Plus, the new Space Age [Foreign Policy This Week](
May 23, 2022 | [View in browser](
To access all the benefits of an FP subscription, [sign in]( or [subscribe](. Thanks for reading. Welcome to a special edition of FP This Week, with editor in chief Ravi Agrawal reporting from Davos. I havenât been to Davos in eight years, and I wasnât sure what to expect when I arrived in the Swiss mountain town for the first World Economic Forum annual meeting since January 2020. The most obvious change from years past is that itâs not winter. Gone are the snow boots and insulated jackets; people can move around more easily. Another reminder that things arenât quite the same old is that everyone attendingâworld leaders, CEOs, and members of civil societyâhad to test negative for COVID-19 before traveling. While this yearâs summit is a bit smaller than the 2020 gathering, Davos has evolved over the years. The usual suspects have come with their large contingentsâthe United States and India, for example, are represented by several top state lawmakersâbut thereâs a much bigger corporate presence now as well, with many unofficial events on the sidelines, and a lot of deal-making. One nation-state thatâs not represented this year is Russia. The summit has taken the rare step of banning it, and a site once called âRussia House,â which used to showcase Moscowâs soft (and hard) power in Europe, has been rebranded âRussian War Crimes House.â  Obviously Russian President Vladimir Putinâs [war in Ukraine]( is top of the agenda at this yearâs discussions, overlapping with other debates about global energy, the worldâs worsening food supply, and how to strengthen post-pandemic health care systems. This morning I caught Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyâs virtual appearance, in which he challenged business leaders to push for a âcomplete withdrawalâ of their operations in Russia. Davos is often thought of as chummy and smug, a byword for a cabal of global elitists. Some of the criticisms are fair. But the so-called Davos Man has adapted, and this time around the shindig is noticeably less male, less white, and less Western. The question is whether gatherings such as Davos can face their critics head-on by developing more equitable solutions to the cascading crises currently facing the world. Later this week, FP is hosting a panel discussion at the summit called âReturn to War.â I will be moderating a conversation with four top thinkers: Shangri-La Dialogue senior fellow Lynn Kuok, Harvard Universityâs Graham Allison, Human Rights Watchâs Kenneth Roth, and Kingâs College Londonâs Lawrence Freedman. FP readers can join me and [watch live]( on Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. EDT. (This panel will also be livestreamed on ForeignPolicy.com.) âRavi Agrawal, FP editor in chief --------------------------------------------------------------- New and Noteworthy - Outer Space Security & Governance: As space becomes an increasingly competitive domain, essential security and stability challenges need to be addressed. The potential for future conflicts in space, or for conflicts on Earth to spill into space, is intensifying as more actors develop counterspace weapons that could destroy systems on Earth. For a deeper understanding of the key trends and issues in outer space, [preview FP Analyticsâ latest Power Map]( designed specifically for FP Insiders.Â
- I Spy Season 4: On FPâs [hit podcast]( we get spies to share their stories. Hosted by Margo Martindale (famous for her work on The Americans), youâll hear from the operations people: the spies who steal secrets, who kill adversaries, who turn agents into double agents. This season, we’ll also have an [I Spy newsletter]( with real photography provided by the spies, new illustrations, and more bonus content you won’t find anywhere else. Listen to the new trailer on [Apple Podcasts](, [Spotify](,[Stitcher](, or wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes will be released on May 31.
- FP Live: Australians voted for change this past Saturday in a historic election that replaced almost a decade of conservative rule with Anthony Albanese and a Labor Party-led government. Tomorrow, join FP executive editor Amelia Lester for a [wide-ranging interview]( with former Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd discussing what Australiaâs elections mean for the world. May 24, 10 a.m. EDT. --------------------------------------------------------------- Meet the Journalist Colm Quinn is the writer of Morning Brief, Foreign Policyâs flagship daily newsletter guiding you through the most important world stories of the day. Catch up on last weekâs briefings [here]( and [sign up]( to get it in your inbox every weekday morning. âAbout me: Iâve been working in (lowercase) foreign policy in Washington for over a decade. Iâve seen presidents come and go, wars (eventually) end, and watched as âstrategic rivalryâ supplanted terrorism as the capitalâs driving principle. Iâm from a small island in the North Atlantic best known for black beer, green hills, and long grudgesâso you wonât find any American exceptionalism here (each newsletter, however, will be exceptional).â [Follow Colm on Twitter]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Most Popular on FP - [Russia Is a Real Threat to NATO]( By Kathleen J. Mcinnis and Daniel Fata
- [The Window to Expel Russia From Ukraine Is Now]( By Nataliya Bugayova
- [Putin Wants to Keep Fighting. Who Will Fill the Ranks?]( By Amy Mackinnon and Jack Detsch
- [For Opposition to Putinâs War, Look to the Fringes of His Empire]( By Alexey Kovalev
- [The Echoes of Americaâs Hypocrisy Abroad]( By Howard W. French --------------------------------------------------------------- From Around FP - International Day for Biological Diversity: This yearâs Biodiversity Day slogan is âBuilding a shared future for all life.â Revisit FP Analyticsâ [special report]( which dives into the drivers and consequences of global environmentally linked conflict.Â
- U.S. Tech Regulation & Geostrategic Competition: FP Analyticsâ [report]( breaks down potential national security and economic competitiveness consequences of pending legislation. For more on this topic, [join FP and CCIA for a free event with policy experts and government leaders]( spotlighting these risks and the means to address them. May 25, 11 a.m. – 12 p.m. EDT.
- Fuel Your Workday: Check out the full slate of upcoming [events]( and catch up on recordings from [past discussions]( including a discussion about the crisis in Sri Lanka, available on demand to subscribers [here](. Empower your team with [organization-wide access]( to FP. --------------------------------------------------------------- Be a geopolitical scientist: Join thousands of government, corporate, NGO, multilateral, academic and thinktank executives around the world who rely on FP for cutting-edge analysis and news. [View membership options.]( FOLLOW FP ON This email was sent to {EMAIL} because you are subscribed to the FP This Week newsletter.
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