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Please don't mistake my post for claiming that "might is right" is right. I agree it's not the most efficient path, and in Mark Carney's speech he acknowledges that this worldview will have a tremendous cost due to the risk-mitigation actions each country will have to take in response. However, he also seems optimistic when describing how middle powers can band together for common causes, while also working to advance their own individual interests. "If we're not at the table, we're on the menu." Cooperation with each other is encouraged, not blind subjugation to the world's superpowers.
I believe this acceptance, and the risk mitigation that needs to be taken in response, is necessary. Of course it would be better for everyone to follow a common rule of law and submit to a rule-based world order; however, it's ignorant to believe that matches our reality. If every country's sovereignty was respected, Ukraine would never have been invaded, Venezuela wouldn't have been attacked, and genocide wouldn't be occurring in Palestine.
This week the UN Relief and Works Agency headquarters was bulldozed by Israel in complete defiance of international law. In response, the UN strongly condemned this in a tweet. The current international institutions are toothless or worse. We have a new "board of peace" being formed with two founding members being wanted on international war crime charges. But if only the experiment had worked, we could have solved climate change and eradicated world hunger.
This is the same complacent dialogue I railed against in my first post. Yet in the end of your comment you still seem to recognize that change is needed. Let's not reminisce on the status-quo fondly. It's time to create something new. I hope to see strong independent nations who can band together in a federation when needed. And no, I don't think disarmament would be in our common interest. I look to Libya and Gaddafi's fate when considering what would happen after giving up nuclear ambitions. And I doubt Ukraine would have been invaded if they still had their nuclear weapons.
Carney's speech was epic. He stuttered a bit, but the way it was written at the moment that it was delivered, I believe, will go down in history. I don't know much about him as a politician overall, but the sentiment he expressed is one that is shared throughout Europe and surely much of the industrialized world.
If we're going to establish a truly rules-based world order, we need to back up our words with actions, and force if necessary. We do hold imperialist and expansionist actors accountable, with force if necessary.
The issue of weapons of mass destruction is huge and hardly something we will solve here. But briefly: nobody should have weapons of mass destruction. We should have a situation where a supranational body ensures that weapons of mass destruction do not exist, similar to the IAEA but one that is compulsory. Yes it sucks that Ukraine and Libya were invaded, and I agree that it likely wouldn't have happened if it could have devolved into the entire planet being destroyed. But the stakes of weapons of mass destruction is way to high. This is not how we ensure peace, an inch from the abyss, terrified to move lest we all slip and fall. We need something more robust and less based on the ensured destruction of the planet.