for Europe to muster, at least now. Even low-end estimates — 40,000 to 50,000 European ground troops — would severely strain countries, including Britain, whose forces have dwindled to or near historic lows.
Many Europeans would be reluctant to send troops into Ukrainian territory. But what’s the choice if the goal is to deter further Russian attacks?
Washington and key allies, including Germany, oppose granting Ukraine NATO membership. U.N. peacekeepers could be deployed only with the agreement of Russia, a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, and no one seriously expects President Vladimir Putin to sign off on blue helmets in Ukraine that would face down his own forces. Besides, U.N. forces elsewhere have a long track record of failing to keep peace (see: Lebanon).
European officials have started talks on mustering a force to protect Ukraine. It could involve some combination of British, French, Dutch, Nordic and Baltic troops, among others.
A crucial precondition would be muscular U.S. backup, perhaps based in Poland, providing what military types call “C4ISR” — command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.
Put simply, Europe cannot halt the war in Ukraine on its own. And the United States can’t successfully end it without European troops. Cooperation and codependence are the key — if or when a negotiated ceasefire is achieved.
Plenty of obstacles to a European force would present themselves, not least the certainty that Putin would vehemently object, painting it as an advance of NATO troops toward Russia’s borders.
But instead of encouraging European allies and signaling that Washington will have their back, Trump is targeting them with aggression and abuse. That has left Europe reeling just days into his presidency.
If that’s the art of the deal, it’s artless. And it’s extremely unlikely to work.
The issue is not just the threat of tariffs on European goods, though those would sap nations already struggling with anemic economies (Britain) and unsustainable debt (France) even as they would struggle to afford a hugely expensive deployment.
Nor is it only Trump’s snarling over Greenland, which he wants to wrest away from Denmark, although his bullying has shaken NATO allies.
It’s also the brazen interference and contempt for key allies by Elon Musk, who is understandably regarded by European officials as a Trump proxy.
Musk has been loudly promoting radical European political parties that would be most opposed to any force that would safeguard a ceasefire and protect Ukraine. In both Britain and Germany, he has thrown his support behind Russia-sympathizer parties — Reform UK and Alternative for Germany.
Would anyone blame French officials for concluding that Musk would also back France’s populist party National Rally, which, with its own history of swooning over Putin, would be very unlikely to back a European force to deter Russian aggression?
Of course, Trump does have another option. Instead of seeking a negotiated ceasefire safeguarded by European forces, he could simply abandon Ukraine by cutting off military aid.
But that could make Ukraine Trump’s Afghanistan, multiplying the carnage, chaos and refugees. It would signal to China and other adversaries that Washington is weak. It could even prompt U.S. allies, fearing Washington has washed its hands of Europe’s security, to develop their own nuclear arms programs. If you think Europe is unstable now, think of Poland or Turkey with nukes — or Germany.
Trump was smart to push Europe to step up. We’ll see if he’s smart enough to stop undercutting his own idea.

Trump issues new threat to BRICS - RT (informação russa, ou desinformatsia)

 Um presidente arrogante, e ignorante, acha que a preeminência do dólar precisa ser imposta pela força bruta e pelas ameaças comerciais, o que nada mais é do que prepotência imperial.

O bloco do Brics, ignorante em história econômica e em política monetária, acha que pode impor aos membros – sobretudo aos agentes econômicos privados – uma moeda criada politicamente e artificialmente, apenas por objeção IRRACIONAL ao dólar.
Quando ignorantes mandam na política externa, podemos ter bobagens desse tipo e enfrentamentos inúteis e custosos aos verdadeiros criadores de riquezas, que não são os políticos, mas os empresários e comerciantes. (PRA)

Trump issues new threat to BRICS
The US president has warned the economic bloc against turning away from the “mighty” dollar
The BRICS nations will face 100% tariffs on their goods if they dare to challenge the dominance of the “mighty US dollar,” President Donald Trump warned on Thursday, in his latest threat to use American economic power to achieve geopolitical goals.

Members of the BRICS economic bloc have accelerated efforts to reduce reliance on third-party currencies in bilateral trade in recent years, especially after Western sanctions led to the freezing of Russia's reserves held in dollars and euros, following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022.

“The idea that the BRICS countries are trying to move away from the dollar while we stand by and watch is OVER,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Thursday, echoing past threats.

“They can go find another sucker nation,” he fumed. “We are going to require a commitment from these seemingly hostile countries that they will neither create a new BRICS currency nor back any other currency to replace the mighty US dollar.”

‘Find another sucker’: Trump threatens BRICS with massive tariffs, but who will suffer the most?READ MORE: ‘Find another sucker’: Trump threatens BRICS with massive tariffs, but who will suffer the most?
“There is no chance that BRICS will replace the US dollar in international trade or anywhere else, and any country that tries should say hello to tariffs and goodbye to America!” Trump added.

Following a similar threat in November, the Kremlin stressed that American pressure would only accelerate a growing global trend toward using national currencies in trade, diminishing the greenback’s role as a reserve currency. Russian President Vladimir Putin stated during the BRICS summit in Kazan in October that while it was too early to discuss a common BRICS currency and “reject” the dollar, Moscow has had to find alternative financial systems to circumvent Western financial infrastructure.

Beijing responded to Trump’s threat by promising to continue expanding cooperation among fellow members of the economic bloc. Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian called BRICS an important platform for cooperation among emerging markets, emphasizing its aim to achieve comprehensive development and prosperity, not to engage in “bloc confrontation” or “target any third party.”

Kremlin responds to Trump’s BRICS threatREAD MORE: Kremlin responds to Trump’s BRICS threat
India stated that while the group regularly discusses bilateral financial transactions, it has “no interest” in weakening the dollar. “India has never been for de-dollarization,” Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said in December.

South Africa similarly denied that the bloc was planning to create a new currency.

However, in 2023, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva expressed support for creating “a trading currency” within the bloc, “just like the Europeans created the euro.”

