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Monday, 22 December 2025

Rebels Without a Cause: Structural Fragmentation and the Crisis of Authority on the American Right


I. The Misdiagnosis: Why "Culture War" Explanations Are Inadequate

The current civil war within American conservatism is routinely framed as a dispute over extremism, antisemitism, or tone. This framing is analytically insufficient. What is occurring is not primarily a moral breakdown, nor simply a media-driven personality clash. It is a crisis of authority rooted in the collapse of three interlocking pillars that once stabilized the conservative coalition:

  1. A shared governing philosophy
  2. Institutional legitimacy
  3. A credible path from grievance to power

The events of December 2025—particularly the dramatic confrontations at AmericaFest and the ongoing implosion of the Heritage Foundation—are not causes but manifestations of this deeper collapse. The participants—Shapiro, Carlson, Bannon, Kelly, Owens, Vance—are responding rationally to incentives created by a movement that no longer knows how to convert social energy into durable governance.

In short: conservatives are fighting because there is no longer agreement on what constitutes authority, or who is entitled to exercise it.

II. Trump as a Functional Solution to a Structural Problem

Donald Trump did not resolve conservatism's contradictions; he suspended them.

From 2016 onward, Trump functioned as a personalized legitimacy engine. He replaced ideology with loyalty, institutions with intuition, and coalition management with charisma. This allowed mutually incompatible factions—free-market conservatives, nationalists, populists, libertarians, evangelicals—to coexist without resolving their differences.

Crucially, Trump also absorbed accountability. Policy incoherence, moral transgressions, and rhetorical excesses were externalized onto the leader, rather than debated internally.

With Trump now in his constitutionally final term and prohibited from seeking reelection, this buffering function is disappearing. The movement is being forced to confront questions it avoided for a decade:

  • Is conservatism a governing philosophy or a protest identity?
  • Does legitimacy flow from institutions, elections, or popular anger?
  • Are moral boundaries instruments of strength or constraints on mobilization?

The fights now visible were always latent. As observers noted at AmericaFest, the question looming over the movement is who inherits the machinery when Trump exits the scene. The answer reveals profound disagreement about what that machinery should be used for.

III. The Charlie Kirk Assassination: Catalyst for Crisis

On September 10, 2025, Charlie Kirk was assassinated while speaking at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah. Kirk, the 31-year-old founder of Turning Point USA and one of the most influential figures in the MAGA movement, was shot in the neck by Tyler James Robinson, a 22-year-old from Washington, Utah, who opened fire from a rooftop approximately 130 yards away.

Kirk had been answering a student's question at an outdoor debate event attended by approximately 3,000 people when he was killed. Robinson, who surrendered the next day, was charged with aggravated murder. Authorities described him as politically radicalized, with differing ideological views from his conservative family. According to Utah Governor Spencer Cox, Robinson had become radicalized after dropping out of Utah State University and had expressed dislike of Kirk during a family dinner.

The assassination followed a series of violent political incidents in 2025, including shootings of two Democratic Minnesota legislators and their spouses in June, the killing of two Israeli embassy staffers in Washington in May, and an arson attack on Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's residence in April.

Kirk's death created a leadership vacuum within Turning Point USA and removed one of the few figures capable of mediating between conservative factions. His widow, Erika Kirk, assumed leadership of the organization. More significantly, Kirk's assassination served as a focal point for conflicting narratives about political violence, with conspiracy theories spreading rapidly—theories that would contribute to the factional warfare at AmericaFest three months later.

IV. AmericaFest 2025: The Crisis Made Manifest


The Context

AmericaFest 2025, held December 18-21 in Phoenix, was the first major Turning Point USA gathering since Kirk's assassination. Intended to honor his legacy as a unifying force, it instead became the stage for the most public rupture in the conservative movement since Trump's emergence.

What occurred was not about Nick Fuentes per se. Fuentes served as a proxy variable for three deeper disputes:

  1. Boundary-Setting vs. Coalition Elasticity: Should movements maintain ideological borders, or embrace maximum inclusivity?
  2. Moral Authority vs. Popular Authenticity: Does legitimacy flow from ethical principles or from resonance with the base?
  3. Governance vs. Perpetual Insurgency: Is the goal to wield power responsibly, or to maintain revolutionary energy?

Ben Shapiro's Opening Salvo

Ben Shapiro opened the conference on December 18 with what can only be described as a declaration of factional war. In a half-hour speech, Shapiro attacked multiple prominent conservatives by name.

On Tucker Carlson: "If you host a Hitler apologist, Nazi-loving, anti-American piece of refuse like Nick Fuentes...you ought to own it. There is a reason that Charlie Kirk despised Nick Fuentes. He knew that Nick Fuentes is an evil troll and that building him up is an act of moral imbecility, and that is precisely what Tucker Carlson did."

On Candace Owens: Shapiro accused her of spreading conspiracy theories about Kirk's assassination and of making unsubstantiated claims about Israeli involvement in his death.

On Megyn Kelly: Shapiro said those who "refuse to condemn Candace's truly vicious attacks" are "guilty of cowardice."

On Steve Bannon: Shapiro alleged that Bannon "maligns people that he disagrees with, which is indeed par for the course from a man who was once a P.R. flack for Jeffrey Epstein."

Shapiro's central argument was that the conservative movement faces existential danger from "frauds" and "charlatans" who "claim to speak in the name of principle but actually traffic in conspiracism and dishonesty." He argued that hosts are responsible for the guests they choose and called for what he termed "ideological border control."

Critically, Shapiro invoked Kirk's memory, noting that Kirk understood the importance of asking questions "that actually get at the truth."

Tucker Carlson's Response

Barely an hour later, Carlson took the same stage. His response was calculated mockery:

"I just got here, and I feel like I missed the first part of the program. Hope I didn't miss anything meaningful. No, I'm just kidding, I watched it. I laughed."

Carlson reframed Shapiro's critique as an assault on free speech at an event dedicated to a man who died while exercising it: "To hear calls for deplatforming and denouncing people at a Charlie Kirk event, I'm like, what? That's hilarious."

He continued: "Charlie stood firm in his often-stated and deeply held belief that people should be able to debate."

