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1. Superpower relations
The curious case of the Chinese spy balloon
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Itโs not like US-China relations were good before Billings, Montana native Chase Doak spotted a 200-foot-tall object drifting in the sky one sunny February morningโฆ but his discovery certainly made them worse.
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China first denied it was a balloon meant for spying but somewhat undermined those denials by getting mad when a US fighter jet spectacularly shot it out of the sky. The whole event at least made for some good memes.
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Outside the US relationship, it was a tough year for China: now-former foreign minister Qin Gang disappeared, as did now-former defence minister Li Shangfu. Both are rumoured to have committed serious crimes – in Qinโs case, thereโs speculation he had been compromised by a Western intelligence agency.
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In September, the US doubled down on its efforts to deny China crucial advanced semiconductors, tightening the ban it put in place in 2022. But China then scored a propaganda win when Huawei released its Mate 60 Pro, a phone that at least some people think shows China has found a way around the US ban.
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Thankfully, by November, Presidents Biden and Xi Jinping kissed and made up at the APEC meeting in San Francisco.
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In 2024, China needs to focus on its domestic economic challenges, so will probably try to avoid provoking the Americans. With that said, the Chinese Communist Party isnโt known for its ability to turn the other cheek, itโs still water-cannoning US allies in the South China Sea, and itโll still end up a campaign issue in the hugely contentious US election.
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So while we keep talking about the US and China trying to โput a floorโ under their relationship, 2023 has been a reminder that they can always dig deeper.
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2. Territorial disputes
Nice knowinโ ya, borders
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Borders seem simple enough, right? You draw a line in the sand – or snow, or Himalayas, or sea, or liquid hot magma. Whatโs on this side is mine, and whatโs over there is yours. But in 2023, there were a few places where it wasnโt quite so simple.
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Some borders – like the unofficial Taiwan Strait median line – look a lot weaker now that Chinese jets are roaring across every 2.5 days on average.
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Other borders are now gone (like Nagorno-Karabakh), closed (Finlandโs frontier with Russia), damaged (Israelโs border with Gaza), imaginary (Venezuelaโs claims on Guyana), or still trying to will themselves into existence via independence movements (for example Catalans in Spain, Sikhs in Punjab, West Papuans in Indonesia, or Shans in Myanmar).
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And still, other borders seem to be evolving, like the Europeans seeking third-country migration deals, or Mexico and the US investing in advanced border tech, or China using rail infrastructure to integrate with neighbours like Laos.
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If Putinโs invasion of Ukraine last year was our warning that borders were under pressure, 2023 has been the confirmation. And as our world continues to fray, the list of borders that might crumble, harden, evolve, or emerge will just get longer.
3. AI & Tech
The pace of change is exhausting, said governments everywhere
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You donโt need us to remind you that 2023 was the year of AI. Nor do world leaders, who were forced to add ChatGPT to the long list of things they donโt understand but are reliably informed they must worry about.
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While machine learning and the large-language models (LLMs) that power AI have been around for decades (like autocorrect in your texts), governments are only now starting to publicly think through the transformative – and potentially devastating – impact on our world.
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Think undetectable deep-fakes in election campaigns, AI-written malicious codes that bypass cyber defences, and โalgorithmic warfareโ on the battleground (a report on Thursday suggests Israel is already using AI to target Hamas).
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As usual, the EU is โleadingโ the way on tech regulation – it looks all but certain now to pass the EU AI Act early next year. And as usual, Europeโs own tech industry is leading the criticism in response, calling the act โpotentially disastrousโ.
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So yeah, the AI revolution is just beginning, which means the regulation counter-revolution – plus some game-changing opportunities – are not too far behind.
4. Elections
Out with the old, in with the popular
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In 2023, voters across the world sent their elected representatives a message: โwe donโt like you very much, and we definitely donโt like the direction weโre headingโ. Out of 10 elections in OECD countries (and one OECD-applicant country), opposition parties won the most votes in seven of them.
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In Argentina (the OECD applicant country in question), voters were so disillusioned by 140% inflation that they voted for a man with five cloned dogs, each named after free market economists. Woof.
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There are plenty of ways to explain this trend – overwhelmed government in-trays, splintered and polarised informational ecosystems, high inflation, and the enduring appeal of populism.
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Of the survivors, Turkish President Erdoganโs victory was the most surprising; Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakisโ the most resounding; and Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallasโ the most impressive. She managed to pitch a platform of continuity – that is, strident support for Ukraine – to an electorate that was suffering 15% inflation at the time they went to the polls.
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Oh, and speaking of the decline of incumbency advantage, did we mention there will be more elections in 2024 than in any other year in history, including in little places like India, the United States, the EU, and the UK? Have your popcorn at the ready.