China responds to Trump’s BRICS threatREAD MORE: China responds to Trump’s BRICS threat
BRICS comprises founding members Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, along with Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates. Indonesia was accepted as a full member earlier this month.

Trump mistakenly included Spain as a member of BRICS during a White House press briefing shortly after his inauguration. “They’re a BRICS nation, Spain. You know what a BRICS nation is? You’ll figure it out,” he said, adding he would impose “at least 100% tariff on the business they do with the United States.”

https://www.rt.com/business/611957-trump-brics-tariffs-dollar/

How globalization shifted the balance of the US economy away from domestic industrial production (Adam Tooze)

 How globalization shifted the balance of the US economy away from domestic industrial production.






Cidade mais brasileira do Japão, Hamamatsu celebrará 130 anos de amizade entre os dois países com iniciativas inéditas - Brasil Nikkei (SP)

O Cônsul brasileiro em Hamamatsu, embaixador Aldemo Garcia, me envia o o artigo com o balanço das atividades e projetos que foram realizados no Japão em 2024 e sobre as perspectivas para 2025, publicado no jornal "Brasil Nikkei" de São Paulo, direcionado para a comunidade nikkei no Brasil. 


A logomarca dos 130 Anos de Amizade Brasil Japão 

Cidade mais brasileira do Japão, Hamamatsu celebrará 130 anos de

amizade entre os dois países com iniciativas inéditas

 

O ano de 2025 será um muito especial para as relações do Brasil com o Japão. Estamos comemorando o 130º aniversário das relações diplomáticas entre os dois países, estabelecidas em 1895 com a assinatura do Tratado de Amizade, Comércio e Navegação. Não por acaso, os líderes dos dois países anunciaram no ano passado que 2025 viria a ser oficialmente o “Ano da Amizade e do Intercâmbio Brasil-Japão”. Para marcar em grande estilo essa ocasião, nós do Consulado-Geral em Hamamatsu estamos planejando uma agenda intensa de atividades para o corrente ano. Como a cidade com mais brasileiros do Japão, com quase dez mil conterrâneos nossos, Hamamatsu não poderia ficar de fora dessa celebração!

Uma das principais atividades será a participação do Brasil, pela primeira vez desde a criação do Consulado em 2009, no Hamamatsu Matsuri, o maior Festival de Pipas do Japão, que atrai quase dois milhões de visitantes durante o feriado da Golden Week, em maio. Com origem no século XVI, o festival é composto por cerca de 170 grupos formados pelos bairros da cidade, cada qual com sua pipa. A participação de uma equipe composta por membros da comunidade brasileira (o Time Brasil), com uma pipa simbolizando nosso país, é, portanto, uma honra excepcional atribuída ao Brasil pela Prefeitura local. Contaremos com o apoio da Embratur para a realização desse evento.

Outra iniciativa de grande simbolismo será a criação em Hamamatsu de um "Bosque dos Ipês" similar aos "Bosques das Sakuras", já existentes em São Paulo e São Roque. Seria uma versão em Hamamatsu do projeto "Cerejeiras para o Futuro", lançado pelo Bunkyo (Sociedade Brasileira de Cultura Japonesa e de Assistência Social) em 2021. Embelezado por dezenas de ipês representando nossa natureza e dotado de uma área de convivência, o bosque será um lugar agradável para a confraternização de brasileiros e japoneses, constituindo uma homenagem à amizade entre o Brasil e o Japão que perpassará os anos.

Não menos emblemática será a celebração da Data Nacional brasileira, o 7 de Setembro, que planejamos comemorar com a iluminação do Castelo de Hamamatsu nas cores da bandeira nacional - como feito, pela primeira vez, em 2024, porém este ano pretendemos manter a iluminação verde e amarela ao longo de toda a semana! A festa de 2024 teve grande repercussão midiática, inclusive no horário nobre da TV brasileira, e nossa intenção é repetir esse grande sucesso.

Para além da iluminação do Castelo de Hamamatsu, o ano de 2024 foi marcado por uma intensa agenda de atividades realizadas ou apoiadas pelo Consulado, reforçando a visibilidade da nossa cultura, promovendo o empreendedorismo e buscando dar o melhor encaminhamento a questões que afetam nossa comunidade.

Visando dar maior projeção aos artistas profissionais e amadores da comunidade, apoiamos o lançamento dos catálogos ArteBrasil 2024 e ArteKids 2024. Atuamos nas visitas do pianista Ricardo Bacelar, em julho, e do cantor e expoente da cultura nordestina Del Feliz, em outubro, elaborando programação que incluiu palestras em escolas brasileiras da região. Milhares de brasileiros e japoneses se reuniram em grandes celebrações que apoiamos, como o Brazilian Day Hamamatsu, em outubro, e a primeira edição da October Fun Fest, novo festival com forte temática brasileira que tem tudo para fazer parte da agenda regular de eventos da região.

O Espaço do Empreendedor Brasileiro do Consulado (EEB) seguiu a todo vapor, com destaque para a realização da 2ª Feira do Micro e Pequeno Empreendedor Brasileiro no Japão (Feira MIPE), em junho. Na ocasião, foi feito o lançamento e a exposição do catálogo Artesanato Brasil, que colocou em evidência a criatividade da mulher brasileira no Japão. Realizamos no segundo semestre o ciclo de palestras “Conectando-se ao Mercado Japonês”, para ajudar nossos pequenos empresários a penetrar o mercado consumidor local mais amplo. No fim do ano, organizamos a Maratona de Inovação e Empreendedorismo “Hackaton”, que buscou explorar o potencial de nossos microempreendedores em oferecer soluções inovadoras que podem fazer sucesso no mercado.

A educação e a juventude sempre receberam nossa atenção especial. Lançamos na província de Shizuoka o projeto “Jovens Aprendizes”, para facilitar que nossos estudantes adquiram uma curta experiência no mercado de trabalho. Apoiamos a realização de mais uma edição dos Jogos Escolares Brasileiros no Japão (JEBRA), no estádio Ecopa, em Fukuroi - o JEBRA, aliás, vem-se transformando no maior evento esportivo brasileiro no exterior! No fim do ano, conduzimos campanha de doação de mochilas “randoseru” para famílias brasileiras com crianças matriculadas em escolas japonesas.