On antisemitism, Carlson offered a philosophical statement: "Antisemitism is immoral. In my religion, it is immoral to hate people for how they were born. Period." But he then pivoted to what he characterized as more widespread discrimination, referring to what he claimed was bias against white men.

Most tellingly, Carlson dismissed the entire controversy as manufactured: "The Trump coalition, and the supposed civil war going on within that group—I don't think it's real."

Steve Bannon's Escalation

The following night, Steve Bannon entered the fray with characteristic aggression. According to reports, Bannon declared that "Ben Shapiro is like a cancer, and that cancer spreads," to cheers from attendees.

Bannon accused Shapiro of being part of "the 'Israel First' crowd" and suggested that Shapiro's real goal was to subordinate American interests to Israel's. This represents a remarkable shift in Republican discourse—directly questioning support for Israel, once considered beyond debate in conservative circles.

The Israel Fracture

Perhaps the most significant development at AmericaFest was the open questioning of unwavering support for Israel—a position that would have been unthinkable in Republican circles even five years ago.

Carlson criticized civilian deaths in Gaza in terms that wouldn't have been out of place in progressive circles, arguing that killing children for their parents' actions is unjustifiable regardless of location.

Bannon made his position explicit: Israel should be independent and not drag the United States into endless wars.

This reflects broader generational shifts. Polling data shows dramatic changes in Republican attitudes toward Israel, particularly among younger conservatives.

Vivek Ramaswamy's Intervention

Vivek Ramaswamy, running for Ohio's Republican gubernatorial nomination, attempted to articulate a principled conservative position against what he called the "online right" that fixates on "heritage and lineage rather than American ideals." He specifically called out Fuentes as unwelcome in the conservative movement, reasserting an ideological definition of American identity grounded in belief and assimilation, not ancestry.

However, his intervention was largely drowned out by the larger conflict, illustrating a deeper problem: reasoned policy arguments cannot compete with factional combat for attention.

Erika Kirk's Impossible Position

Erika Kirk, thrust into leadership after her husband's assassination, attempted to frame the conflict positively. She offered: "You may not agree with everyone on this stage this weekend—and that's OK. Welcome to America."

She recalled her husband being a "peacemaker" and a "coalition builder" and lamented that after his assassination, "we saw infighting. We've seen fractures. We've seen bridges being burned that shouldn't be burnt."

But Kirk also made a consequential decision: on opening night, she enthusiastically endorsed Vice President JD Vance for president in 2028.

V. JD Vance: The Reluctant Arbiter


Vance's Strategic Ambiguity

Vice President JD Vance closed the conference on December 21 with a speech that attempted to transcend the conflicts without resolving them. His approach was telling: he declined to bring "a list of conservatives to denounce or deplatform."

"President Trump did not build the greatest coalition in politics by running his supporters through endless, self-defeating purity tests," Vance declared. "We have far more important work to do than canceling each other."

His message was carefully calibrated: "We don't care if you're White or Black, rich or poor, young or old, rural or urban, controversial or a little bit boring, or somewhere in between. We don't care...if you love America, you're welcome in the movement."

The Vance Dilemma

Vance's position reveals the central tension facing any post-Trump conservative leader. He must:

  1. Unite incompatible factions that Trump held together through personal charisma
  2. Define clear boundaries without alienating significant constituencies
  3. Convert grievance into governance
  4. Maintain revolutionary energy while demonstrating governing competence

His refusal to set "red lines" regarding figures like Fuentes is strategic, not accidental. Vance understands that Trump's coalition exists precisely because it avoided such definitions. But this strategy has inherent limits: a movement defined by what it opposes rather than what it proposes cannot sustain itself through the exercise of power.

What Vance Cannot Say

What was most notable about Vance's speech was what he did not say. He made no mention of Nick Fuentes by name, despite having called him a "total loser" in previous statements. He offered no clear definition of what should disqualify someone from the conservative movement beyond the vague standard of loving America.

This silence is the sound of structural problems that cannot be solved through rhetoric alone.

VI. The Heritage Foundation: Institutional Collapse as Diagnostic

The October Video

While AmericaFest captured attention through spectacle, the Heritage Foundation's implosion revealed the movement's deeper dysfunction with clinical precision.

On October 30, 2025, Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts recorded a video defending Tucker Carlson's interview with Nick Fuentes. Roberts declared: "The Heritage Foundation didn't become the intellectual backbone of the conservative movement by canceling our own people or policing the consciences of Christians, and we won't start doing that now."

Carlson was a "close friend of the Heritage Foundation," Roberts said, who would "always" be. As for Fuentes: "I disagree with and even abhor things that Nick Fuentes says, but canceling him is not the answer either."

The video was scripted by Ryan Neuhaus, Roberts' chief of staff. Within days, Neuhaus was reassigned from his position and eventually left the organization.

The Cascade

The response from the Jewish community and conservative establishment was swift and devastating:

  • Young Jewish Conservatives resigned from Heritage's antisemitism task force
  • The Zionist Organization of America withdrew its partnership
  • Rabbi Yaakov Menken of the Coalition for Jewish Values stated that Heritage had "chosen to vocally stand with an antisemite"
  • The Jewish Leadership Project demanded a "vigorous explanation"

On November 18, 2025, Robert P. George—a professor who served on Heritage's Board of Trustees—resigned. He made his position clear: he could not remain without a full retraction of Roberts' video.

Roberts' Failed Defense

At an all-staff meeting on November 5, Roberts attempted damage control: "I made a mistake and I let you down and I let down this institution, and I am sorry for that. Period. Full stop."

But he also revealed he was "not very familiar with Fuentes"—an admission that drew withering criticism. Amy Swearer, a senior legal fellow, called it "a master class in cowardice" during the leaked meeting video.

Two Heritage Foundation board members—Shane McCullar and Abby Spencer Moffat—resigned in mid-December, with McCullar saying the board was "unwilling to confront the lapses in judgment that have harmed its credibility."

The Mass Exodus

On December 22, 2025—as AmericaFest concluded—the Heritage Foundation experienced institutional disintegration.

