Two opinion-focused pieces argue that the stability of global order remains important to the United States, and both contend that it can be rebuilt or restored through renewed policy and engagement. One outlet frames the issue as a strategic necessity: the United States benefits from rules-based relationships that reduce uncertainty in trade, security, and diplomacy, and therefore has an interest in maintaining and strengthening that system. The other emphasizes a similar premise, linking America’s long-term interests to the continuation of global order and suggesting that current challenges do not eliminate the possibility of improvement. While both pieces share the same broad conclusion, neither provides detailed, outlet-specific reporting about particular events, negotiations, or specific policy actions in the text provided. Instead, they offer advocacy and analysis of the need for continued commitment to international arrangements that support predictability and cooperation. Taken together, the sources present a unified argument at the level of principle: global order matters, and renewed American efforts are presented as a means to support or restore it.