5. Climate change
A record year (both good and bad)
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On 1 September, the worldโs biggest wind turbine (which sits in the ocean off the coast of China and has a wingspan of 252 metres) produced a record 384.1 megawatt hours (MWh) in a single day thanks to typhoon-strength winds.
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In normal speak, thatโs enough energy to power ~170,000 homes, 38 million LEDs, or a 2.2 million km trip in an electric car!
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Hereโs some more good news for you:
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A Swedish startup claims to have developed a sodium-ion battery that doesnโt rely on expensive and mining-intensive rare-earth minerals.
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The International Energy Agency is predicting that investments in renewable energy will reach a new global peak.
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And weโve never had as much solar energy capacity as we do today.
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2023 also saw the UAE host COP28. Surely holding the worldโs most important climate conference in a petrostate is like holding a nutrition conference at KFC, right?
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And yet, the COP28 joint agreement contained the first-ever reference to transitioning away from fossil fuels; many hailed it as a success. We think itโs a timely reminder that having all stakeholders in the room is often the most productive path to progress.
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However, we canโt wrap 2023 without mentioning that scientists say itโs been the hottest year on record, with global mean temperatures between Jan and Nov coming in 1.46ยฐC above the pre-industrial levels.
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That sweaty thought notwithstanding, noted scientist Lesley Ann Hughes gave us some good vibes to close out the year: โIโm optimistic about the future. Iโve come to the conclusion that hope has to be a strategyโ.
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Amen.
Remember whenโฆ

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๐ญ๐ทย Croatia officially adopted the euro and joined the Schengen Area on 1 January, becoming the 20th member state of the Eurozone and the 27th member of the Schengen Area.
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๐จ๐ณ Chinaโs leader Xi Jinping was unanimously โre-electedโ as the President of the People’s Republic of China for an unprecedented third term. On the same day (10 March), Silicon Valley Bank failed. Coincidence? Yes.
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๐ซ๐ฎ Finland became the 31st member of NATO on 4 April, roughly doubling the length of the alliance’s border with Russia.
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๐ The African Union became the 21st permanent member of the G20 at the groupโs annual summit in New Delhi on 10 September.
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๐ท๐บย Russian warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin launched a half-hearted coup against Vladimir Putin (though he said it was only against โincompetent military leadersโ). That cooked his goose, and in one of the least surprising things of 2023, Prigozhin was blown out of the air on a flight to St Petersburg on 23 August.ย
Flag of the year

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Only a few new flags were adopted in 2023. Our favourite came from Banffshire, a historic Scottish county whose new stripes feature rolling ocean tides and a warm yellow background designed to depict a fruitful harvestโฆ and good Scotch whisky. Who doesnโt love that?
A few of our favourite things in 2023
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For your downtime during that blurry week between Christmas and New Yearโs:
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Read: Lumumba Plotย – the secret history of the CIA and a Cold War assassination in the newly independent Congo.
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Read:ย Cobalt Redย – the gripping exposรฉ on the true cost of cobalt mining in our world.
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Read:ย Spies, Lies, and Algorithmsย – an intriguing primer on espionage for the digital age, from one of Americaโs leading intelligence experts.
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Read:ย Party of Oneย – the vital new account of the life and vision of one of the worldโs most consequential but least-known leaders, Xi Jinping.
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Listen:ย The Rest Is Politics – already one of the UKโs top podcasts after launching just last year, and aimed at โdisagreeing agreeablyโ.ย
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Watch:ย The Boy and the Heronย – the most expensive film ever made in Japan, and a box office hit despite being released without marketing.
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Watch:ย Slow Horses – a spy thriller series following Gary Oldman as he leads a unit of failed MI5 spooks in a kind of administrative purgatory.
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Watch:ย Ambassadors – a painfully authentic three-part British dramedy about life at the British embassy in the fictional nation of Tazbekistan.
Quiz: Were you paying attention in 2023?
1) Who became the fourth country to ever land a rover on the moon this year? |
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2) Globally, July was the hottest month ever recorded. How much hotter was it than the average July between 1951 and 1980?ย |
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3) Which countryโs economy grew the fastest this year? |
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4) India became the worldโs most populous country this year. How many people are estimated to live there? |
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5) Instagram Threads (remember that?) became the fastest app ever to reach one million users. How long did it take? |
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6) Honduras ended its diplomatic recognition of Taiwan in March, and opened relations with China. How many UN member states still recognise Taiwan?ย |
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7) We mentioned above that Croatia adopted the euro and joined the Eurozone this year. Who was the last country to join (in 2015)? |
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8) How many rounds of voting did it take for the House of Representatives to appoint (former) Kevin McCarthy as House Speaker in January?ย |
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9) By how much did NATOโs land border with Russia expand when Finland officially joined the alliance in April? |
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10) In June, Ghana became the first country to approve the revolutionary R21 vaccine for use in young children. What is R21 designed to prevent? |