More than a dozen staffers—including most of the personnel from Heritage's legal and economic centers—left to join Advancing American Freedom (AAF), the think tank founded by former Vice President Mike Pence. This nearly doubled AAF's size overnight.

Those departing included Amy Swearer, Rachel Greszler (who had criticized Roberts for making policy decisions "in closed-door meetings...often in utter disregard to the policy experts"), and John Malcolm, Heritage vice president and the foundation's top legal scholar, who was fired on December 19 after Roberts discovered the plan to leave for AAF.

The Intellectual Casualty

On December 22,  professor Josh Blackman resigned as Senior Editor of the Heritage Guide to the Constitution, a position he called "the crowning achievement of my professional career."

In his resignation letter, Blackman wrote: "Your actions have made my continued affiliation with Heritage untenable. First, your comments were a huge unforced blunder, and gave aid and comfort to the rising tide of antisemitism on the right. Second, in the wake of your remarks, jurists, scholars, and advocates have made clear to me they can no longer associate with the Heritage Guide they contributed to."

Professor Nelson Lund of Antonin Scalia Law School also issued an open letter to Roberts, stating that neither Roberts nor the Board appeared likely to "take appropriate steps to salvage the Foundation's reputation."

What Heritage Reveals

The Heritage Foundation's collapse illustrates something deeper than one leader's poor judgment. It reveals the substitution of signaling for analysis, loyalty for competence, and factional positioning for policy development.

Heritage was founded in 1973 and has been among the most influential conservative policy organizations in American history. It helped shape the Reagan Revolution and provided intellectual infrastructure for Republican governance for five decades. Its transformation under Roberts—who explicitly described his mission as "institutionalizing Trumpism"—demonstrates what happens when think tanks become factional brands rather than policy incubators.

When institutions lose autonomy from factional politics, movements lose the capacity for self-correction. Heritage's collapse severed conservatism's feedback loop between ideas and governance at precisely the moment such feedback is most needed.

VII. Analytical Framework: The Players and Their Positions


Ben Shapiro: Institutional Rationalism Without Sociological Depth

Shapiro's call for "ideological border control" reflects classical institutional logic: movements require boundaries to maintain coherence, legitimacy, and electoral viability. Historically, this view aligns with postwar conservatism's emphasis on respectability, coalition discipline, and constitutional norms.

However, Shapiro's position rests on an implicit assumption that delegitimation alone resolves radicalization. This is not analytically accurate.

Shapiro correctly diagnoses the risk posed by figures like Fuentes, but he does not explain the conditions that produce their appeal. His approach treats radicalization as a reputational hazard rather than a sociopolitical outcome of dislocation, status loss, and institutional distrust.

For policymakers, the limitation is clear: boundary enforcement without structural reform displaces extremism rather than resolves it. Deplatforming addresses symptoms, not causes. The constituencies attracted to figures like Fuentes will not disappear because conservative elites denounce them; they will migrate to more virulent forms or create parallel institutions beyond elite influence.

Tucker Carlson: Anti-Institutionalism as Philosophy

Carlson's posture—skeptical, interrogative, noncommittal—is often defended as populist pluralism. In reality, it represents a coherent philosophy: the systematic erosion of elite authority without the construction of alternative legitimacy structures.

Carlson's refusal to "police" figures like Fuentes follows from a worldview in which:

  1. Institutions are inherently corrupt
  2. Moral consensus is a mask for elite domination
  3. Popular anger is self-justifying
  4. Asking questions absolves one of responsibility for their implications

This framework excels at delegitimizing power but struggles to institutionalize it. Carlson's "just asking questions" defense collapses under scrutiny: selective skepticism is not neutrality.

From a statecraft perspective, Carlsonism produces Schumpeterian "creative destruction": high mobilization energy coupled with continuous institutional disruption. New innovations constantly displace old power structures, driving change but also causing upheaval and shifts in what counts as legitimate authority.

The problem is that destruction must eventually give way to construction, or it simply becomes destruction. Carlson offers no theory of what institutions should replace those he undermines, beyond vague appeals to popular sovereignty.

Steve Bannon: Revolutionary Politics Without Stability

Bannon's rhetoric situates him not within conservatism, but within a broader tradition of permanent revolutionary politics. His objective is not policy victory but continuous destabilization, under the assumption that destruction precedes renewal.

Historically, this logic is familiar—and costly. Movements built on endless antagonism inevitably cannibalize their own coalitions once external enemies lose salience. Bannon's hostility toward figures like Shapiro is therefore structural, not personal: institutional conservatives represent closure, while Bannon requires perpetual openness to grievance.

For policymakers, Bannonism offers no end state—only Hegelian escalation. It is a philosophy of permanent revolution that cannot transition to governance without betraying its animating principle.

Megyn Kelly: The Silent Majority's Paralysis

Kelly represents a large but politically incoherent constituency: conservatives who recognize populism's excesses yet fear alienating its energy. This group senses danger but lacks a theory of intervention.

Their indecision contributes to radical drift. Movements radicalize not because moderates disagree, but because they hesitate. Kelly's position—caught between friendship with Owens and recognition of her influence as harmful—exemplifies the paralysis of those who see the problem but cannot solve it without fracturing relationships they value.

Candace Owens: The Contested Role of Skeptical Inquiry

Owens occupies a contested position in conservative discourse. Her defenders argue that she asks questions others avoid due to social or political pressure—questions about institutional narratives, foreign policy alignments, and power structures. This role, they contend, is essential in a healthy political discourse where no topic should be off-limits to scrutiny.

Her critics distinguish between investigative inquiry (which follows evidence, acknowledges uncertainty, and adjusts to new information) and rhetorical questioning (which implies conclusions while maintaining deniability), yet Owen adhers to these criteria.

Regarding Kirk's assassination, Owens raised questions about the official narrative while Robinson awaits trial. Her defenders note that healthy skepticism of official accounts is reasonable, particularly given the political violence of 2025 and the speed with which authorities characterized Robinson's motives. Citizens have every right to ask questions about major political events without being obligated to provide alternative explanations or policy solutions.

