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179 World Affs. 4 (2016)

handle is hein.journals/wrldaf179 and id is 1 raw text is: 







                         LETTER

             FROM THE EDITOR


                      James S. Denton



   Readers  of World Affairs (WA) know there is no shortage of danger
or complexity in the challenges abroad that await the next American
president. So, with the race to succeed President Obama entering its end
game  (and with the narrowing choices becoming increasingly troubling),
we asked a handful of contributors to offer their thoughts on the perils
and  promise lurking behind today's headlines, the understanding of
which will be a key to the success of the next U.S. president's foreign
policy.
   They  did not disappoint. The responses we got were surprising only
in the depth of the insights they offered.
   NPR's Tom  Gjelten, a savvy observer of contemporary America whose
essays have graced our pages often, writes that with population diversity
and political polarization reaching an all-time high in America, and that
with more war certainly in our future, the next president will be wise
to reclaim American exceptionalism as a unifying force in this time of
division and realignment.
   Australian commentator John Lee writes that after a period of deteri-
orating influence in Asia, the United States is reemerging as the region's
central economic and unifying security force in the wake of China's eco-
nomic slowdown, military build-up, and increasingly abrasive diplomacy.
   However, all is not so tidy in the European Union. Alina Polyakova
and Anton Shekhovtsov write that the sense of purpose that was fused on
the continent in the aftermath of the Second World War (and renewed
after the Cold War) is now poised on the brink of disintegration as ref-
ugees, stagnant economies, the threat of terrorism, and alienation from
Brussels are fueling rising extremism, nationalism, and isolationism.
Profoundly differing visions have emerged in Europe, a condition that
could undo  Europe's liberal order as well as the transatlantic partner-
ship-the  first building block upon which the West's prosperity and
security is built.

4   WORLD  AFFAIRS

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