No que se refere ao atendimento consular, tivemos duas novidades. Uma foi a criação de nosso “Espaço Kids”, para tornar mais agradável a permanência das famílias em nossas dependências durante a prestação dos serviços. A outra foi a disponibilização de número de telefone e “whatsapp” para que os brasileiros possam esclarecer dúvidas conosco de forma prática sobre os temas consulares.

A colaboração com o Conselho de Cidadãos de Hamamatsu foi intensa ao longo do ano. Merece destaque, nesse âmbito, o projeto “Quebrando o Silêncio”, que promoveu série de palestras ao longo do ano sobre o combate à violência doméstica e a publicação de nova tiragem de manual sobre o assunto. O Consulado reforçou sua cooperação com a Polícia de Shizuoka no sentido de oferecer apoio efetivo e humanizado às vítimas de violência doméstica.

Um presente para a nossa comunidade foi a elaboração, com o apoio do Consulado, da biografia do Sr. João Masuko, por Osny Arashiro, honrando a história deste tão querido pioneiro entre os brasileiros em Hamamatsu. O lançamento do livro será feito nas dependências do Consulado em fevereiro.

Tudo isso só é possível porque temos a alegria de contar com uma comunidade brasileira vibrante e trabalhadora, cujo apoio na realização dessas atividades é fundamental. Estou certo de que, neste ano que se inicia, vamos novamente estar juntos em iniciativas de grande impacto, celebrando os 130 anos de amizade entre o Brasil e o Japão.  


The Domino Theory Is Coming for Putin - Casey Michel (Foreign Policy)

Argument
An expert's point of view on a current event.

The Domino Theory Is Coming for Putin

A series of setbacks for Russia is only gaining momentum.

By , head of the Human Rights Foundation's Combating Kleptocracy Program and author of American Kleptocracy: How the U.S. Created the World’s Greatest Money Laundering Scheme in History. 

https://foreignpolicy.com/2025/01/29/domino-theory-putin-russia-georgia-transnistria-belarus/?tpcc=world_brief&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=World%20Brief%2001302025&utm_term=world_brief

For many, the daily news out of Ukraine paints a dour picture of Kyiv’s future. Russian troops continue to grind forward, sacrificing themselves by the tens of thousands for the sake of seizing more and more Ukrainian land. Dreams of a potential Ukrainian counteroffensive are long gone, with calls in the West for everything from Ukrainian neutrality to recognizing Russian sovereignty on stolen Ukrainian lands picking up steam.

These views aren’t without some merit. But they risk missing the forest of the daily news cycle for the trees of where we are—and just how battered and bloodied Russia truly is. On the economic front, Russia has seen both soaring interest rates and galloping inflation, providing a toxic brew of stagflation, from which there’s little likelihood of escape. On the manpower front, Russian President Vladimir Putin is so skittish of a potential new round of mobilization that he’s forced to rely on North Korean conscripts. And on the tactical front, Putin is no closer to Ukrainian collapse than he was in early 2022. He has created for himself, as scholar Michael Kimmage described, a “nightmare,” with only disastrous choices remaining, both for Putin’s rule and for Russian strategic interests writ large.

Indeed, it is the latter point that presents the greatest evidence of Putin’s disastrous turn and perhaps the greatest, or at least the most overlooked, suite of opportunities for Western policymakers. Few have made the connection, but a clear trend line has emerged over the past few years. Thanks to Putin’s monomaniacal fixation on Ukraine, he has been willing to sacrifice other geostrategic projects elsewhere, unwilling to step into the breach to help what had previously been key Russian interests. We’ve started to see a Russian variant of a domino theory emerge—one that has begun gutting Russian interests elsewhere, and illustrating, as few other things can, just how atrophied Russian power projection has become.

The first domino to fall came in 2023, when troops from Azerbaijan stormed into the separatist enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing ethnic Armenians to flee en masse. Rather than being the supposed guarantor of stability—and a key security partner of Armenia, which backed Nagorno-Karabakh for decades—Russia wilted in the face of Azerbaijan’s push. Tucking tail, Russian troops left the region entirely, scuttling a military base where nearly 2,000 Russian troops had once been deployed.

A year later, the next domino toppled. With the ousting of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria, Russia not only lost its key regional ally, but watched as its primary claim as a security guarantor for autocratic regimes disintegrated. Rather than act as a swaggering great power that could shore up illiberal leaders, Moscow was suddenly outed as a government that could do neither.

Both developments—the disappearance of Nagorno-Karabakh and the dissolution of Assad’s regime—are downstream from Putin’s overwhelming focus on subjugating Ukraine, regardless of the cost. All of which begs a pair of questions: Given that he’s been completely consumed by this messianic obsession with Ukraine, which pro-Russian domino will be the next to fall? And how can Western policymakers be ready to take full advantage?

Start with the oldest Russian-backed enclave there is: Transnistria. A sliver of eastern Moldova, Transnistria has been occupied by Russian troops since the earliest days of the post-Soviet era. If anything, the recalcitrance to find a solution to Transnistria was something of an “original sin” for Western policymakers, unwilling as they were to face the realities and reverberations of Russian imperialism, long before Putin set his sights on Ukraine. By the late 1990s, it was clear that Russian promises to remove Moscow’s troop presence from Moldova—and to finally end the Kremlin’s willingness to carve up a separate, sovereign country in the middle of Europe—were hardly credible. By and large, the West looked the other way, letting this blindingly, breathtakingly obvious example of Russian revanchism fester.