Her critics respond that the specific framing of questions—particularly suggestions of Israeli or internal conservative involvement—risks spreading unfounded suspicions that can harden into accepted "alternative facts" within segments of the movement, especially when there might be no credible evidence  to support  such theories.

This tension reveals a broader question: What distinguishes legitimate skepticism from conspiracy thinking? The answer may lie not in whether questions are asked, but in the relationship between questions and evidence, the willingness to update beliefs, and the acknowledgment of what is known versus speculated.

Owens represents a significant constituency that believes mainstream institutions have lost credibility and that official narratives deserve systematic skepticism. Whether this skepticism serves corrective or corrosive functions depends partly on standards of evidence and intellectual humility—standards that apply to her critics as well as to Owens herself.

Nick Fuentes: Political Data, Not Moral Symbol

Fuentes should be analyzed as an indicator, not a villain. His following reflects:

  1. Intergenerational downward mobility
  2. Collapse of meritocratic belief
  3. Alienation from national narratives
  4. Absence of conservative institutional mentorship
  5. Search for belonging through transgression

Deplatforming addresses optics, not causality. Amplification accelerates decay. The missing response is diagnostic engagement paired with firm moral boundaries.

Fuentes is a 27-year-old who has built a following by saying increasingly extreme things. Yet his shows now regularly clear over a million views, up from a few thousand just four years ago. This growth reflects not Fuentes' persuasive power, but the failures of mainstream institutions to provide young conservative men with meaning, purpose, and pathways to success.

Ignoring this constituency ensures its mutation into more virulent forms. Conservative institutions once provided mentorship, intellectual development, and integration into responsible political action. Their collapse leaves a void that figures like Fuentes fill by default.

JD Vance and the Post-Trump Question

Vance's strategic ambiguity masks an unresolved tension: whether the future right is civic-national or ethno-cultural. His rejection of "purity tests" prevents schism in the short term but postpones the definitional questions that governance requires.

Can conservatism govern a pluralistic society without fracturing? Vance's success depends on answering this question while avoiding its explicit articulation—a paradox that may prove unsustainable.

VIII. Structural Analysis: Why the Rebels Lack a Cause

The Dissolution of Fusionism

Postwar American conservatism was built on fusionism: the synthesis of three distinct strands:

  1. Economic libertarianism: Free markets, limited government, low taxation
  2. Social traditionalism: Religious values, cultural conservatism, moral order
  3. Aggressive anti-communism: Strong national defense, interventionist foreign policy

This fusion was held together by the Cold War, which provided an external threat sufficient to paper over internal contradictions. When the Soviet Union fell, the coalition required new adhesive. For a time, the War on Terror provided it. When that project collapsed in Iraq and Afghanistan, fusionism's incoherence became undeniable.

Trump's rise represented the abandonment of fusionism. He rejected free trade, mocked neoconservative foreign policy, and demonstrated that the Republican base cared little about ideological consistency or moral character. What mattered was cultural identification and the promise of restored status.

But Trump provided only suspension, not resolution, of conservatism's contradictions. His second term makes this undeniable: his supporters cannot agree on trade policy, immigration enforcement, foreign interventions, or even basic questions about who should be considered American.

The Israel Fracture as Symptom

The emerging split over Israel is particularly diagnostic. For decades, support for Israel was one of the few truly unifying positions in American conservatism, binding together:

  • Evangelical Christians who see Israel as biblically significant
  • Neoconservatives who view Israel as a strategic ally
  • Hawks who value Israeli intelligence and military cooperation
  • Jews within the conservative movement
  • Those who support democracy against authoritarian regimes

The fracturing of this consensus reveals deeper fissures:

The Carlson position reflects genuine non-interventionism: if America First means anything, it means not fighting other people's wars, even Israel's.

The Bannon position reflects economic nationalism: sending aid to Israel while Americans struggle economically is indefensible.

The younger generation's position reflects generational change: they do not share their parents' Cold War-era assumptions about geopolitics, and social media has exposed them to Palestinian narratives.

The Fuentes position reflects open antisemitism dressed as geopolitical analysis.

These positions are not reconcilable through leadership or rhetoric. They reflect different foundational worldviews about America's role in the world, the relationship between nationalism and universalism, and the meaning of "America First."

The Absence of Governing Coherence

The Trump administration's second term has revealed what the movement lacks: a coherent governing agenda beyond the personal will of Trump himself.

What MAGA conservatism stands for has never been fully articulated—beyond support for the person of Donald Trump. Project 2025, despite providing detailed policy proposals, could not serve as the movement's intellectual framework precisely because Trump distanced himself from it when politically convenient, and because it was produced by institutions (like Heritage) that have now lost legitimacy.

The movement can mobilize but cannot govern because mobilization and governance require different organizational structures, different incentive systems, and different relationships to truth and accountability.

The Meritocracy Crisis

Underlying everything is a deeper crisis: the collapse of meritocratic belief among young conservatives. This constituency does not believe that hard work, education, and playing by the rules will secure middle-class life. They have watched:

  • College become financially ruinous without guaranteeing employment
  • Housing become unaffordable in the cities where jobs concentrate
  • Marriage and family formation delayed into the thirties
  • Their parents' generation hoarding wealth and opportunity
  • Immigration policy enriching employers while suppressing wages
  • Elite institutions celebrating diversity while practicing nepotism

For this generation, conservatism's traditional promises—work hard, defer gratification, climb the ladder—ring hollow. Figures like Fuentes offer something establishment conservatives cannot: a narrative that explains their situation through external enemies rather than personal inadequacy, and a community formed through shared transgression rather than institutional gatekeeping.

The response from establishment conservatives—denunciation, deplatforming, moral condemnation—does not address the underlying conditions. It simply confirms the narrative that elites care more about respectability than about the constituencies they claim to represent.

IX. Conclusion: The Unanswerable Question

American conservatism is rebelling because its organizing purpose has dissolved. It knows what it opposes, but not what it seeks to institutionalize. Anger has become both motive force and identity.

This is not a moral failure—it is a structural one.

The fights at AmericaFest and the implosion of Heritage are not aberrations or personality conflicts. They are the inevitable result of contradictions that were suspended, not resolved, and that can no longer be contained by personal charisma or external enemies.

