cover image: Lose-Lose? - Munich Security Report 2024 - Lose-Lose? | Munich Security Report 2024

20.500.12592/xd259cn

Lose-Lose? - Munich Security Report 2024 - Lose-Lose? | Munich Security Report 2024

15 Feb 2024

As in previous years, the report summarizes and interprets important (if selected) developments in the world, presents eye-opening infographics, and sheds light on some of the key challenges that we will tackle in Munich and in our events and initiatives throughout the rest of the year. [...] As the world moves toward some new form of multipolarity – or rather, toward a “multiplex order” or “multi-order world” – cooperation inside the existing order has been crowded out by competition about the order itself.9 The Doubt of the Benefits Despite the tremendous achievements in the post–Cold War era, key actors in the West, powerful autocracies, and countries in the so-called Global South h. [...] In recommitting is the only way to reduce the risks of excessively to mindsets and policies geared at a growing global pie, including for many one-sided dependencies.”64 countries in the developing world, the transatlantic partners will also have to consider growing resource constraints at home – the inevitable result of Olaf Scholz, German the end of the peace dividend. [...] They aimed to diversify relations in light of the perceived retreat of the US and reap the benefits of Chinese offers.1 However, the terrorist attacks by Hamas against Israel on October 7, 2023, and the ensuing war shook the region, possibly rupturing this trend. [...] While the various coup leaders in the Sahel cited the main reason for their takeovers to be the inability of the then-governments to deal with insecurity, each coup was the result of a combination of factors.
Pages
127
Published in
Germany