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America built the global order. Now it's tearing it down.

2026 is a tipping point year. The biggest source of global instability won’t be China, Russia, Iran, or the ~60 conflicts burning across the planet – the most since World War II. It will be the United States. That’s the throughline of Eurasia Group’s Top Risks 2026 report: the world’s most powerful country, the same one that built and led the postwar global order, is now itself actively unwinding it, led by a president more committed to and more capable of reshaping America's role in the world than any in modern history.

Last weekend offered a preview. After months of escalating pressure – sanctions, a massive naval deployment, a full oil blockade – US special forces captured Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro in Caracas and flew him to New York City to face criminal charges. A dictator removed and brought to justice with no American casualties, it was President Donald Trump's cleanest military win on the global stage.

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Surgery’s robotic shift

While surgeons remain fully in control, technological advances are expanding the use of surgical robots in operating rooms. As adoption accelerates, so do the expectations for patient outcomes and surgical care.

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Why Europe’s support for Ukraine could become harder to sustain

Europe enters 2026 under mounting strain as it confronts external threats, internal political pressures, and a weakening relationship with the United States.

In GZERO’s 2026 Top Risks livestream, Mujtaba Rahman, Managing Director for Europe at Eurasia Group, describes a continent that is “exhausted, fatigued, weak, and vulnerable,” besieged by Russia’s war in Ukraine, competition from China, and the rise of far-right populism in Europe’s largest economies.

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Hard Numbers: Italy considers another electoral change, Iran offers cash to beleaguered citizens, Missed safety checks in Switzerland, Pentagon reviews role of female soldiers

4: Italy has reformed its voting rules four times since 1993, and Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is now considering a fifth change. Meloni wants to end the first-past-the-post system, which remains in place for a third of seats. The goal: pre-emptively halting a left-wing alliance at the next election in 2027.

$7: As protests over Iran’s worsening economic crisis rage on, the government has come up with a plan it hopes will cool tempers: handing cash to citizens worth $7 a month. Demonstrations began after Iran’s currency lost more than half its value against the dollar and inflation topped past 42%. Seven dollars may not cut it for most Iranians, whose basic expenses start at $200 a month.

6: Local authorities in the Swiss Alps acknowledged that they hadn’t carried out any safety inspections for nearly six years at the bar where 40 people died on New Year’s Eve as a result of a fire. “We bitterly regret this,” said the local mayor. Swiss investigators believe sparklers used in the basement initiated the blaze.

10: The Pentagon is commissioning a review of female soldiers serving in ground-combat roles, affecting thousands of women in the Army and Marines. The memo calls for military leaders to provide “all available metrics describing that individual's readiness and ability to deploy,” 10 years after the US lifted all remaining restrictions on women serving in combat roles.

What’s Good Wednesdays™, January 7, 2026

Read: “How Sondheim Can Change Your Life” by Richard Schoch. Four years after his death at 91, Stephen Sondheim’s legend only continues to grow on Broadway and beyond. In this thoughtful examination, Schoch, a theater historian, makes a compelling case that Sondheim wasn’t just a musical genius, but also a modern-day philosopher. Drawing on lyrics from shows like “Company,” “Follies,” and “Sunday in the Park with George,” Schoch explores how Sondheim’s lyrics about ambition, love, and the messy business of becoming yourself offer practical wisdom for navigating real life. It proves that the smartest insights can come in 3/4 time. – Tony

Read: “The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny” by Kiran Desai. Shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2025, this novel follows the story of two young Indian immigrants who come to the United States to study in the late 1990s. The plot is simple, but what makes the book exceptional is how Desai describes the feeling that almost every immigrant faces: the fear of loneliness. It also dives deep into societal pressures by overbearing families, political climate, racism, and toxic relationships. The near-700-page saga quickly became one of my favourites of 2025. – Suhani

Read: “Pachinko.” Min Jin Lee’s historical fiction from 2017, named after a parlor game that has allowed Japanese people to circumvent gambling rules, is a glorious read. The book follows a Korean family that migrates to Japan in the early part of the 20th century, around the time that Japan annexed Korea. With Japan-China tensions rising today, and South Korea attempting to build bridges with Beijing, this novel beautifully encapsulates some of the older tensions between all three of these countries, as well as some of the horrendous sins committed, making for an important, insightful and emotional book. – Zac

Read: “Motherland.” How did Russia go from being one of the most progressive feminist countries in the world under Lenin to a self-styled bastion of ultra-traditional values under Putin? Part history, part family memoir, part contemporary reporting, Russian-born journalist Julia Ioffe’s bookMotherland: A feminist history of modern Russia tells the country’s story from the perspective of the women — in the Kremlin, on the fronts, and in the factories — who shaped, and were shaped by it. As she tells it, the lassitude and machismo of Russian men ultimately left women with a “double burden”: full-time work and full-time homemaking. At a time when questions of gender roles are at the center of debate in so many countries, Julia’s book is relevant far beyond the Motherland. – Alex


What happens to China’s claim to Venezuelan oil?

