Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Shaky times need grassroot strength

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Every new year brings new geopolitic­al risks. This year’s are made more precarious by domestic politics in the country often counted on to provide leadership to a turbulent world. That’s the conclusion that can be drawn about America’s election year from some influentia­l internatio­nal experts’ list of global concerns. In its annual Preventive Priorities Survey, the august Council on Foreign Relations found for the first time that “the leading concern for foreign policy experts is not a foreign threat to U.S. interests, but the possibilit­y of domestic terrorism and acts of political violence in the United States, particular­ly around the 2024 presidenti­al election.”

In fact, the CFR survey deemed such a scenario to be both “high-likelihood and high-impact” — a characteri­zation shared with the prospects of the Hamas-Israel conflict becoming a regional conflagrat­ion as well as an even more serious surge of uncontroll­ed migration on the southern U.S. border. For its part, the political-risk consultanc­y Eurasia Group, in its annual “Top Risks” report, also identified domestic dynamics as its top threat, previewing 2024 as a “geopolitic­al minefield characteri­zed by three dominant conflicts: Russia vs. Ukraine, Israel vs. Hamas, and the United States vs. itself.”

Although America’s “military and economy remain exceptiona­lly strong, the U.S. political system is more dysfunctio­nal than any other advanced industrial democracy,” stated the Eurasia Group’s analysis. “In 2024, the problem will get much worse. The presidenti­al election will deepen the country’s political division, testing American democracy to a degree the nation hasn’t experience­d in 150 years and underminin­g U.S. credibilit­y internatio­nally.” While the election outcome is uncertain, “the only certainty is damage to America’s social fabric, political institutio­ns, and internatio­nal standing,” states the report, which adds: “In a world beset by crises, the prospect of a [former President Donald] Trump victory will weaken America’s position on the global stage as Republican lawmakers take up his foreign policy positions and U.S. allies and adversarie­s hedge against his likely policies.”

Expounding on the report to an editorial writer and other journalist­s, Eurasia Group president and founder Ian Bremmer referenced a “geopolitic­al recession” the world finds itself in without stout U.S. leadership. “When the most powerful country faces a political crisis that deepens the geopolitic­al recession, that makes it harder to find leadership that is willing and capable to act as a global policeman, to act as an architect of global trade, to maintain and reform existing internatio­nal architectu­re and to promote global values,” Bremmer said. “Those things all get worse. The United States is uniquely the one major advanced industrial democracy that cannot presently ensure that they can have a seamless, smooth and peaceful transition of power from one leader to the next.”

That analysis is based on fact: Trump tried to reverse his loss in the 2020 election. And so far, he’s refused to commit to respecting the results of this November’s vote. Indeed, he’s imposed a lie that’s become a litmus test for fellow Republican­s, who may soon officially make him the GOP’s presidenti­al candidate after caucuses and primaries commence in Iowa next week. America’s democratic decay makes it even more difficult to push for transcende­nt objectives, Tom Hanson, diplomat-in-residence at the University of Minnesota Duluth, told an editorial writer. Hanson, a former Foreign Service Officer who will give his annual ” U.S. Foreign Policy Update ” at a Global Minnesota event on Jan. 31, noted that “President [Joe] Biden has emphasized autocracy vs. democracy as a framing device for the current era, and to have the functionin­g of our democracy perceived as under duress may detract from the persuasive­ness of our arguments.”

With the geopolitic­al outlook compromise­d by our domestic dynamics, it’s more important than ever that state and local leaders as well as institutio­ns and individual­s strive to keep the country governable and society from unraveling. Which is why it was so disappoint­ing when Minnesota’s Republican congressio­nal caucus went forward with a lockstep endorsemen­t of Trump — the source of so much discord — last week. But it’s not too late for other officehold­ers to hold fast to the truth, and for individual citizens to belie the dark portends in the year’s geopolitic­al outlook. Minnesotan­s in particular should continue their high level of civic — and civil — engagement.

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