What happens when middle powers stop trusting the old global order?

In this episode of The Focus, host John Bruni speaks with Kishore Mahbubani — one of the world’s leading geopolitical thinkers — about the growing fragmentation of the international system, the future of American leadership, and the rise of Asia. He also discusses whether middle powers can shape the emerging global order rather than simply survive it.

*Show Notes*
In this episode of The Focus, Kishore Mahbubani — former President of the UN Security Council🇺🇳, veteran Singaporean🇸🇬 diplomat, and one of Asia’s most influential geopolitical thinkers — joins John Bruni to discuss the accelerating transformation of the global order.

*Topics include*
👉🏻 The “Carney Moment” 🇨🇦 and the rise of middle powers
👉🏻 Whether Western dominance is fading
👉🏻 Strategic autonomy in an age of interdependence
👉🏻 U.S.🇺🇸-China🇨🇳 rivalry and the future of the Indo-Pacific
👉🏻 Whether allies still trust the old international system
👉🏻 Australia’s🇦🇺 strategic dilemma between Washington and Beijing
👉🏻Can middle powers genuinely shape the future — or are they merely surviving it?

Prof. Mahbubani brings decades of diplomatic experience and strategic insight to one of the defining questions of the 21st century:

Is the old order breaking down faster than a new one can emerge?

Source: Kishore Mahbubani | The Carney Moment: A Post-American World? | TFP #101