The movement faces a crisis that none of its major figures can solve:

  • Shapiro offers boundaries without addressing the conditions that produce boundary-violators
  • Carlson offers permanent critique without constructive alternatives
  • Bannon offers permanent revolution without stability
  • Vance offers strategic ambiguity without definitional clarity
  • Owens offers questions without methods or answers
  • Ramaswamy offers principles that lack political power

The decisive question is not who gets deplatformed, who wins the factional struggle, or who succeeds Trump in 2028. The decisive question is whether conservatism can once again answer the question essential to all governing movements:

How does power become responsibility?

Until conservatism can articulate:

  1. A theory of authority (Who should govern, and why?)
  2. A theory of legitimacy (What makes governance rightful?)
  3. A theory of the common good (What is governance for?)
  4. A path from grievance to construction (How does anger become policy?)

The rebellion will continue. But it will remain, fundamentally, without a cause—a movement against rather than for, capable of mobilization but not governance, of disruption but not creation.

The tragedy is not that conservatism is fighting. The tragedy is that it is fighting without knowing what victory would look like, or how to recognize it if achieved.

The outcome of this crisis will determine not merely the future of the Republican Party, but the future of democratic governance in America. A movement this large, this energized, and this structurally incoherent does not simply disappear. It either finds new organizing principles that can channel its energy into responsible statecraft, or it continues its trajectory toward increasingly radical fragmentation.

History suggests the latter is more likely without deliberate intervention. But history also reminds us that institutional collapse creates opportunities for reconstruction. Whether American conservatism can rebuild its intellectual and institutional foundations while maintaining political viability remains the central question of our political moment.

The rebels need a cause. Whether they can find one before the rebellion consumes them entirely is the question that will define the next decade of American politics.


Sunday, 21 December 2025

The German Zeitenwende: A Structural Analysis of Remilitarization and Strategic Autonomy in an Era of Systemic Transition


Introduction: The Confluence of Decline and Renewal

The trajectory of German defense policy now constitutes the most consequential departure from the post-war Zivilmacht (civilian power) paradigm in the history of the Federal Republic. What began as a rhetorical inflection following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine has, by 2025, hardened into a structural transformation of Germany’s strategic posture, fiscal doctrine, and industrial priorities. The Zeitenwende is no longer a declaratory shift; it is an institutional reorientation that seeks to reconcile Germany’s economic centrality within Europe with its longstanding military underperformance and strategic reticence.

Yet this remilitarization is unfolding under conditions profoundly different from those that underpinned earlier phases of European integration or transatlantic reassurance. Germany is rebuilding military capacity at precisely the moment when the international system it aims to stabilize is undergoing a destabilizing transition. Scholars of international political economy and security studies increasingly converge on the assessment that the global order is moving from a unipolar system dominated by U.S. hegemony toward a contested, fragmentary multipolarity. Historically, such systemic transitions are associated not with equilibrium but with elevated risks of miscalculation, alliance strain, and major power conflict.

The paradox at the heart of the German Zeitenwende is therefore acute. Germany seeks to deter instability through accelerated militarization while operating within an international environment structurally prone to escalation. The views of Professor Sachs illuminates this dilemma through a game-theoretic and systemic lens: declining hegemonic powers, rising challengers, and strategically exposed middle powers interact in ways that systematically undermine cooperative equilibria. Under such conditions, rearmament can deter localized threats while simultaneously intensifying broader insecurity. Germany’s challenge is not merely to rearm, but to do so without reinforcing the very dynamics of strategic fragmentation it seeks to contain.

In this sense, the Zeitenwende is less a linear correction of past underinvestment than a high-risk adaptation to a disintegrating order. The success or failure of this project will hinge not only on matériel and manpower, but on whether Germany can align military renewal with credible strategic autonomy, alliance cohesion, and economic sustainability in an era of declining hegemonic coordination.

Procurement and the “Division 2025” Initiative: Ambition Confronts Reality

At the operational core of Germany’s strategic pivot lies the Division 2025 initiative—an emblematic effort to provide NATO with a fully equipped, combat-ready formation capable of sustained high-intensity, peer-to-peer conflict. The program is designed not only as a force-generation milestone but as a signal of Germany’s intent to transition from a security consumer to a security provider within the Alliance.

However, by early 2025, the gap between ambition and execution had become increasingly visible. Despite unprecedented funding commitments, the Bundeswehr still lacked a single fully combat-ready division. Senior figures within Germany’s defense industrial base bluntly acknowledged that, in its existing state, Germany could credibly defend Augsburg but not Munich or Berlin. This operational fragility has left the country structurally dependent on approximately 38,500 U.S. Army personnel stationed on German territory—an arrangement that underscores the persistent asymmetry between Germany’s economic weight and its military readiness.

In response, the Ministry of Defense abandoned the long-standing doctrine of “dynamic availability,” under which units rotated shared equipment, and shifted toward full capitalization of formations. The scale of this procurement acceleration is historically unprecedented. Between 2023 and 2025, Germany approved 255 major procurement projects valued at €188.4 billion, compared with 215 projects totaling €109 billion over the entire 2015–2022 period. The inflection point came in 2025 alone, when the Bundestag authorized 103 major procurement projects worth €83 billion, followed by an additional €52 billion covering 29 contracts approved in December.

Flagship acquisitions illustrate both strategic intent and structural constraint. The procurement of F-35A Lightning II aircraft for NATO nuclear-sharing roles replaces the aging Tornado fleet and anchors Germany firmly within the U.S.-centric fifth-generation airpower ecosystem. On land, the long-term vision centers on the Franco-German Main Ground Combat System (MGCS), while immediate operational gaps are addressed through expanded procurement of Leopard 2A8 main battle tanks and additional Joint Strike Missiles. In air and missile defense, the European Sky Shield Initiative (ESSI) integrates Arrow-3 exo-atmospheric interceptors—at a cost of approximately €3 billion—alongside IRIS-T SLM systems to construct a layered continental shield.

