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Washington still fields “the world’s most capable force of aircraft, warships, and submarines,” writes Isaac Kardon. But “the efficacy of U.S. military power in contested littoral zones” is eroding.
“Thanks to U.S. sanctions and Havana’s internal mismanagement,” Cuba is “facing economic disaster,” writes Ricardo Zuniga. How can the island escape this crisis?
Without regional cooperation, the United Arab Emirates “faces a future not of strategic autonomy as it craves but of dependence on political decisions made in the United States and Israel,” writes @andrewleber.bsky.social.
Americans see local consent for U.S. military intervention as not only a “practical concern” but also as a “matter of moral principle,” writes @janinadill.bsky.social.
“The American president who comes after Trump should set out to update, improve, and sell the idea of an enlightened and U.S.-led world where leadership, rules, values, institutions, and norms still matter,” writes Philip Gordon.
Overseas bases make the United States more likely “to default to military action,” writes @profrachelmetz.bsky.social. “If war were harder to wage, perhaps Washington would wage fewer unwise wars.”
“When Beijing casts structural problems as technical hurdles or pressures from abroad, it limits the reforms it is willing to pursue while offloading responsibility,” writes Francesca Ghiretti.
Restoring transatlantic trust will require “a long-term change in the tone and behavior of U.S. leaders over multiple electoral cycles,” argues David Gioe. “It will not simply reappear after Trump leaves office.”
On the latest episode of “The Foreign Affairs Interview,” Philip Gordon and Mara Karlin discuss how U.S. allies have reacted to Trump’s cajoling and threats over the course of his second term—and how those responses will shape the future of U.S. power. https://fam.ag/4vxHKjR
“The U.S. military needs to work more closely with its allies to meet the challenges they share with Washington,” argues Thomas Mahnken. “Otherwise, the United States risks stretching itself too thin in an increasingly dangerous world.”
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How Americans think about U.S. military interventions.
www.foreignaffairs.com
Greeted as Liberators?
America depends on global order—and can restore it.
www.foreignaffairs.com
The oceans may soon be tolled.
www.foreignaffairs.com
Don’t Give Up on Global Order
How America Lost Command of the Commons
What American military force can and cannot do.
www.foreignaffairs.com
A risky quest for strategic autonomy in a war-torn Middle East.
www.foreignaffairs.com
The Day After in Cuba
Can the UAE Go It Alone?
Iran and the Hidden Cost of Wartime Access
Overseas bases make the U.S. military dominant—and more likely to blunder into war.
www.foreignaffairs.com
Beijing’s blind spots hinder real reform.
www.foreignaffairs.com
The crisis between Washington and Europe may be a blessing in disguise.
www.foreignaffairs.com
How China Misperceives Itself
The Transatlantic Crucible
The American Military’s Coming Marathon
The Pentagon needs both quantity and quality to win modern conflicts.
www.foreignaffairs.com
Foreign Affairs
Foreign Affairs
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