great power competition
-
Everyone Wants to Be Great Again

The Putin–Xi Multipolar Declaration, the Data Behind It, and Why Fragmentation May Be a More Accurate Description Than Partnership Editorial Analysis | 31 May 2026 On 20 May 2026, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping signed a Joint Declaration on the Establishment of a Multipolar World and a New Type of International… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, South East Asia, war30th anniversary Russia-China partnership, anti-hegemonic declaration, balance of power, Beijing summit 2026, bilateral trade decline, Chinese FDI Russia, CNPC, Cold War bipolarity, commodity exporter, energy dependence, fossil fuel asymmetry, fragmentation, gas pipeline stalled, gazprom, great power competition, hegemony, Joint Declaration on the Establishment of a Multipolar World, multipolar world declaration, multipolarity, New Type of International Relations, no-limits partnership, outbound direct investment, Power of Siberia 2, pricing impasse, Putin Xi summit May 2026, Russia energy exports, Russia-China strategic partnership, Russia-China trade 2025, Russian oil exports China, trade contraction 6.9 percent, unipolar moment, US Hegemony, world order -
The Fractured Crescent

Power, Rivalry and Realignment in the Emerging Middle Eastern Order The Middle East enters another period of strategic transition as assumptions underpinning the regional order during the post-Cold War era face growing pressure from shifting power balances, changing economic realities, military confrontation, and the gradual erosion of uncontested American dominance. Public discussion frequently presents the… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, Latin America, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, South East Asia, warAbraham Accords, energy politics, Eurasia, Gaza War, Geopolitics, Geostrategy, great power competition, Gulf Cooperation Council, Gulf States, iran, israel, middle east, Mohammed bin Salman, Mohammed bin Zayed, multipolarity, Netanyahu, Political Rivalry, power transition, Qatar, Red Sea, regional power shift, Regional Realignment, Saudi Arabia, security architecture, Strait of Hormuz, Strategic Competition, Sudan conflict, Trump, Turkey, US foreign policy, West Asia, Yemen war -
Do Not Underestimate the United States (Editorial Version)

An analytical examination of the US blockade on Iran, the systematic disruption of energy flows to Asia, and the long-term campaign to isolate China The United States Navy’s deployment of FA-18 Super Hornets to conduct strafing attacks against Iranian commercial tankers in the Gulf of Oman on 6 and 8 May 2026, three vessels targeted,… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, South East Asia, waralliance systems, Brian Berletic, Brookings Institution, China, deindustrialisation, economic warfare., energy security, Energy Warfare, Eurasia, Eurasian integration, Geopolitics, global energy markets, global trade routes, great power competition, Indo-Pacific, industrial policy, international relations, iran, LNG, maritime chokepoints, Maritime Strategy, NATO, Nord Stream, proxy warfare, RAND Corporation, Russia, sanctions, sanctions policy, Strait of Hormuz, Strait of Malacca, Strategic Competition, Ukraine war, United States foreign policy, US Navy -
Do Not Underestimate the United States (Long Version)

Why the United States Seeks Control of Supply Routes Rather Than Conventional Victory American power has repeatedly been misread during prolonged geopolitical confrontations because commentators continue measuring strategic success through the narrow lens of immediate battlefield outcomes rather than through cumulative institutional, economic, and infrastructural transformation across decades. Independent geopolitical analyst Brian Berletic argued during… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, East Africa, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, iran, israel, middle east, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, waralliance systems, Brian Berletic, Brookings Institution, China, deindustrialisation, economic statecraft, economic warfare., energy geopolitics, energy security, Energy Warfare, Eurasia, Eurasian integration, geopolitical risk, Geopolitics, global energy markets, global trade routes, great power competition, Indo-Pacific, industrial policy, international relations, iran, LNG, maritime chokepoints, Maritime Strategy, military strategy, NATO, Nord Stream, proxy warfare, RAND Corporation, Russia, sanctions, sanctions policy, Strait of Hormuz, Strait of Malacca, Strategic Competition, strategic studies, supply chains, Ukraine war, United States foreign policy, US Navy, US-China relations -
Trump’s Beijing Delegation Exposed the Real Structure of American Power [Extended Version]
![Trump’s Beijing Delegation Exposed the Real Structure of American Power [Extended Version]](https://globalgeopolitics.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/img_20260513_235056.jpg?w=1024)
The Beijing visit exposed how transnational corporations, financial institutions, and technology monopolies now operate openly as the permanent power structure beneath American electoral politics. Donald Trump arrived in Beijing flanked by the commanding layer of American corporate and financial power because the visit exposed something Washington normally prefers hidden behind electoral theatre: transnational capital, technology… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, South East Asia, warAmerican decline, American empire, Apple, Belt and Road Initiative, blackrock, Boeing, China, Chinese Strategy, Corporate Globalism, corporate power, dollar hegemony, donald trump, economic warfare., elite power structures, energy security, Eurasia, Financial Capital, Financialisation, Foreign Policy, Game Theory, Geoeconomics, Geopolitics, global hegemony, global order, Goldman Sachs, great power competition, Indo-Pacific, Industrial Capacity, industrial policy, international relations, iran, manufacturing, Maritime Strategy, multipolarity, Nvidia, oligarchy, political economy, realism, Semiconductor War, Silicon Valley, Strategic Competition, strategic studies, supply chains, taiwan, technological sovereignty, Tesla, transnational capital, United States, US-China relations, wall street, Xi Jinping -
Kagan and Boot: The Guilty Are Writing the Verdict (Extended Version)

