A new VUCA era: extreme geopolitical volatility in 2025 (II)

Radicalism, the spread of populism and the weakening of democracy are bringing us closer to the risk of implosion of the system that emerged after the Second World War
Trump no quiere enfadar a Putin, para evitar que las negociaciones entre Estados Unidos y Rusia para una paz duradera en Ucrania puedan naufragar. En imagen, durante su encuentro en Hamburgo en julio de 2017 - PHOTO/Kremlin
Trump does not want to anger Putin, lest the US-Russia negotiations for a lasting peace in Ukraine collapse. Pictured, during their meeting in Hamburg in July 2017 - PHOTO/Kremlin

Gustavo de Arístegui, diplomat, ambassador and member of parliament for the Popular Party, listed on La Razón on 5 January 2025 the consequences of the growth of radicalism, the expansion of populism and the weakening of democracies since the end of the Second World War. In addition, the Popular Party MP reviewed the main historical events from the 1950s to the present day.

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<p>De izquierda a derecha: los presidentes de Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro; de Kazajistán, Nursultán Nazarbáev; de Rusia, Vladimir Putin; de China, Xi Jinping, asisten a una ceremonia de colocación de coronas florales en Moscú después del Desfile de la Victoria que conmemora el 70 aniversario de la derrota de los nazis en la Segunda Guerra Mundial, en la Plaza Roja, Moscú, Rusia, el 9 de mayo de 2015 - AP/ PAVEL GOLOVKIN </p>
L-R: Presidents of Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro, Kazakhstan's Nursultan Nazarbayev, Russia's Vladimir Putin, China's Xi Jinping attend a wreath laying ceremony in Moscow after the Victory Parade commemorating the 70th anniversary of the defeat of the Nazis in World War II, on Red Square, Moscow, Russia, May 9, 2015 - AP/ PAVEL GOLOVKIN