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Diplomacy & Crisis News

Elon Musk’s Twitter Chaos Is Going to Be Even Worse Overseas

Foreign Policy - Fri, 11/11/2022 - 22:13
Gutting the workforce will make it harder to protect dissidents and police misinformation.

Livestock Are More Than Just Emissions

Foreign Policy - Fri, 11/11/2022 - 19:41
Africa needs to reduce emissions and protect food security. Villainizing livestock will lead to neither.

Crypto’s Boy King Got Dethroned Overnight

Foreign Policy - Fri, 11/11/2022 - 19:22
Sam Bankman-Fried sold himself as a savior—but was sitting on a hollow company.

U.S. Struggles to Help Ukraine Keep the Lights On

Foreign Policy - Fri, 11/11/2022 - 18:35
Ukraine needs heaters as much as HIMARS.

The Barbadian Proposal Turning Heads at COP27

Foreign Policy - Fri, 11/11/2022 - 14:00
How Mia Mottley’s climate finance plan went from symbol of moral outrage to serious possibility at the IMF.

Will U.S. Midterm Results Affect Washington’s Foreign Policy?

Foreign Policy - Fri, 11/11/2022 - 12:11
A Republican-led House could mean a more hawkish stance on China and less aid for Ukraine—or more of the same.

Biden and Xi Set to Meet With Tensions High

Foreign Policy - Fri, 11/11/2022 - 11:52
The U.S. president embarks on a weeklong trip on the heels of the midterm elections, aiming to project stability and strength.

U.S. Midterm Results Are a Net Plus for National Security

Foreign Policy - Fri, 11/11/2022 - 10:27
As Trumpism deflates, internationalist Republicans will press the Biden administration on China, defense, and trade.

South Asia Unites Around ‘Loss and Damage’ at COP27

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 23:30
Led by Pakistan, climate-vulnerable countries seek aid for adaptation.

Biden’s Team Is Dangerously Messing in Bosnia’s Politics

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 22:51
Unwise interventions are pushing ethnic partition.

On Nuclear Treaty, at Least, Biden Aims for Fresh START With Russia

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 21:20
Washington and Moscow look set to keep New START alive with working-level talks, despite historic tensions.

Biden’s Foreign Policy Set for Midterm Shake-Up

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 21:01
House Republicans are already planning a batch of investigations.

Latin America’s Pink Tide Is an Opportunity for Washington

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 18:17
With Lula’s victory in Brazil, the Western Hemisphere is now dominated by left-of-center governments.

A Theme Park Crisis Is Wrecking South Korea’s Bond Market

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 16:50
A provincial default has destroyed local government credibility.

How Eritrea Could Derail the Ethiopian Peace Deal

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 16:23
The Eritrean president has his own interests in Tigray, and they could undermine Ethiopia’s truce with the TPLF.

World Cup Shows Need to Crack Down on Kim’s Labor Exploitation

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 15:17
Shipping workers abroad helps the North Korean leader evade sanctions and finance his nuclear weapons.

What Russia’s Kherson Retreat Means for the War

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 14:00
Moscow’s withdrawal marks a humiliating battlefield setback that could worsen already-dismal morale.

Democrats and Republicans Agree That America Is Always Right

Foreign Policy - Thu, 10/11/2022 - 11:08
Washington can no longer afford its self-defeating “with us or against us” attitude.

The Divisive Vote: Elections in the Americas

Foreign Policy Blogs - Tue, 08/11/2022 - 17:14

Political Rally during Brazil’s latest election: REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

It was shocking to see what had occurred in a local election in a city in my country. A grassroots candidate won because the sitting government representative took to marginalizing certain groups and dividing the community over the last few years. This was done in order to garner majority political support for his chosen candidate. Many of those issues affected everyone’s grandparents and dealt with violence against women, especially diverse women in the community. The candidate did not choose to be supportive of those in the community, but was intentionally divisive to the point of actually accusing a grassroots pro-elder support group of committing illegal acts with no evidence in order to slander them in the community.

While in the above example the community was able to push back against the sitting Government representative and his established allies, the tactic of alienating the other in the quest for a position of power goes against the most basic freedoms established in any healthy democracy. So limiting are some of these restrictions now in a G7 nation, that it would be difficult to even discuss them openly. When you have the feeling that openly presenting your balanced opinion and criticism of your Government would make you identify with characters in a Cold War novel, you are not in possession of your Constitutional rights.

