2026-02-05
57 分钟I'm Dan Kurtz-Valen, and this is the Foreign Affairs Interview.
The international world order has never been perfect.
The United States rules have never been respected to a hundred percent,
but at least there has been engagement.
So I wouldn't throw the baby out with a bathwater.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney may have made headlines when he described a rupture in global order in a speech at Davos last month.
But long before that,
policymakers and analysts had already been grappling with this unsettled and unsettling era in global politics.
And the challenges, of course,
have been especially great for American allies facing a very different Washington.
President Alexander Stubb of Finland has become central both in navigating and understanding this time of rupture.
He has emerged as a leader who has particularly adapted managing the rift in the US-European relationship and at talking to Donald Trump,
whether about Greenland or about golf.
Yet, even as he scrambled seemingly every week to avoid transatlantic crisis,
Stubb has also gone out of his way to stress the long-term stakes at this moment,
as he did in a recent Foreign Affairs essay.
He warns that, without significant changes,
the multilateral system has it exists while crumble, and that the alternatives are much worse.
Spheres of influence, chaos, and disorder.
I spoke to Stubb on Tuesday,