Yet even as procurement volumes surge, structural bottlenecks persist. Personnel shortages have emerged as the most binding constraint. Parliamentary approval to expand the Bundeswehr from roughly 180,000 troops to 260,000 by 2035 already implies a historically ambitious recruitment and retention effort. NATO planning assumptions, however, demand force levels approaching 395,000 personnel—an increase of more than 80% from current strength. Defense Minister Boris Pistorius’ warning that NATO must be prepared for possible Russian conflict “as early as next year” starkly exposes the tension between strategic urgency and Germany’s slow-moving institutional capacity.

The result is a rearmament effort that is financially credible but operationally fragile: capital-intensive, procurement-heavy, and constrained by demographic realities, industrial lead times, and administrative inertia. Division 2025 thus functions less as an achieved capability than as a stress test of Germany’s ability to convert fiscal power into usable military force.

Comparative R&D Investment: Narrowing the Innovation Gap

Beyond force generation, the Zeitenwende aspires to reposition Germany within the technological hierarchy of modern warfare. Historically, Germany lagged behind its peers in defense research and development, privileging incremental modernization over disruptive innovation. By 2025, however, Berlin had moved decisively to narrow this gap.

In absolute terms, Germany’s defense R&D spending reached approximately €1.4 billion, approaching France’s €1.6 billion annual investment. When accounting for joint Franco-German programs, the two countries together now account for roughly 74% of total EU defense R&D expenditure. On the surface, this convergence suggests a maturing European defense innovation core.

Yet deeper structural disparities remain. Germany continues to allocate only around 0.05% of GDP to defense R&D—half of France’s relative commitment and a fraction of the United States’ $145 billion Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation (RDT&E) budget. In proportional terms, the U.S. devotes approximately 16% of its defense spending to innovation, compared with roughly 4% across the EU. This asymmetry translates directly into capability gaps in AI-enabled command systems, autonomous platforms, hypersonics, and integrated sensor networks.

Berlin has sought to compensate by concentrating resources in select domains. AI research hubs in Oberbayern and quantum technology partnerships—often deeper with the UK than with France—reflect an attempt to leapfrog rather than catch up incrementally. Nonetheless, innovation ecosystems cannot be scaled overnight, particularly in the absence of a unified European industrial strategy.

The fragmentation of Europe’s defense industrial base remains a central liability. Europe fields three distinct fourth-generation-plus combat aircraft—the Eurofighter Typhoon, Rafale, and Gripen—while the United States converges on a single fifth-generation platform, the F-35, with planned production of 3,556 units. This duplication dilutes economies of scale, fragments R&D investment, and locks Europe into parallel modernization cycles. The inefficiency is not merely economic; it is strategic, undermining interoperability and slowing adaptation at precisely the moment when technological acceleration defines battlefield advantage.

Germany’s R&D surge thus represents progress within constraint: a narrowing gap that nevertheless preserves transatlantic dependence and exposes the limits of national innovation strategies in a fragmented continental system.

Fiscal Revolution: The Death of Orthodoxy

Perhaps the most consequential dimension of the Zeitenwende lies not in weapons systems but in fiscal doctrine. Germany’s remilitarization has precipitated a fundamental rupture with the economic orthodoxy that defined the post-2009 era. In early 2025, Berlin enacted a landmark constitutional amendment to the Schuldenbremse (debt brake), exempting defense spending above 1% of GDP from standard borrowing constraints. Together with a €500 billion fund earmarked for defense and infrastructure, this move effectively marked the end of the “black zero” paradigm.

Under current projections, Germany aims to raise defense spending to 3% of GDP by 2027 and 3.5% thereafter, with the defense budget rising from €86 billion in 2025 to €108.2 billion in 2026. This reallocation of fiscal space reflects a recalibration of threat perception: military security is now treated as a precondition for economic stability rather than a discretionary expenditure.

The shift has significant European ramifications. Germany’s trajectory strains the logic of the EU Stability and Growth Pact, even under the European Commission’s “ReArm Europe” framework, which permits limited flexibility—up to 1.5% of GDP above a baseline—for defense spending between 2025 and 2028. Berlin’s projected outlays risk exceeding these parameters, forcing a broader reckoning over whether the EU’s fiscal architecture can accommodate sustained defense investment.

This German U-turn has already catalyzed debate over “productive debt”—borrowing that enhances long-term security and growth potential. Goldman Sachs economists estimate that Germany’s fiscal pivot could lift GDP growth to 0.2% in 2025, 1.5% in 2026, and 2% in 2027, while easing pressure on the European Central Bank to push rates below neutral. Defense spending thus emerges not merely as a security instrument but as a macroeconomic stabilizer in an otherwise stagnating economy.

Diplomatic Complexity: Germany and the Trump Peace Initiative

The intersection of Germany’s remilitarization with transatlantic diplomacy has become increasingly fraught, particularly in relation to Ukraine. Contrary to claims of obstructionism, Germany’s posture is better understood as one of strategic refinement rather than resistance. While Washington prioritizes rapid conflict termination under the logic of transactional burden-sharing, Berlin emphasizes the durability of any post-war order.

The Berlin talks involving President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff, and Chancellor Friedrich Merz crystallized this approach. Zelenskyy described the emerging framework as “a very workable version” of a peace plan, while underscoring that “every single detail matters” to avoid rewarding aggression. European leaders committed to supporting U.S.-led efforts while insisting that security guarantees, sovereignty, and economic reconstruction are integral to wider Euro-Atlantic stability.

German officials have been explicit in their concern that peace arrangements lacking credible enforcement mechanisms would generate strategic vacuums. Chancellor Merz noted that the U.S. proposals presented in Berlin contained “considerable” legal and material guarantees, while emphasizing that territorial questions remain central. Germany has spearheaded discussions on European-led multinational monitoring forces—an initiative designed to satisfy American demands for burden-sharing while preserving European agency.

These efforts unfold amid visible strain. France, Germany, and the UK jointly advanced a 28-point counterproposal aimed at moderating provisions perceived as excessively favorable to Russia. A senior European diplomat characterized the negotiations as “endlessly frustrating,” highlighting the pressure placed on Ukraine and its supporters to engage with demands “impossible for Ukraine to accept.”

