Missing Merkel?
Insights, analysis and must reads from CNN's Fareed Zakaria and the Global Public Square team, compiled by Global Briefing editor Chris Good
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September 23, 2021 Missing Merkel? "Angela Merkel's first EU summit, in December 2005, was a sign of things to come," The Economist recounts. "[UK Prime Minister] Tony Blair and [French President] Jacques Chirac were locked in combat over the seven-year budget. The chancellor, in office for three weeks, took stock of others' red lines, schooled Mr Blair and Mr Chirac in the finer details and, after negotiating for hours (and oiling the wheels with German money), brokered a compromise. If the rest of Europe is nervous over Mrs Merkel's departure, it is because she has made herself the indispensable European: brilliantly briefed, invested in personal relationships, and possessing almost superhuman negotiating stamina." Back to the Table? At Foreign Affairs, Ali Vaez and Vali Nasr write that to salvage the 2015 nuclear deal, the US and Iran must each change its approach and reconsider red lines—including, for the US, rolling back certain sanctions not explicitly tied to nuclear issues and, for Iran, limiting enrichment. "None of the concessions required to get the negotiations out of the doldrums will be easy," Vaez and Nasr write, but saving the deal "is far preferable and less costly than the alternatives. The Real American Ruling Class? The super-rich do exist, Patrick Wyman writes for The Atlantic, but in the US at least, the more important political overclass is a different "American gentry"—those who own agricultural or manufacturing interests and reside in multi-million-dollar golf-course homes, not stylized villas or lavish penthouses. They're dotted across the country in small cities and towns, and their investment in social and economic institutions gives them power. Forget Offsets: Decarbonizing Is Hard With the approach of COP26—this year's UN climate conference, set to begin Oct. 31—Brooke Masters writes for the Financial Times that while some companies boast of going green, we need to look past the "smoke and mirrors" of tree-planting "offsets," for instance, and acknowledge that decarbonization is more complicated. FAREED'S GLOBAL BRIEFING You are receiving this newsletter because you're subscribed to Fareed's Global Briefing.
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