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jim loving's avatar

As discussed by Robert Kagan in his recent Atlantic essay, the American architected global system was constructed after WWII to prevent future global conflicts and to prevent the continuation of the warfare that was a regular feature of global relations leading up to WWII.

“America’s unique circumstances—¬largely in¬vulnerable to foreign invasion, because of its strength and its distance from the other great powers, and thus able to deploy force thousands of miles from home without leaving itself at risk. America’s allies made two remarkable wagers: that the United States could be trusted to defend them whenever needed, and that it would not exploit its disproportionate might to enrich or strengthen itself at their expense.

The American order established harmony among the great powers within it, and left those outside it, Russia and China, relatively isolated and insecure—unhappy with the global arrangement but limited in their ability to change it.

So much of America’s influence in the world has derived from treating others as part of a community of democratic nations or of strategic partners.

Yan, the Chinese thinker, observed that one of the elements holding the American order together was America’s reputation for morality and respect for inter¬national norms.”

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/2026/03/trump-national-security-greenland-spheres-of-interest/685673/?gift=YRI4EEH83_xCFEy-xnh1S_Y9jP3iEbnNvvTA3K-C-_8&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share

Serge Tolkachev's avatar

The article's conclusion is terrifying. The cultural crisis is far more powerful than the economic one, but the former follows from the latter.

Europe is under the rule of liberal post-industrial financiers, for whom industrial production is a relic of the past. Therefore, they consider themselves the smartest, entrusting China and other developing countries with the mission of supplying Europe with industrial products. Thus, when US Commerce Secretary Mr. Lutnick declared in Davos that globalization was a mistake and American tariffs were its correction, liberal Europe dismissed him as a crazy cynic and booed him.

Among the Western elite, there are many sincere supporters of this post-industrial illusion, apparently significantly more than those who support a new industrialization. Within their own logic, they consider President Trump's new global program madness or betrayal and see themselves as noble defenders of liberal values. Alas, they fail to understand that the civilizational salvation of the West lies within the mainstream of industrial values. Even China's incredible leap to global dominance, driven by industrialization, fails to convince liberal globalists of the simple idea that global cultural influence and liberal values ​​spring from a developed industrial base, not from its shattered remains.

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