Professor Sachs’ systemic analysis provides a sobering interpretive frame. In declining hegemonic systems, he argues, dominant powers “refuse to die,” substituting escalation and coercion for managed transition. The peace process reflects this pathology. U.S. national security strategy increasingly abandons multilateral coordination in favor of explicit national interest maximization, treating allies’ resources and strategic geography as instruments rather than partners. Germany’s insistence on “strategic refinement” thus reflects classic middle-power hedging behavior under hegemonic uncertainty: an effort to reconcile alliance dependence with autonomy, deterrence with restraint, and rearmament with order preservation.

The Polish Partnership: Pragmatism Over Revisionism

Speculation regarding latent German ambitions to revise post-war borders or reclaim former Prussian territories (Ostgebiete) remains firmly within the realm of historical revisionism rather than contemporary policy reality. The 1990 German–Polish Border Treaty irrevocably codified the Oder–Neisse line as Germany’s eastern frontier, a settlement reinforced by subsequent EU and NATO integration. In strategic terms, any revival of territorial revisionism would be not only politically impossible but fundamentally incompatible with Germany’s post-1990 constitutional identity and alliance commitments.

In contrast, the contemporary German–Polish relationship has evolved into one of Europe’s most consequential bilateral security partnerships. Far from latent rivalry, the organizing principle of this relationship is shared vulnerability—particularly regarding the defense of Poland, the Baltic states, and the SuwaĹ‚ki Gap, NATO’s most exposed land corridor linking the Baltic region to the rest of the Alliance. German remilitarization is therefore not oriented eastward as revisionism, but eastward as reinforcement: a structural recognition that Polish sovereignty is inseparable from German security.

This reorientation has taken tangible operational form. In April 2025, Germany formally activated the 45th Panzer Brigade in Lithuania, marking the first permanent forward deployment of a full German brigade abroad since the Second World War. Once fully operational, the brigade is expected to approach 5,000 personnel equipped with Leopard 2 variants and integrated support units, embedding Germany directly into NATO’s forward defense posture. Complementing this, Berlin committed engineering and logistics units for deployment to Poland beginning in April 2026 for a two-year mission supporting Poland’s East Shield defensive network—a multi-billion-dollar fortification system spanning roughly 700 kilometers along Poland’s borders with Russia and Belarus.

Air and air-defense integration has similarly intensified. Germany has deployed Eurofighter aircraft and Bundeswehr personnel to Malbork air base as part of NATO’s enhanced air policing mission, responding to persistent airspace violations and probing activity along Poland’s northeastern frontier. These deployments are not symbolic; they represent a doctrinal shift toward forward defense, deterrence by denial, and rapid escalation control at the point of contact rather than reliance on rear-area reinforcement.

Institutionally, the consolidation of joint German–Polish defense mechanisms has accelerated. By late 2025, standing bilateral defense coordination structures had been institutionalized, complemented by Polish–Lithuanian ministerial frameworks that integrate German planning into regional defense architectures. The strategic logic is explicit: NATO’s contemporary doctrine seeks to prevent territorial loss outright, particularly in the SuwaĹ‚ki Gap, by imposing prohibitive costs on any aggressor during the opening phase of conflict, thereby buying time for alliance-wide mobilization.

In this context, Germany’s eastern deployments represent not a departure from restraint but its transformation—from post-war abstention to post-unipolar responsibility.

Structural Forces and the Path Dependency of Decline

Professor Sachs’ analytical framework, while deliberately provocative, offers a structural diagnosis that conventional policy analysis often avoids. His argument is not that war is inevitable, but that systemic pressures increasingly narrow the space for stable equilibrium. Several interlocking dynamics are central.

Hegemonic Overextension and the Refusal of Decline.

Historical experience suggests that dominant powers rarely manage decline gracefully. Sachs argues that hegemonic systems tend to resist relative loss of power through coercion, escalation, and institutional rigidity rather than negotiated transition. In contemporary terms, American strategic documents increasingly frame global engagement in explicitly competitive and instrumental terms. Alliances are no longer treated primarily as collective security arrangements but as force multipliers for U.S. objectives, generating unease among partners whose autonomy becomes conditional.

Maritime–Continental Rivalry and Eurasian Integration.

Drawing on Mackinder’s Heartland thesis, Sachs situates U.S. grand strategy within a longer tradition of maritime powers seeking to prevent Eurasian consolidation. While the claim that “maximal chaos” is a deliberate objective risks oversimplification, it is analytically defensible to argue that Washington’s strategy prioritizes preventing rival powers—particularly China—from integrating continental resources, supply chains, and energy corridors. Competition over critical minerals, logistics chokepoints, and trade routes increasingly defines this rivalry, with maritime leverage playing a central role.

Alliance Compression and Strategic Convergence Among Non-Western Powers.

Sanctions regimes, financial weaponization, and security pressure have had the unintended effect of accelerating coordination among states previously divided by ideology or history. The gradual convergence of BRICS economies, Iran’s deepening integration into Eurasian trade networks, and expanded non-dollar settlement mechanisms reflect this dynamic. Sachs’ contention is not that such convergence is monolithic or stable, but that Western pressure is catalyzing precisely the continental alignment it seeks to prevent.

Domestic Strain and Externalization of Conflict.


Sachs’ analysis of domestic decline borrows heavily from Spenglerian civilizational theory. While some indicators are contestable, others are empirically observable: demographic contraction, political polarization, declining trust in institutions, and growing reluctance among populations to bear the costs of prolonged external conflict. In such contexts, external crises often function as temporary instruments of internal cohesion—though rarely with durable success.

The Illusion of Escalation Control.


Perhaps the most analytically grounded of Sachs’ warnings concerns escalation. Modern conflicts are consistently launched under assumptions of containment and proportionality, only to expand beyond initial objectives. The belief that limited troop deployments, peacekeeping forces, or calibrated strikes can be cleanly bounded has repeatedly proven false. European debates over selective intervention in Ukraine illustrate this risk: tactical initiatives are often pursued without credible models for escalation termination.

Germany’s Dilemma: Arming Within a Disintegrating Order

Germany’s Zeitenwende unfolds at the intersection of these structural pressures. The contradiction is not ideological but temporal: Germany rebuilds military capacity to preserve an order whose institutional foundations are eroding.

