Geopolitics Unplugged

DAVOS REVIEW: January 21-22, 2026


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By Justin James McShane

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This is a special free quick review of yesterday’s (January 21) events at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2026, under the theme “A Spirit of Dialogue.” Amid fractured global order, Day 3 (January 21) centered on navigating contested geopolitics through negotiation over confrontation, accelerating AI deployment, and balancing protectionism with economic realities.

A full recap is below with no fluff, just sources and highlights.

Key Signals from Day 3

* Geopolitical negotiations over force: U.S. President Trump explicitly ruled out military action on Greenland, framing acquisition as a security imperative via talks, easing immediate transatlantic tensions.

* AI as massive infrastructure build-out: Leaders highlighted AI’s job-augmenting potential and urgent scaling needs, with calls for responsible deployment amid energy and chip demands.

* Tariffs as negotiation tool, not endgame: U.S. walk-back on some tariff threats post-dialogue, underscoring pragmatic adaptation in trade amid deficit concerns.

* Dialogue amid fragmentation — Sessions stressed diplomacy for security (NATO, Europe defense) and shared prosperity in contested world.

Day 3 Recap (January 21)

Donald J. Trump – President of the United States – Special Address

* Called Greenland a “core national security interest” for U.S. and NATO, part of North America; seeking “immediate negotiations” for acquisition to counter Russia/China threats.

* Explicitly stated: “I won’t use force... we would be, frankly, unstoppable. But I won’t do that.” Announced framework for future deal on Greenland/Arctic after meeting NATO’s Mark Rutte.

* Touted tariffs as effective negotiation tactic: slashed U.S. trade deficit 77% with no inflation; used threats to secure deals on drug prices, trade imbalances.

* Highlighted economic gains: $18 trillion+ investments committed, deficit cut 27%, steel production up, factory construction +41%; predicted stock market doubling.

* Emphasized U.S. AI/energy leadership over China; criticized EU green policies for weakening allies.

* Geopolitical implication: Prioritizes bilateral deals and strength over traditional multilateral norms.

Jensen Huang – Founder and CEO, NVIDIA – Conversation

* Described AI as largest infrastructure build-out ever: 5-layer stack (energy, chips, cloud, models, apps).

* Stressed AI augments jobs, especially trades like plumbers/electricians for data centers (high salaries, U.S. shortages).

* Urged Europe/emerging markets to fuse AI with industry strengths; optimism for broad participation: “Get involved!”

* Geopolitical implication: AI race requires massive investment; diffusion key to avoid divides.

Jamie Dimon – Chairman and CEO, JPMorgan Chase – Conversation

* Warned Trump’s proposed 10% credit card interest cap could cause “economic disaster,” limiting credit access.

* Noted AI transforming industries; new players disrupting; markets face rapid change.

* Geopolitical implication: Trade/AI policies need careful calibration to avoid unintended economic harm.

Abdel Fattah El-Sisi – President of Egypt – Special Address

* Focused on regional stability, security, prosperity in Middle East; pushed Gaza peace plan phase 2 with engagement.

* Highlighted Egypt’s economic reforms: private sector role, infrastructure (highways, Suez Canal zone).

* Geopolitical implication: Calls for dialogue to seize mutual benefits amid global challenges.

Other Notable Addresses

* Javier Milei – President of Argentina – Special Address: Outlined Argentina’s shift from hyperinflation to fiscal discipline; stressed productivity, AI regulation.

* Panels touched European defense (NATO strengthening via diplomacy), AI in health/work (augmentation, upskilling), climate/energy transitions, jobless growth prevention.

Day 3 underscored erosion of post-war norms, with calls for dialogue clashing against protectionism, AI as dual-edged sword requiring scale/responsibility, and middle powers navigating U.S.-China-EU frictions through pragmatism over ideology.

Today’s Preview Section: Day 4 Agenda Highlights (January 22)

* Focus expected on continued themes: global cooperation, growth sources, innovation deployment, planetary boundaries.

* Key sessions likely include climate/growth linkages, AI governance, economic shocks prep (debt, disruption).

* Potential high-profile: Follow-ups on AI/health, women’s health breakthroughs, humanitarian aid gaps.

* Alternative events (e.g., climate-focused debriefs outside official agenda).

Scheduled speakers for Day 4:

* Special Address by He Lifeng, Vice-Premier of the People’s Republic of China (around 11:20–11:50 CET).

* Moderated/introduced by Børge Brende (WEF President) and André Hoffmann (WEF Vice-Chair). Topic centers on China’s perspective on global cooperation, economic growth, and contested world dynamics under the dialogue theme.

Other prominent sessions and speakers highlighted in the program (times approximate or thematic groupings; not all have exact slots confirmed publicly yet):

* Decade Déjà Vu: Are the 2020s the New 1920s? — Featuring Christine Lagarde (ECB President) and others like Andrew R. (likely Haldane or similar economist). Discusses parallels between current economic/geopolitical risks and historical crises, low-growth era challenges.

* Who Brokers Trust Now? — Panel with Tharman Shanmugaratnam (Singapore President), Annalena Baerbock (German Foreign Minister), Alexander De Croo (Belgian PM), Chuck Robbins (Cisco CEO), Comfort Ero (International Crisis Group), and moderator Ishaan Tharoor. Focuses on rebuilding trust amid fragmentation, multilateralism vs. unilateralism.

* How Can We Avert a Climate Recession? — Speakers include Al Gore, Ester Baiget (Novonesis CEO), Carsten Schneider, Zhang Lei, Elizabeth Thurbon, Jai Shroff. Explores climate risks to growth, planetary boundaries, and sustainable prosperity models.

* Second Act for EU Single Market — Panel with Christine Lagarde, Carlos Cuerpo Caballero (Spanish Economy Minister), Christian Sewing (Deutsche Bank CEO), Valerie Baudson, Annette Mosman, Martin Sandbu. Addresses revitalizing European economic integration and competitiveness.

Which session are you watching most closely today? Reply in comments.

Primary sources:

* WEF Live from Davos Day 3: https://www.weforum.org/stories/2026/01/live-from-davos-2026-what-to-know-on-day-3

* Trump Special Address: https://www.weforum.org/stories/2026/01/davos-2026-special-address-donald-trump-president-united-states-america/

* El-Sisi Special Address: https://www.weforum.org/stories/2026/01/davos-2026-special-address-abdel-fattah-el-sisi/

For deeper predictions, alliance shifts post-Trump address, or full Rapid Reads archive, upgrade to paid. Free tomorrow: Next-day recap. Share this if it cut through the noise for you.

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