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Canadian PM Carney warns 'rules-based order is fading' and middle powers need to stick together
The decline of the international rules-based order means middle-sized countries need to stick together, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said today, in a thinly veiled criticism of the US ...
Markets, NATO, and the enduring power of the rules-based international order caused Trump to back down from taking Greenland.
States like Canada have long known the current system of international rules-based order is a “fiction,” Carney said.
Analysts say US actions have ended the post-war order, but how much that ‘order’ applied to the Global South is unclear.
The world has changed, and everyone will be playing by a new set of geopolitical -- and financial -- rules.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney delivered an extraordinary rebuke of the United States at the World Economic Forum ...
In a speech filled with references to the U.S., Carney encouraged fellow "middle powers" to band together against hegemons.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has said the international rules-based order no longer functions, and he urged middle ...
“Stop invoking the rules-based international order as though it still functions as advertised,” Carney continued. “Call the ...
East Asia's leaders have resisted the turn to protectionism, but to sustain openness and build towards global public goods ...
The Mark Carney speech at Davos hit like a bombshell. In what felt like a rare moment of straight talk from a Western leader, Canada’s PM admitted som.
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What Is The Rules-Based International Order, And Why Is The Canadian PM Calling It Fiction?
In recent years, US officials framed conflicts involving Russia and China as existential threats to that order, arguing that defending it justified sanctions, military aid and economic containment.
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