US President Donald Trump said Tuesday Venezuela would ship up to 50 million barrels of crude oil, worth about $3 billion, to the US. Hours later, the US energy secretary said Washington would “indefinitely” control Venezuela’s oil industry, which is currently run by the Venezuelan government. Details on how this will work are scant, but one immediate question is: what happens to China, the single largest importer of Venezuelan oil? Beijing is entitled to roughly 4.4 billion barrels of Venezuelan crude under current agreements. Some of that is in-kind repayment for Chinese loans that date back to Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chávez. About 80% of that debt has been paid, but Caracas still owes Beijing around $12 billion. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has reportedly told Venezuela’s interim president Delcy Rodriguez to cut off China –along with Russia, Iran, and Cuba. Will she comply? If so, how will China – in danger of losing an important foothold in Latin America– react? The story of Venezuela’s oil is about to become a global one.

Relatedly: Earlier today, the US seized two empty and rusting oil tankers, including a Russian-flagged vessel in the North Atlantic. The US Coast Guard had been pursuing the Bella 1 for weeks: it said the tanker violated oil sanctions and was operating under a false flag. Russia reportedly dispatched at least one naval vessel to escort the tanker during the US pursuit, but no Russian ships or submarines were in the vicinity during the Coast Guard’s seizure.

Europe makes concrete plan for long-term Ukrainian security

When it comes to postwar Ukrainian security, the big question has been whether Kyiv’s allies are willing to lend troops to support its defense. The answer, from the United Kingdom and France, is yes, following a meeting of pro-Ukrainian countries in Paris yesterday. The specifics were unclear, though France said it could offer thousands of personnel. The US backed the pledge, but their own role in postwar peace remains unclear. The greater challenge, though, is getting Russia to agree to make a deal to end the war, as the two sides continue to dispute which territories Ukraine should concede. Yesterday’s announcement is also unlikely to go down well in Moscow: the Kremlin has said that any foreign troops in Ukraine would be “legitimate targets.”

Old enemies get new incentives as Israel and Syria enter US-mediated talks

On Tuesday, long-time enemies Syria and Israel held US-mediated talks on reducing tensions along their shared border. The aim is to revive a United Nations-patrolled buffer zone between the two countries' armies, and Syria is also hoping that Israel withdraws troops that it has stationed in Syrian territory since the fall of the Assad regime. Israel has also carried out strikes deeper into Syria in recent months, stalling peace talks. However, both sides are incentivized to make a deal to curry favor with the Trump administration, which is hoping the two Middle East rivals can reconcile under a US-brokered agreement.

Yemen’s civil war had been at a stalemate for years.

That changed in early December, when the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC), a separatist group seeking to re-establish the southern Yemeni state that existed until 1990, stormed through the oil-rich region of Hadramout, ousting the Saudi-backed forces and extending its area of control to the Saudi border.

Riyadh was furious. It punched back with airstrikes and demanded that the Emirates cease their support for the STC and retreat from the country. The UAE denied that it pushed for the separatists’ advance, but – in a surprise move – it agreed to withdraw its own troops from the country. On Sunday, Yemen’s Saudi-backed government forces retook Hadramout.

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Walmart’s $350 billion commitment to American manufacturing means two-thirds of the products we buy come straight from our backyard to yours. From New Jersey hot sauce to grills made in Tennessee, Walmart is stocking the shelves with products rooted in local communities. The impact? Over 750,000 American jobs - putting more people to work and keeping communities strong.

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Is Venezuela entering a real transition or just a more volatile phase of strongman politics?

In GZERO’s 2026 Top Risks livestream, Risa Grais-Targow, Director for Latin America at Eurasia Group, examines Delcy Rodríguez’s role as Venezuela's interim president after Nicolás Maduro. Risa notes that the Trump administration appears to prefer working with Rodríguez over opposition leader María Corina Machado.

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In this episode of Tools and Weapons, Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith sits down with Ed Policy, President and CEO of the Green Bay Packers, to discuss how purpose-driven leadership and innovation are shaping the future of one of the world’s most iconic sports franchises. Ed shares how technology and community-focused initiatives, from Titletown Tech to health and safety innovations on the field, are transforming not just the game of football, but the economy and culture of Green Bay itself. He explains how combining strategic vision with investment in local startups is keeping talent in the Midwest and creating opportunities that extend far beyond Lambeau Field.

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Is US power becoming more unpredictable and more damaging on the world stage?

In GZERO’s 2026 Top Risks livestream, Ian Bremmer describes global politics under Donald Trump as a spectrum ranging from “FAFO” to “TACO.” Countries that cross Trump and appear weak, Ian says, get “FAFO’ed,” shorthand for “F*** Around and Find Out,” whether they are allies like Canada or adversaries like Venezuela. Others, including China, Russia, and Brazil, fall closer to “TACO,” meaning “Trump Always Chickens Out,” when retaliation would be costly for the United States.

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Who “runs” Venezuela now? For now, Washington – having ousted dancing strongman Nicolás Maduro – has turned to his vice-president, 56-year-old Delcy Rodríguez, a regime heavyweight who has previously served as minister of both finance and oil under Maduro.

The move sidelines Venezuelan opposition leaders Maria Corina Machado and her ally Edmundo González, who is widely believed to have won the July 2024 presidential election in which Maduro claimed victory.

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5: Today marks the fifth anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol. It’s also the first time that the US marks the insurrection since President Donald Trump, who pardoned 1,600 people who were either convicted or charged with a role in the riot, returned to office. Unlike former President Joe Biden, who used the anniversary to warn against threats to democracy, Trump has no plans to commemorate the events.

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