Now, though, it is Moscow’s relations with Transnistria that are suddenly in question. Earlier this year, Moscow cutting off its gas line to Europe left the entire region in, quite literally, the dark. While there has been some progress in restoring energy capacity, sudden chatter has emerged about the potential “collapse” of Transnistria wholesale and what that means for Moldova and the rest of the region more broadly. The West has been almost entirely absent from the conversations about potential solutions, let alone what this may mean strategically—a bizarre absence, given Transnistria’s border with Ukraine and the clear designs that Moscow has on eventually linking its Ukrainian gains with its Moldovan holdings.

Elsewhere, Georgia remains mired in a domestic political contretemps worse than anything the country has seen in years. After recent parliamentary elections—broadly viewed as fraudulent—the pro-Russian Georgian Dream party claimed victory, and with it, the right to thwart Tbilisi’s pro-Western direction. The stolen vote was the culmination of a longer trajectory, with the party’s leadership dismantling the underpinnings of Georgian democracy. Similar to the descent of Ukrainian democracy seen under former leader Viktor Yanukovych, whose pro-Kremlin sympathies resulted in Ukraine’s 2014 Maidan Revolution, Georgian Dream’s lurch toward authoritarianism has resulted in the kinds of protests that increasingly resemble those that toppled Yanukovych.

Meanwhile, it is in Belarus that we can find the West’s greatest blind spot—and, arguably, the greatest pressure point for testing just how weak Moscow’s reach and influence is now. In 2020, pro-democratic protests erupted across the country, presenting the greatest threat to the decades-long rule of Belarusian despot Aleksandr Lukashenko. However, in one of the greatest (and most overlooked) foreign-policy failures of U.S. President Donald Trump’s first administration, Washington did little to back the democratic protesters and instead ceded all influence to Moscow. As such, when it appeared that Lukashenko was on his last legs, Putin interceded, reinforcing the regime and restoring the rule of one of Moscow’s longtime clients. Years later, Lukashenko remains in power, and Belarus remains a key staging ground for Moscow’s ongoing assaults on Ukraine.

Now, Belarus faces yet another inflection point. On Jan. 26, another election in Belarus assured Lukashenko’s regime of another term in office—or so the dictator hopes. After all, it was the immediate aftermath of Belarus’s previous election, without even the pretense of fairness or freedom, that unexpectedly jump-started the country’s 2020 protests. While the regime has arrested tens of thousands since, that’s hardly a guarantee of post-election stability this time around. If anything, with Belarus’s opposition far more organized and far more committed than even five years ago, Lukashenko can hardly be sure that this won’t be his last thieved election—especially with his primary patron completely distracted and increasingly drained.

All these developments—Transnistria going dark, Georgia turning turbulent, and Belarus once again facing the same ingredients that sparked its largest pro-democracy protests just a few years ago—would be newsworthy on their own. But it’s the fact that the primary backer of Transnistria separatists, Georgian illiberals, and Lukashenko’s regime are suddenly watching their external influence erode that presents new opportunities for the West, if only Brussels, London, and Washington take advantage.

Indeed, it is somewhat shocking that the West hasn’t sketched out a better strategy for the broader region in recent months. The European Union has continued encouraging Moldova’s pro-EU direction, but the West remains effectively a nonactor when it comes to things like Transnistria. In Georgia, the United States recently sanctioned Bidzina Ivanishvili, the architect of the country’s democratic decline, but it’s clear that there’s little strategy beyond these kinds of individual responses. And Belarus, meanwhile, is effectively a black hole of policy analysis, even for the new administration in Washington. Reams of paper have been produced on new U.S. strategy regarding Ukraine, Russia, and Europe, but there’s been precisely nothing written on Belarus, which appears to be a complete vacuum of strategic thinking.

And that’s all a shame and an opportunity foregone. After all, it’s not just people like Assad suddenly learning that Putin’s support apparently comes with an expiration date. Transnistria separatists, Georgia’s budding autocrats, Belarus’s thug-in-chief—all of them have suddenly realized that Putin’s backing, even for them, isn’t bottomless. As they’ve seen, the Russian president will always, always prioritize Ukraine over Russian interests elsewhere, including client regimes and kleptocratic allies along Russia’s other borders.

This is, of course, a trend that has been years in the making. For over a decade, Putin has prioritized subjugating Ukraine over Moscow’s other key strategic goals, dating all the way back to the creation—and immediate implosion—of the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union. In the years since, Putin has prioritized the gelding of Ukraine over everything from a viable economy to stable relations with the West, even to the point of risking regime stability itself. Indeed, at this point, it’s fair to say that Putin may well choose domination of Ukraine over even places like Sakha or Chechnya, both of which remain part of the Russian Federation for the time being but have clear histories as separate, sovereign states—one of the primary reasons that Russia’s territorial stability is hardly guaranteed, or why, as the Economist said, Putin is “turning Russia into a failed state.”

Questions and crises of Russia’s internal stability are still a ways off. But that is, ultimately, where this accelerating collapse of dominoes is heading. That is all the more reason the West must begin formulating policy not just on the next dominoes to fall—places like Transnistria, Georgia, and even Belarus—but also on what a post-Putin Russia may well, and should, look like. After all, once they start tumbling, dominoes have a way of continuing to fall. The West should be ready.

Casey Michel is head of the Human Rights Foundation's Combating Kleptocracy Program and author of American Kleptocracy: How the U.S. Created the World’s Greatest Money Laundering Scheme in History. X: @cjcmichel


Países com mais ganhadores de Prêmios Nobel

 Top 20 Countries with the Most Nobel Prizes Winners 🏆🌍


20. Belgium 🇧🇪 — 11

19. Israel 🇮🇱 — 13

18. India 🇮🇳 — 13

17. Norway 🇳🇴 — 14

16. Denmark 🇩🇰 — 14

15. Australia 🇦🇺 — 14

14. Poland 🇵🇱 — 19

13. Italy 🇮🇹 — 21

12. Netherlands 🇳🇱 — 22

11. Switzerland 🇨🇭 — 25

10. Hungary 🇭🇺 — 25

9. Austria 🇦🇹 — 25

8. Canada 🇨🇦 — 28

7. Russia/Soviet Union 🇷🇺 — 30

6. Japan 🇯🇵 — 31

5. Sweden 🇸🇪 — 34

4. France 🇫🇷 — 76

3. Germany 🇩🇪 — 115

2. United Kingdom 🇬🇧 — 143

1. United States 🇺🇸 — 423

E o Brasil? Zero!

