Insights, analysis and must reads from CNN's Fareed Zakaria and the Global Public Square team, compiled by Global Briefing editor Chris Good
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July 30, 2021 Fareed: The World Is Reminding Us That Democracy Is Hard "The news this week that democracy is imperiled in Tunisia—the only success story of the Arab Spring—comes just three weeks after we heard that Haiti's president had been assassinated," Fareed writes in his latest Washington Post column. "Meanwhile, in Afghanistan, the government seems unable to establish authority across the country. It got me thinking about one of the fundamental questions of politics: Why is it so difficult to develop and sustain liberal democracy?" China Has a Stake in Afghanistan, Too China shares a sliver of border with Afghanistan and is said to view it as a potential market for infrastructure projects, so it may come as little surprise that Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met with a delegation of Taliban officials in Tianjin. Should Europe Build Its Own Clouds? "Today, non-European service providers host 80% of European data," Alice Pannier writes for the Institut français des relations internationales (IFRI), citing the European Commission and noting that the cloud-storage market is dominated (including in Europe) by a handful of American companies, notably Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. When it comes to how data are handled, Europe is at the vanguard of raising the alarm about privacy: The EU's 2016 General Data Protection Regulation, for instance, prompted browser-cookie alerts across the continent. Peru Turns Left—but How Sharply? This month, Peru confirmed the winner of its June presidential election: Pedro Castillo, a leftist former teacher and union leader with no previous experience in elective office, who campaigned iconically in a wide-brimmed hat, holding an oversized pencil. Castillo, in turn, has sworn in a fellow member of his Marxist party as prime minister. Despite apparent market concerns about Peru's macroeconomic direction, John Sakellariadis writes for Global Americans that it's not clear how dramatically Castillo will change things. The Upside to GMO Foods Genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, have provoked backlash among American and European consumers, but in a recent New York Times Magazine essay, Jennifer Kahn posed GMO opposition as, partly, a fear of the unknown. Scientists are engineering things like purple, antioxidant-rich tomatoes, bruise-resistant potatoes, and apples that don't brown when cut; though "Big Ag" may be most interested in crops that resist herbicides, researchers have geared some of these experimental plants toward home gardeners, Kahn wrote, and GMOs could make biodiversity more available to dinner tables. What did you like about today's Global Briefing? What did we miss? Let us know what you think: GlobalBriefing@cnn.com
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