Sign in Welcome! Log into your account your username your password Forgot your password? Get help Create an account Create an account Welcome! Register for an account your email your username A password will be e-mailed to you. Password recovery Recover your password your email A password will be e-mailed to you. The Guardian View on Biden’s UN Speech: Cooperation Not Competition 180 September 24, 2021 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Published in The Guardian (U.K.) on 22 September 2021 by The Guardian (link to originallink to original) Translated from by . Edited by . Back To Origin This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link . Tags:arms controlBoris JohnsonJoe BidenU.K.United Nations General AssemblyXi Jinping Hot this week Block titleFeaturedAll time popularMore South Africa: US-Venezuela Quagmire: Morass for Sober Reflection January 7, 2026. Published in The Sun 0 Australia: China-Taiwan-US Triangle Held Together by Assumptions and 1 Dangerous Lie January 2, 2026. Published in ABC News Australia 0 Japan: This Year, International ‘Our Country 1st’ Rhetoric Raged Internationally January 5, 2026. Published in Kobe Shimbun 0 Canada: Good Riddance, Nicolas Maduro January 3, 2026. Published in National Post 0 India: Why Venezuela? The Strategic Logic Behind Trump’s Boldest Gamble January 7, 2026. Published in FirstpostThe more the U.S. interferes, the more likely [Venezuela] will drift into chaos. 0 Topics Kenya: US Onslaught on Venezuela Targets Its Large Oil Resources January 7, 2026. Published in The Standard 0 Saudi Arabia: Arab World’s Clear Warning from Venezuela January 7, 2026. Published in Arab NewsThe message is unmistakable: there are no absolute guarantees and state sovereignty is conditional when it clashes with the interests of powerful states. 0 South Africa: US-Venezuela Quagmire: Morass for Sober Reflection January 7, 2026. Published in The Sun 0 India: Why Venezuela? The Strategic Logic Behind Trump’s Boldest Gamble January 7, 2026. Published in FirstpostThe more the U.S. interferes, the more likely [Venezuela] will drift into chaos. 0 Taiwan: As US-China Discuss New World Order, What Deterrence Can a Hollowed-Out Taiwan Find? January 7, 2026. Published in UDN[Trump's] attitude toward U.S.-Japan security and Indo-Pacific strategy is even softer than it was in the past. 0 Japan: This Year, International ‘Our Country 1st’ Rhetoric Raged Internationally January 5, 2026. Published in Kobe Shimbun 0 Mexico: Strategic Dissonance January 5, 2026. Published in La Jornada[T]he Trump Corollary .... conveys the harsh imperial vision that will govern U.S. relations with the subcontinent. 0 Germany: Against Putin’s Will? January 5, 2026. Published in Frankfurter Allgemeine ZeitungThe stabilization of Eastern Europe is only possible if Russia is sufficiently deterred. 0 Related Articles Germany: Trump Risks Falling into the Same Trap as His Predecessor* December 20, 2025. Published in Süddeutsche ZeitungAmericans were not inclined to let Biden get away with being so out of touch. Trump is now running the same risk. Australia: If Kamala Harris Wants a 2nd Run at the White House She Has To Move Past Her Joe Biden Issues October 29, 2025. Published in ABC News Australia Bangladesh: Donald Trump’s 19th Century Nationalism in a 21st Century World September 28, 2025. Published in Dhaka Tribune[Trump’s] economic nationalism and anti-globalization stance are not just policy choices but philosophical commitments to a bygone era. Dominican Republic: Trump Is Rigorously Consistent September 18, 2025. Published in Listín DiarioEverything he says is noise, a distraction. South Africa: Litmus Test for SADC Unity in the Wake of US Military Overtures August 14, 2025. Published in Pretoria NewsSouthern Africa cannot be turned into the U.S.'s new battlefield. What is certain is that Africa will continue to be a playground for foreign wars. Previous articleWhy Europe Urgently Needs a Common Defense StrategyNext articleAmerica’s ‘Human Rights 1st’ Is Discredited LEAVE A REPLY Cancel replyLog in to leave a comment