China’s Economy Has Not Peaked - Nancy Qian (Kellog Insight)

 China’s Economy Has Not Peaked

Chinese policymakers should allow for a more market-driven allocation of land, money, and labor.

By

Nancy Qian

Kellog Insight, Jan 7, 2025


Project Syndicate, December 15, 2024



Summary China’s GDP is growing. Youth unemployment is down. And the property-market crisis is moderating. But the economy’s dynamism is missing. Rather than use “normal” policy tools, such as interest rates and fiscal spending, to address... more

What happens to the world economy and global geopolitics in 2025 will depend significantly on China, the world’s largest exporter and second-largest consumer market. But prevailing assessments of China’s economic health are deeply flawed.

The headlines in 2024 have been mixed. China’s GDP is growing, though the precise rate is always a matter of debate. Youth unemployment, which shocked policymakers when it reached a peak of 21.3 percent in June 2023, has declined to 17.6 percent. And the property-market crisis finally seems to be moderating, with transactions increasing following the government’s bold intervention to support the sector, which, directly and indirectly, accounts for one-third of the Chinese economy.

And yet, the dynamism that characterized China’s economy over the last three decades seems to be missing. Consumption growth is slow, as apprehensive Chinese households maintain high savings rates. Likewise, foreign investors’ confidence is at an “all-time low.” As prices drop, fears of a deflationary spiral are growing, recalling the prolonged stagnation that gripped Japan beginning in the 1990s. Against this backdrop, some now argue that China’s economy has already peaked.

But such assessments are not particularly reliable. For starters, they mostly reflect the perspective of multinationals, concerned with their own profits, or foreign businesses and governments that take an adversarial view of Chinese growth. This helps to explain why observers tend to focus on specific sectors, such as luxury goods or electric vehicles, which account for a small part of a vast and complex economy and are disconnected from the challenges confronting most of China’s 1.4 billion people and the government that manages their lives.

A second problem with much of the analysis of China’s economy is that it is not evidence-based. For example, international policymakers tend to fixate on consumption, which is low in China, even though the assumption that domestic consumption will boost growth is highly debatable. In fact, low consumption can reflect a wide range of problems, which would not automatically be solved by inducing Chinese to consume more.

Similarly, the obsession with deflationary risks stems from the assumption that deflation contributes to poor economic performance. But researchers have struggled to find rigorous evidence that deflation causes economic downturns, rather than just being a symptom of them, or that monetary policies that fight deflation boost growth. In both China and Japan, it is more likely that deflation and economic stagnation are caused by other issues, such as rapid population aging.

Confusion about the causes and effects of economic trends can lead to misguided and even counterproductive policy responses. Consider cuts to savings deposit rates: the idea is that reducing the return on savings will encourage Chinese households to save less and spend more. But most Chinese would only end up poorer. Add to that the declining value of real estate (the main alternative savings vehicle) and, far from spending more, Chinese households might be motivated to increase their savings. They might even think twice about having more children, exacerbating China’s deepening demographic crisis.

Rather than use “normal” policy tools, such as interest rates and fiscal spending, to address low consumption or deflationary pressures, China needs fundamental reforms that tackle the structural issues underlying these problems.

Nancy Qian

Yet another problem with assessments of China’s economic health is that they tend to treat China like a “normal” modern economy and assume that policy tools familiar to Western economies are similarly useful. But this ignores the fact that China has very different fundamentals. The lack of savings instruments is one example. Another is land ownership: 55 percent of China’s total land area is agricultural and is either directly controlled by local governments or leased to farmers. Even privately owned urban housing does not include the land on which it is built, which belongs to the local government and is leased to the homeowner.

There are other restrictions, too. In most countries, people can choose where they live, based on considerations like job opportunities and lifestyle preferences. In China, strict internal migration controls make it very difficult for most people—except the richest and most educated—to move to a different part of the country. In some parts of Shanghai, housing can be sold only to Chinese citizens with local residency permits under the hukou household-registration system.

Furthermore, whereas students in most middle- and high-income countries are allowed to discover their talents and interests gradually and decide whether to apply to university after high school, Chinese students are not afforded this luxury and need to invest and commit to academics much earlier in life because of the competitive and centralized education system. Such restrictions—of which there are many more—dictate the economic lives of ordinary Chinese people. They also constrain aggregate GDP growth by undermining the efficient allocation of capital and labor.

Rather than use “normal” policy tools, such as interest rates and fiscal spending, to address low consumption or deflationary pressures, China needs fundamental reforms that tackle the structural issues underlying these problems. Allowing a more market-driven allocation of land, money, and labor would give over a billion people the chance to be more productive and earn more money. This would lead to higher consumption and investment, increased confidence, and, most importantly, a better quality of life.

Such reforms would be highly complex, underscoring the need for careful design and implementation. But getting them right would pay huge dividends. China achieved remarkable growth for decades by shifting from a command economy to a quasi-market-based system. Eliminating the remaining legacies of the restrictive planned economy could lead to another wave of high growth.

O Grande Salto para o Sul Global: a China olha a África e o Oriente Médio - Zineb Riboua (Hudson Institute)

The Great Leap South: China’s Ambitions in the Middle East and Africa

 Zineb Riboua

Hudson Institute, Jan 30, 2025

https://www.hudson.org/foreign-policy/great-leap-south-chinas-ambitions-middle-east-africa-zineb-riboua

This monthly report by Hudson’s Zineb Riboua explores President Xi Jinping’s strategic push to broaden the People’s Republic of China’s influence across the Middle East and Africa. Click here to subscribe.

