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Andreas Rödder, a professor of contemporary history at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, has asserted that the risk of a global conflict is alarmingly real, particularly in light of ongoing clashes in Ukraine and Gaza. In a recent interview, Rödder noted the fraying of the international order established in 1990, attributing this shift to the unresolved defeat of the Soviet Union in the Cold War and the resulting imperial aspirations of Russia and China.
He criticized Western policies, especially NATO's eastward expansion, which he claims exacerbated tensions with Russia. Rödder argued for a retreat to the principles of a bourgeois society, which champions individual merit over collective identity, as a path forward. He also emphasized the urgent need for the West to fortify its democracies and military capabilities, warning that current political divides threaten this strength.
Rödder concluded that the lessons from the Cold War remain pertinent: the West must show both external strength and internal cohesion to counteract authoritarian expansion in the East.