1 DECEMBER 2007, Page 21

New world order

Sir: Poor old Irwin Stelzer is stuck in an Atlantico-centric world in which the main debate is still about choosing between Europe and America and deciding which side of the Atlantic Ocean is top dog (The Special Relationship is between Washington and Brussels', 24 November).

When will Washington, or Brussels, grasp that this world has now disappeared? Power and influence have now moved away from the Atlantic powers and in three new directions — to a billion or more participants in the world wide web, to two billion-plus new capitalists in Asia and to the lands of the petrodollars — the latter two now generating most of the world's savings and exporting the capital which drives the planet's economy (and buys up our assets).

British foreign policy now has to tune into these entirely new networks of which, inci- dentally, the transcontinental, trans-north- south, multifaith Commonwealth will be an increasingly useful and important element. David Howell House of Lords, London SW1