Saudi Arabia Threatens China’s Congo Stranglehold

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), home to 80 percent of the world’s known cobalt reserves, is taking steps to loosen China’s grip on its mining sector, Congolese senior official Marcellin Paluku announced. PRC-owned companies currently control the majority of the Congo’s cobalt output and refine it in China before supplying the world’s battery makers. But Kinshasa is turning to Saudi investors to diversify its partnerships and break Beijing’s dominance over the DRC’s mineral wealth.

Saudi Arabia, armed with the immense capital of its Public Investment Fund and driven by its Vision 2030 strategy to pivot beyond oil, is uniquely positioned to challenge China in the cobalt supply chain. Unlike Beijing, Riyadh does not have a reputation for extractive economic practices or cutting corners. This makes Saudi Arabia an attractive partner for the DRC as the embattled African nation looks to reduce its dependence on China.

Paluku’s announcement follows the arrest of three Chinese nationals who were caught in eastern Congo with several gold bars and hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash stashed under their car seats. South Kivu Governor Jean Jacques Purusi revealed that Congolese law enforcement kept the operation secret after other Chinese nationals accused of running illegal gold mines were unexpectedly released and allowed to return to China.

Why it matters

China’s extensive investments in the DRC and strategic infrastructure projects in neighboring Tanzania and Zambia are crucial to Beijing’s dominance over the cobalt supply chain. But Chinese firms’ shady and often illegal business practices have fostered discontent in the Congolese government and opened the door for new players.

With cracks forming in China’s cobalt empire, the United States has an opportunity to reshape the global resource landscape. By partnering with Saudi Arabia in the Congo, Washington can promote competition, champion ethical mining practices, and chip away at China’s near monopoly on critical minerals.

Eurasian Reroute: Ankara and Beijing Could Outflank Russian Railways

A Turkish official revealed that China is interested in contributing around $60 billion to upgrade Turkey’s rail network—an investment that could provide European freight companies an alternative to routes through Russia. This development is particularly striking given that Russia and China have grown closer in recent years as Beijing backs Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine through increased energy and technological trade.

The proposed upgrades, from railway electrification to the creation of a high-speed line connecting Istanbul and Ankara, signal Turkey’s ambitions to become a transit hub between Europe and Asia. But the real twist is China’s involvement: by backing Turkey’s plans, Beijing would help Ankara undercut Moscow’s freight dominance.

Why it matters

In what seems like a geopolitical backstabbing, China may quietly reroute trade from its so-called no-limits partner, Russia, to benefit from Turkey’s strategic location.

This development weakens Russia’s economic leverage over Europe, aiding US efforts to isolate Moscow. But it also highlights China’s growing influence in critical infrastructure projects in Turkey, a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. This deepens Beijing’s strategic foothold in Europe.

Turkey’s balancing act between the US, European NATO, and China underscores a shifting geopolitical landscape where middle powers exploit great power competition. Washington needs to counter China’s expanding global reach while maintaining cohesion within these alliances.

The US should offer Turkey alternative infrastructure investments and joint projects to compete with Beijing. Supporting European freight routes like the Three Seas Initiative can help America’s continental allies bypass China and Russia altogether.

Washington also needs to address Ankara’s security and trade concerns to ensure Turkey’s ambitions align with NATO and Western interests. Meanwhile, the US should emphasize the risks of China’s debt-trap diplomacy and promote transparent connectivity initiatives like the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (PGII). Finally, American policymakers and diplomats should monitor fractures in the China-Russia relationship and amplify rifts to turn quiet tensions into loud divisions.

Beijing Arms the Houthis, Causing Trouble for the World

American intelligence sources revealed to i24NEWS that Beijing supplies the Iran-backed Houthis with sophisticated weaponry to help the terror group destabilize one of the world’s most critical maritime routes. The Houthis, known for chanting “death to America,” allegedly receive these weapons in exchange for Chinese ships’ safe passage in the Red Sea.

Why it matters

China’s support for the Houthis does not just bolster the group’s capacity to destabilize the region. It also threatens global trade routes and emboldens anti-American actors to challenge US influence. China’s support is particularly important because Israeli strikes, the collapse of Hezbollah, and the fall of the Assad regime have weakened the Houthis’ primary backer, Iran.

China has cultivated its ties with the Houthis and other anti-Western groups by presenting itself as a champion of the Global South, forging strategic ties through economic and military support to challenge US dominance. To counter China-Houthi collaboration, the US should enhance its security cooperation with regional partners like Saudi Arabia and Israel to safeguard trade routes, disrupt Houthi supply chains with targeted sanctions, and increase diplomatic pressure on Beijing.

China Squeezes a Crumbling Iran

In a scramble to prop up its faltering militia network, Iran transferred nearly 3 million barrels of oil from a Chinese storage site onto tankers to be sold. The Wall Street Journal reports that this oil could be worth around $2 billion, but that Tehran will owe Beijing around $1 billion in storage fees. This underscores Tehran’s increasing dependence on Beijing as the Iranian economy crumbles under crippling sanctions and a string of regional defeats. Iran’s roar of defiance against the West has faded into a whisper of deference to Beijing.

China and Iran’s relationship became a 25-year “strategic partnership” in 2021. But this partnership increasingly looks more like a lifeline with strings attached. Beijing is tightening its grip, leveraging economic and political influence to control Iran’s resources and decision-making. The Iranians’ choice to move the 3 million barrels of oil echoes a 2018 shipment they made to evade Trump-era sanctions. Both examples paint a clear picture: China is not merely propping up Tehran—Beijing is exploiting the regime’s fragility to further Chinese interests.

Why it matters

The mercantilist Chinese government sees Iran’s desperation as an opportunity to solidify its role as a power broker in the Middle East. By offering Iran a financial lifeline and alternative markets, China allows Iran to sidestep Western sanctions and sustain its regime.

Through opaque oil deals and strategic investments, Beijing has become both Tehran’s benefactor and gatekeeper. China undermines US efforts to curb Iran’s destabilizing activities to reshape regional power dynamics in its favor.

