20 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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20 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios
Billionaires’ wealth soared in 2024 (OXFAM)
The group’s report comes as some of the world’s political and financial elite prepare for an annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland.
20 Jan 2025
Billionaires’ wealth globally grew three times faster in 2024 than the year before, global advocacy group Oxfam International says, as some of the world’s political and financial elite prepare to attend an annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland.
In its latest assessment of global inequality timed to the opening of the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting, Oxfam on Monday said the combined wealth of billionaires rose by $2 trillion to $15 trillion last year.
The report, titled Takers Not Makers, said there were 2,769 billionaires worldwide in 2024, an increase of 204 over the previous year. It noted that at least four new billionaires were “minted” every week during the year, and three-fifths of billionaire wealth came from inheritance, monopoly power or “crony connections”.
Oxfam predicted that at least five trillionaires will crop up over the next decade. A year ago, the group forecast that only one trillionaire would appear in that period.
19 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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The next decade of strategic competition (Atlantic Council)
January 14, 2025
Strategic competition is likely to intensify over the next decade, increasing the demands on the United States to deter and defend against wide-ranging and simultaneous security challenges across multiple domains and regions worldwide. In that time frame, the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Joint Force should more effectively leverage the competencies of US Special Operations Forces (USSOF) to compete with US strategic adversaries.
Three realities facing the DOD over the next decade lend themselves toward leveraging USSOF more in strategic competition. First, the growing need to counter globally active and increasingly cooperative aggressors, while the broader Joint Force remains focused on the Indo-Pacific and Europe, underscores the value of leveraging USSOF to manage competition in other regions. Second, the desire to avoid war and manage competition below the threshold of conflict aligns with USSOF’s expertise in the irregular aspects of competition. Third, unless defense spending and recruitment dramatically increase over the next decade, the Joint Force will likely have to manage more security challenges without a commensurate increase in force size and capabilities, which underscores the need for the DOD to maximize every tool at its disposal, including the use of USSOF to help manage strategic competition.
19 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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The Israel-Hamas cease-fire and hostage deal
Now comes the even harder part. On Wednesday, negotiators from Israel and Hamas agreed to a cease-fire in Gaza and the release of the remaining hostages taken by the terrorist group during its October 7, 2023 attack.
The deal, mediated by US, Qatari, and Egyptian officials, will take place over three phases, each slated to last six weeks. During the first phase, Hamas will release thirty-three hostages—women, children, and those over fifty years of age—and Israel will release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, begin to withdraw from some areas, and facilitate a significant increase in humanitarian aid into Gaza. In the second phase, Hamas is slated to free the remaining male hostages while Israel withdraws from Gaza. The third phase would include the return of deceased hostages and the beginning of reconstruction.
Does this deal, which now heads to the Israeli cabinet for approval, really mark the end of the war? What’s next for Gaza’s reconstruction, Israel’s security, and wider regional efforts such as Israeli-Saudi normalization? Below, Atlantic Council experts share their answers to these and other pressing questions.
Click to jump to an expert analysis:
Jonathan Panikoff: The war has widened the gap over the prospect of a two-state solution
Shalom Lipner: The “Trump effect” will help Netanyahu sell this deal to his hard-liners
Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib: The deal risks freezing the conflict with no political horizon
Liz Cathcart: The disparities are striking, but there is never an “equal” hostage deal
Danny Citrinowicz: Now Israel needs to aim for normalization with Saudi Arabia
Thomas S. Warrick: Who governs postwar Gaza when the shooting stops?
Alex Plitsas: Now for the hard part—a long-term solution for Gaza
19 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios
Archive 1945 (The Economist)
How The Economist reported on the final year of the second world war, week by week
In January 1945, 80 years ago, the second world war was entering its seventh year. Fighting raged in Europe, as Allied armies liberated large parts of France and Belgium from Nazi control. The Red Army was pushing from the Soviet Union into Poland, squeezing German forces from the east. Meanwhile the Allies’ campaign in the Pacific was gathering momentum, and America was planning for an invasion of Japan. The outcome of the war would transform the international balance of power, politics and the global economy in ways that still shape the world.
This project is republishing excerpts from The Economist’s archive, week by week as the war rolled to an end—a time capsule of how we reported on its final year. A new instalment will appear here on Fridays for the next eight months. To be notified about new entries, sign up for The War Room, our weekly defence newsletter.
19 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
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