From Tehran to Taiwan: The Men Who Built America’s Empire Are Now Writing Its Autopsy The extraordinary significance of the Max Boot interview with former CIA analyst John Culver does not rest merely in the military assessments themselves, severe as they already appear. The deeper significance rests in who is speaking, where they are speaking,… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, East Africa, economics, Energy, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, NATO, politics, reserve currency, warAmerican decline, American empire, American Power, Atlanticism, Belt and Road Initiative, China, containment strategy, de-dollarisation, defence policy, empire, energy politics, Eurasia, Eurasian integration, Geopolitics, Geostrategy, global hegemony, global order, great power competition, imperial overstretch, Indo-Pacific, Indo-Pacific strategy, Industrial Capacity, international relations, iran, John Culver, maritime power, Max Boot, military industrial complex, Military Primacy, military strategy, multipolar world order, NATO, Neoconservatism, petrodollar, political economy, Project for the New American Century, Robert Kagan, Russia, sanctions, South China Sea, Strait of Hormuz, Strategic Competition, Strategic Decline, taiwan, Taiwan Strait, Ukraine war, unipolarity, US foreign policy, US Hegemony, US Navy, US-China relations, Washington Consensus, West Asia -
China’s First Direct Rejection of U.S. Financial Jurisdiction

Why Beijing’s refusal to recognise American sanctions marks a structural shift in global financial power A legal border moved across the international system when China’s Ministry of Commerce instructed domestic firms not to recognise, enforce, or comply with United States sanctions against five Chinese refineries. Financial globalisation relied upon a silent assumption that American secondary… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, Health, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, warAnti-Foreign Sanctions Law, Belt and Road Initiative, blocking statute, China sanctions law, Chinese refineries, commodity security, cross-border finance, de-dollarisation, dollar hegemony, economic statecraft, energy geopolitics, energy security, extraterritorial jurisdiction, extraterritorial sanctions, financial coercion, financial decoupling, game theory in geopolitics, geopolitical economy, geopolitical risk, global financial order, global order transition, global supply chains, great power competition, international political economy, Iranian oil trade, legal sovereignty, multipolarity, realist international relations, sanctions compliance, sanctions enforcement, sanctions policy, sanctions resistance, secondary sanctions, sovereign jurisdiction, strategic autonomy, Strategic Competition, systemic rivalry, trade fragmentation, U.S. Treasury sanctions, U.S.–China relations, yuan internationalisation -
A Division of Labour in WarA Division of Labour in War

The Transfer of Strategic Burden from Washington to Europe in the Ukraine Conflict The Ukraine conflict has entered a phase in which military attrition matters less than institutional transfer. Washington no longer behaves as a state attempting to terminate a costly war through settlement. It behaves as a system reallocating operational responsibility to subordinate allies… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, Russia, warAlliance Politics, burden sharing, China, defence spending, energy markets, energy security, European Union, Geopolitics, global fragmentation, great power competition, hegemonic stability theory, Indo-Pacific, international relations, iran, LNG, middle east, military strategy, multipolarity, NATO, Nord Stream, proxy warfare, realism, Russia, Russia-Ukraine conflict, sanctions, security architecture, strategic sequencing, Ukraine war, United States foreign policy