To counter this, the US should close sanctions loopholes by targeting Chinese entities involved in facilitating Iran’s oil trade and financial flows. Washington should also bolster economic and security ties with its Middle Eastern allies to present a clear alternative to Chinese influence and reinforce its commitment to maintaining stability in the region.

Building Bridges: Pakistan Becomes China’s Shortcut to the Gulf

The Gulf’s abundant energy and status as a trade hub are critical to Beijing’s growing global ambitions. Pakistan, the crown jewel of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), offers PRC firms a direct route to the Arabian Sea and Gulf markets—which could be China’s shortcut to securing influence in the Middle East while sidestepping chokepoints like the Strait of Malacca.

To capitalize on China’s ambitions, Pakistan’s National Logistics Corporation (NLC) launched its first operation through the Transports Internationaux Routiers (TIR) procedure, which alleviates duty and tax burdens for certain goods provided that their transit includes roads. The NLC’s new route links China to the United Arab Emirates via the Khunjerab Pass. Hailed as a “good omen” for Pakistan’s trade and logistics sectors, the move streamlines regional connectivity, paving the way to deepen China’s economic foothold in the Gulf.

The pass has evolved from a bilateral trade route into a key link in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). The NLC called the route “a major leap forward” as the shortest, most efficient route from China to the Gulf, cementing Pakistan’s role as a vital bridge for Beijing.

Why it matters

China is using Pakistan as a bridge to the Gulf while making Islamabad more dependent on Beijing. The US should recognize this as a wake-up call about China’s growing influence, strengthen its own partnerships in the region, and offer Pakistan an alternative to Beijing’s debt-laden projects.

The timing is no coincidence. China is capitalizing on the West’s distractedness to cement its foothold in the Middle East. The UAE, a key US ally and strategic partner, is now squarely in Beijing’s sights. This new trade artery is a fast lane from China to America’s Gulf partners. In a region where Washington once called the shots, Beijing is rapidly gaining ground.


The Case for Reglobalization - Roger W. Ferguson, Jr., Maximilian F. Hippold (Foreign Affairs)

 The Case for Reglobalization

Turning Inward Won’t Secure America’s Interests

Roger W. Ferguson, Jr., and Maximilian F. Hippold

Foreign Affairs, January 30, 2025

 

ROGER W. FERGUSON, JR., is the Steven A. Tananbaum Distinguished Fellow for International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations.

MAXIMILIAN F. HIPPOLD is a Research Associate at the Council on Foreign Relations.

 

After years of promoting globalization and free trade agreements, in the past decade, U.S. policymakers have coalesced around an economic agenda that emphasizes industrial policy and supply chain security. This pivot was in large part a reaction to the downsides of economic interdependence. Although the overall economic benefits of globalization are undisputed, they have been unevenly distributed. In many parts of the United States, unfettered international trade brought a decline of domestic industry and the loss of well-paid manufacturing jobs. Entire regions, especially rural and predominantly industrial ones, were left behind. The supply chain issues that emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic further highlighted the dangers of interdependence. As a result, both Republicans and Democrats have turned to industrial policy and trade restrictions to create more domestic manufacturing jobs and reduce the United States’ reliance on other countries.

But U.S. policymakers risk overcorrecting. By adopting a narrow focus on economic security, they could miss opportunities to court countries in the global South that want economic relationships with the United States. And with great-power competition heating up, now is not the time to look further inward. Instead, the United States needs to seek out ways to reinforce its existing relationships and build new ones in regions of strategic importance.

The Trump administration needs a policy that can balance both economic and geostrategic objectives. It must initiate a process of “reglobalization,” investing in industries that support U.S. supply chains in countries in the global South. Such measures are not the broad, often unpopular, and sometimes harmful free trade agreements of past U.S. administrations. They are targeted foreign investments that ultimately boost domestic manufacturing of high-end products. By adopting this approach, the new administration could both reindustrialize the United States and strengthen the web of partnerships it needs to compete with China, Russia, and other strategic rivals.

LOSING GROUND

A global power shift has changed the terms of U.S. alliances. The post–Cold War unipolar world, dominated by the United States, is becoming a multipolar one. No longer do countries naturally gravitate into Washington’s sphere of influence. Many countries, especially in the global South, are increasingly comfortable engaging with several major powers simultaneously. Vietnam, for instance, is a U.S. partner that also maintains close ties with both China and Russia. India is a member of the Quad (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue)—a grouping that includes Australia, India, Japan, and the United States—and is considered by Washington to be a strategic partner in countering Chinese influence in Asia. But India also works closely with Russia, including by purchasing discounted Russian oil and thus indirectly funding Moscow’s war in Ukraine. Turkey is a U.S. treaty ally as a fellow member of NATO, but it also signed a deal in 2018 to purchase a Russian antimissile defense system and more recently requested to join BRICS, the group whose early members included Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.

The United States and its closest allies, collectively, no longer represent the world’s largest economic bloc. The newly expanded BRICS, which now boasts ten members (the most recent additions are Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates), account for more than a third of global GDP, surpassing the share of the G-7, which includes Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. And as other countries build international partnerships, they are driven not by a sense of shared values but by economic benefits. Many African countries, for instance, have recently increased their economic ties not only to China through its Belt and Road Initiative but also to Russia, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates, which have made investments in ports, clean energy, mining, and more.

The United States, meanwhile, has increasingly turned its attention to domestic priorities. Washington is focused on revitalizing former manufacturing hubs and building capacity at home. There is bipartisan agreement on the need to create new manufacturing jobs, especially in parts of the country most affected by deindustrialization and production offshoring. In 2022, the U.S. Congress passed the CHIPS and Science Act, which allocates more than $58 billion to boost domestic production of computer chips and semiconductors, with broad support from both parties.

Trump needs a policy that can balance economic and geostrategic objectives.

