Today's bluds, tomorrow’s opps: How public diplomacy is reshaping global affairs
That was the reaction of many who witnessed the televised spat between US President Donald Trump and his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the Oval Office last week. Beyond the memes and the jokes, it was the clearest sign that there is a new world order in the making. Of new friendships being forged, old ones being discarded.
Some existing alliances slayed it for eight decades after World War II. But it is in the nature of relationships that things turn. The Soviet Union and the US had fought as allies against Germany, Japan and Italy up until 1945. It didn’t take long for that relationship to become salty, resulting in the Cold War.
That is what the world is going through at the moment. A redrawing of who likes who —in international relations, it is the season of divorces, puppy love and even flings. But why should you care? From inflation to immigration, from tech to trade, every aspect of your life—from the device in your hand to your breakfast of avocado-on-toast—has a direct correlation with the machinations going on in the world’s diplomatic corridors. It is the butterfly effect in action.
SHAPE OF THINGS
Trump’s second term at the White House is merely the catalyst for many of the shifts that are underway. But at the heart of all of these are broader, longer-term trends.
Artificial Intelligence(AI)
Java Programming with ChatGPT: Learn using Generative AI
By — Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer
Artificial Intelligence(AI)
Basics of Generative AI: Unveiling Tomorrows Innovations
By —