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Alexis Ludwig's avatar

This is a truly well-balanced and dispassionate assessment of the existing international system, its costs and benefits, including for the United States. I admire the cool-headed analysis in the heat of the times. For one, you capture ably some of the hypocrisies I used to encounter as an American diplomat, with certain friendly nations (who shall remain unnamed) asking the United States to pay for and do the dirty work and then complaining about how bad we smelled (with shit all over us) when we were foolish enough to do it. (A self-interested analysis, I know, but just saying). Totally agree about the benefits, hidden and open, that accrue to the leader, including the power to frame US national interests as applying more broadly to everyone, even when the argument was a bit of a stretch.

The only quibble I have, and it really is only a quibble, is the somewhat dismissive reference to soft power, as though this were a trifling matter of importance only to effete diplomats. While I totally agree that a trucker in Topeka (or Fresno or Galveston or Grand Junction for that matter) has no reason to care, I think Americans as a group do, or should. Rightly or wrongly, some of us who used to represent the United States (proudly) overseas, believed that the greatness of our power (if you agree) was inseparable from our being good (or at least trying to). Once we abandon even that pretense (shared prosperity, human rights, stability, let's just make money together, the pursuit of happiness, we're in this thing together, bla, bla, bla), we really are no different or better than Putin or Xi Jin Ping. So if raw "hard" power is the only metric that matters, then the political-strategic calculation changes radically for most others, including Canada (which I don't need to tell you). Is it possible that our mad king president (who presumably doesn't think deeply about such things with his dominant lizard brain) sees your country as Putin sees Ukraine? If so, by God, that changes everything.

Nicely done.

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Robin Ghosh's avatar

Good for you to be a polite Canadian and leave out that Canada is ‘reviewing’ it’s F-35 order and will probably switch to Sweden’s Gripen - with the planes actually built in Canada. More Canadian and European jobs. Less American jobs. The Gripens can keep the Canadian border safe from a Southern or Northern invasion.

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