Washington is not about to expand its foreign economic engagement with new free trade agreements, either. Neither party has an appetite for such deals, as demonstrated by strong bipartisan objection to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which led to the U.S. withdrawal from the 12-country agreement in 2017, and stalled negotiations with the EU in 2016 over the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. President Donald Trump, after renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement in his first term, has suggested he might impose 25 percent tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico ahead of the planned review of NAFTA’s successor, the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, next year. Tariffs have become a mainstay of U.S. policy, used to protect domestic industries from unfair competition, primarily from China, and to ensure that products vital for U.S. national security are produced domestically. President Joe Biden maintained many of the tariffs on Chinese goods that Trump put in place in his first term, and Biden imposed new import restrictions on Chinese electric vehicles and other green technologies.

If Washington continues to train its focus inward, however, it could jeopardize its ability to build relationships with countries in the global South that could help the United States advance other strategic aims. The same countries are already growing wary of aligning with Washington. The United States’ recent foreign policy missteps and the perception of double standards in its divergent responses to the wars and human suffering in Ukraine and Gaza have damaged the country’s reputation. Many countries have started to look more favorably toward other global and emerging powers, such as China, Russia, or the United Arab Emirates, as a result. With its diminished economic and cultural appeal hampering its ability to forge new partnerships, the United States risks allowing its adversaries to deepen their ties to nonaligned countries in ways that harm U.S. interests.

The consequences are already visible in Africa, where China in particular has made significant inroads. Under its Belt and Road Initiative, China has offered loans to and invested substantial sums in infrastructure projects in countries such as Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe. Beijing has gained access to ports and natural resources in return. Mining projects in Congo, Zimbabwe, and elsewhere have helped China secure control of almost 90 percent of the global processing of rare earths, which are needed to manufacture computer chips, semiconductors, and batteries. Although African-sourced critical minerals still only account for a moderate proportion of global production, the industry has huge potential. By neglecting to invest in its development, the United States and its allies could miss an opportunity to reduce their dependence on China for access to these resources.

China has similarly expanded its economic influence in Latin America. Through its infrastructure investments, such as a megaport in Peru and a hydroelectric plant in Ecuador, Beijing is now the region’s second-largest trading partner after the United States. And its influence is not always benign: in March 2023, China pressured Honduras to sever diplomatic relations with Taiwan in exchange for economic aid. Beijing has begun to extend its involvement in the region beyond economic ventures, too. In Argentina, for instance, China operates a deep space station that has raised concerns among U.S. defense officials about the possibility it could be used to track U.S. satellites.

TARGETED APPROACH

The Trump administration needs updated strategies to effectively compete with China for influence among nonaligned countries. Building relationships in Africa and Latin America is important not only to secure U.S. access to critical resources but also to increase the number of countries that are willing to help the United States advance its interests. And in the Indo-Pacific region, Washington must create new partnerships beyond its established alliances with Japan, the Philippines, and South Korea to curtail China’s rising economic and military influence.

But to forge those partnerships—as well as strengthen existing ones—the United States must offer economic benefits. As former United States Agency for International Development Administrator Samantha Power said at an event at the Council on Foreign Relations in December, “No matter where I go, no matter what continent, no matter what community even, the message is the same: we want trade, not aid.” The United States therefore needs to ensure that its focus on boosting domestic manufacturing of high-end products does not lead to a wholesale rejection of new foreign economic partnerships. Such partnerships can be mutually beneficial. By investing in industries abroad that can provide inputs for U.S. manufacturing, Washington can both strengthen its supply chains and deepen its ties to pivotal countries in the global South.

The new Trump team should start by identifying the alliances it should strengthen and the countries it should build new relationships with in Africa, Latin America, and the Indo-Pacific region. In Africa and Latin America, this could include countries that are rich in the natural resources used in battery or semiconductor production, such as Chile and Zimbabwe, or are in strategically important locations, such as Djibouti due to its access to the Red Sea. In the Indo-Pacific, the United States should prioritize deepening its partnerships with countries such as Indonesia, Vietnam, and others where it competes with China for economic influence, as well as with Pacific Island nations whose military cooperation could prove useful to Washington in the event of a conflict with Beijing over Taiwan or in the South China Sea.

To forge new partnerships, the United States must offer economic benefits.

Next, the administration should work with U.S. business leaders in critical domestic industries, such as semiconductor manufacturing and car production, to determine the raw or processed materials that can be sourced from priority countries. The U.S. government should then invest in these countries to improve infrastructure and build up industries that can feed directly into U.S. supply chains. The Biden administration’s recent investment in a railway project in Angola followed this logic: the route connects Angola with the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Zambia, facilitating the production of critical minerals used in batteries. But Washington should be making far more of these strategic investments. In Chile, for example, the United States can invest in the copper industry, which is vital for semiconductor manufacturing. It can finance mining projects in Indonesia, which has large reserves of nickel, a mineral used to produce batteries for electric vehicles and other green technologies. In Vietnam, the United States can invest in electronic manufacturing to diversify its supply chains in this sector away from China and Taiwan.

Additionally, the United States can leverage its influence in international financial institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to facilitate lending and investment in U.S. partner countries in the global South. The United States is the largest shareholder of the World Bank Group, and together with its closest allies, such as Germany, Japan, and the United Kingdom, it has an outsized influence when it comes to making policy changes and approving financial assistance packages. Washington could thus push for measures that increase the foreign investment and economic aid to its new or existing partners in the global South, adding to initial U.S. investments and boosting these countries’ long-term economic development. Other U.S. allies, including Japan, South Korea, and European countries, could also benefit from better access to new markets.

This approach is more targeted than the United States’ traditional economic aid, which has primarily focused on grants, humanitarian assistance, and trade programs. It does not just provide economic benefits to U.S. partners in the global South but also meets the United States’ economic and national security needs. With a commitment to reglobalization, carefully crafting trade and investment packages to build relationships with critical countries, Washington can strengthen its domestic industries, protect its supply chains, and enhance the partnerships it needs to advance other national security and geostrategic interests—all at once.