It is essential that this tactic of alienating the other as an election strategy become a thing of the distant past, as the alternative is most likely mutually assured conflict. In recent elections in the Americas the results are almost an even split. In Colombia’s recent election, the left wing candidate was able to pull off a victory despite successive Conservative and anti-cartel governments dominating Colombia’s political landscape and policy discussions for a generation. The end result of the election split came close to 50/50, and this narrow lead assure a Presidential victory. What will be key is to not target the other fifty percent of the population as the “other” in policy discussions, to not label them with terms that minimize their perspective and local issues, nor dehumanize them as a public relations exercise.

The most divisive election result in the Americas took place recently with the final run off vote in Brazil. While Ex-President Lula was able to secure a victory against now Ex-President Bolsonaro, it was by the narrowest of margins and many regions still secured regional seats from Bolsonaro allies. Lula, who came from Brazil’s labour movement, was popular in the past as he tried to secure more labour rights and socially progressive policies while implementing a balanced economic file that differed slightly from his fiscally conservative opposition at the time. With a world recession approaching, Lula will have to try and convince Brazilians that his past successes can be repeated. Lula will have to follow an economic policy that will not place its citizens in a situation of high inflation while burying any image of corruption from his administration. The issue of high inflation is what will likely hurt Biden in his upcoming midterm elections and has placed Canada’s governing party at the lowest levels of popularity in eight years.

Divisive politics often dominates the lingua franca around elections because dividing people might work for votes, but it marginalizes small interests groups in a society and actually seeks to deny them their basic rights. As we saw locally in my town, women who were threatened and assaulted needed to be reminded that despite being told they would not receive help by those in charge, they had the rights to be safe in their community. The phrase “Women get attacked all the time” should never be the common response from leaders in a community. Citizen’s rights are not abolished by being assaulted, nor can they be eliminated by the local politician’s opinion or even the police who gave a lackluster response to safety in the area. Even in the realm of international policy, these local policy tactics affect how a country approaches human rights issues abroad. Freedom cannot exist when a government dehumanizes its opposition for its own political gain.

The Terror Weapon

Foreign Policy Blogs - Tue, 01/11/2022 - 16:04

IRGC’s Unrelenting Attacks On Iraqi Kurdistan – Several Kurdish children taking shelter following an attack by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards

NATO and Western countries have spent much of the year supplying Ukraine with systems that would defend attacks from advanced Russian systems while slowly integrating offensive systems into the mix. The offensive systems given to Ukraine by NATO and Western allies were often tactical, allowing Ukraine to target key Russian military infrastructure so that the process of further attacks on Ukrainian territory would be limited.

The recent strike by Iranian made drones by Russia sought to terrorize the population in Kyiv and other cities in Ukraine, without much tactical value beyond terror. While these systems are a new development in Eastern Europe, similar attacks have been carried out using Iranian systems, and Ukraine has been targeted by them for a second time in recent history. A response by Ukraine and their allies would be appropriate, and should be done inconsideration and in support of Iran’s current freedom movement.

As recently as 2020, Iran used a defensive missile system to shoot down a Ukrainian airliner filled mostly with Canadian passengers, other internationals and a Ukrainian crew. Little has been done on the international stage or by the Canadian Government to appropriately address the crime, nor to give due justice to the victims and their families of the atrocity. This did not phase negotiations Western countries had with Iran’s regime at the time. The response was to distribute more missiles abroad that were also used against civilian populations. The recent drone attacks on Ukrainian civilians comes during a time where there is a passive silencing on the protests in Iran by Western media, and a limited response in aid of protests despite past administrations admitting their grave errors in not supporting past movements.

While there should be a limited amount of engagement by Western countries in the affairs of other nations, when human rights and justice are involved, the values that dominate the lives of those in the West should support like minded movements in countries where help has been justifiably requested. The allowance of terror weapons without a response leads to more oppression against local populations and those abroad. A Government cannot allows its people to be targeted, nor should they turn a blind eye to the suffering of those under the chains of oppression in another country. This simple notion of justice can save millions.

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