The values [multilateralism] promotes are the opposite of those that Donald Trump seems to defend.
The question to be decided this week is what rich economies like the United States and the European Union will do.
Europe wants to speak for itself rather than as an adjunct of the United States.
[T]he Joe Biden administration has taken a series of actions in its 'Indo-Pacific strategy.'
The strategic environment is marked by instability and uncertainties of a fractured world.
The United States has long dominated the World Bank, in both its formal and informal governance.
The G-7, the EU, India and other nations have taken on a monumental task to embrace and propagate shared values across the globe.
At the end of the day, whether it is with China and Russia, nobody wants an escalation of tensions that could descend into armed conflict.
Southeast Asian leaders anticipated a reset in relations under Biden but the U.S. administration's strategic priorities are elsewhere.
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