First, German rearmament accelerates precisely as American security guarantees become increasingly conditional. Recent U.S. strategic framing emphasizes transactional burden-sharing and national advantage, introducing uncertainty into long-term alliance planning. For Berlin, this creates a dual imperative: deepen NATO integration while hedging against strategic volatility.

Second, the Ukraine peace process exposes the limits of current arrangements. While claims of Ukrainian collapse must be treated cautiously, it is evident that sustaining the war indefinitely is politically and materially untenable. Germany’s advocacy for European-led security guarantees reflects an attempt to reconcile deterrence with realism—acknowledging that neither outright victory nor unconditional withdrawal offers stability.

Third, Germany confronts internal constraints. Expanding the Bundeswehr to 260,000—or even higher—presupposes social consent and institutional legitimacy. Surveys indicating ambivalence toward military service do not imply defeatism, but they do highlight the gap between strategic ambition and societal readiness. Rearmament without social anchoring risks becoming hollow.

Fourth, the fiscal revolution underpinning the Zeitenwende introduces long-term economic risk. While defense investment may stimulate growth in the short term, sustaining 3–3.5% of GDP in military spending alongside large-scale infrastructure investment will test Germany’s economic model, particularly if broader European stagnation persists.

The Multipolar Transition: Historical Parallels and Contemporary Risks

Sachs’ historical analogy to the pre-1914 period is not predictive but cautionary. Rising powers constrained by outdated institutional orders generate instability not because of intent alone, but because accommodation mechanisms lag structural change. Today, China’s economic weight, Russia’s exclusion from European security architecture, and America’s insistence on primacy recreate analogous tensions—albeit under nuclear conditions that amplify risk.

Potential flashpoints—from Latin America to the Middle East to Eastern Europe—are not isolated theaters but interconnected nodes. The defining feature of the current system is interdependence: escalation in one region rapidly propagates through energy markets, supply chains, and alliance commitments.

Germany’s remilitarization occurs within this environment. Deterrence remains necessary, but it is no longer sufficient.

Conclusion: The Tragic Paradox of Zeitenwende

German defense policy now operates along three consolidated axes:

Remilitarization and Innovation.
Germany has committed unprecedented resources to defense procurement and R&D, narrowing gaps with European peers while remaining structurally dependent on U.S. technological ecosystems. Implementation remains the critical bottleneck.

Transatlantic Mediation.
Berlin positions itself as a stabilizing intermediary—engaged with U.S. initiatives yet committed to European strategic sustainability. This role is increasingly difficult as alliance relations grow more transactional.

Eastern Stabilization.
Germany’s Polish–Baltic orientation represents a genuine strategic realignment, embedding German power within forward defense structures rather than symbolic reassurance.

The paradox is unavoidable: Germany arms itself at peacetime speed while the international order it seeks to defend fragments under systemic pressure. Military preparation may mitigate risk at the margins, but it cannot resolve structural contradictions rooted in hegemonic transition, institutional inertia, and societal fatigue.

As Sachs bluntly observes, the expectation that any agreement could restore the pre-2020 order is illusory. The Zeitenwende unfolds not as a return to stability, but as an adaptation to a world in which stability itself has become provisional.

Whether Germany’s rearmament ultimately proves prudential or tragically insufficient will depend less on procurement figures than on whether multipolar transition can be managed without catastrophe—a question history answers pessimistically, but policy must continue to confront nonetheless.

Germany arms itself while the order it seeks to defend disintegrates.
Whether this constitutes foresight or fatal entanglement may only be judged in retrospect—if the system allows for retrospection at all.

Friday, 19 December 2025

Strategic Intelligence Brief: 2025 Global State of Play


Comprehensive End-of-Year Geostrategic, Socioeconomic, and Technocultural Analysis



I. Regional Strategic Analysis: Geopolitics and Governance


North America: The "Hard Sovereignty" Doctrine

The second Trump administration has enacted the most dramatic recalibration of American foreign policy since the immediate post-Cold War era, fundamentally reordering both Atlantic and Pacific security architectures. By December 2025, the administration has crystallized its vision through the release of its National Security Strategy on December 4th, a document that analysts describe as representing "Civilizational Realism" and "Hard Sovereignty."

The strategy centers U.S. foreign policy on securing strategic advantages, expanding economic leverage and avoiding prolonged military commitments. The Western Hemisphere has been explicitly elevated as the priority theater, with the document calling for restoration of American preeminence through a "Trump Corollary" to the Monroe Doctrine. This includes carrying out military strikes on alleged drug trafficking boats in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean while weighing possible military action in Venezuela.

The administration has formalized its second withdrawal from the Paris Agreement and enacted a $1.1 trillion defense budget focused on "Fortress America" and maritime dominance. However, the National Defense Strategy unveiled in September 2025 represents a historic shift: rather than prioritizing great power competition with Russia and China, it emphasizes domestic and regional missions. Administration officials explicitly stated their overarching goal was to reassert American dominance over the Americas, with a particular focus on Latin America.

Migration has been elevated to the paramount national security threat. The 2025 National Security Strategy describes mass migration as the major external threat to the United States—more than China, Russia, or terrorism. This framing reflects a fundamental ideological reorientation that views demographic change through a civilizational lens, with implications extending far beyond immigration policy to encompass cultural identity and national cohesion.

The administration's economic framework, colloquially termed the "3-3-3" plan (targeting 3% growth, 3% deficit, 3 million extra barrels of oil daily), prioritizes deregulation and energy dominance over international climate commitments. December 2025 has seen the designation of multiple drug cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations, enabling cross-border kinetic operations and marking a shift toward direct military pressure in the hemisphere.

In the Middle East, the administration has pursued aggressive dealmaking while simultaneously declaring the end of the region's dominance over American foreign policy. In June 2025, Trump authorized strikes against Iranian nuclear sites, yet the National Security Strategy maintains that Iran has been "greatly weakened" and the Middle East is "no longer the constant irritant" it once was. A UN Security Council resolution endorsed the administration's Gaza peace plan calling for Hamas disarmament, though implementation remains uncertain as violations continue. The administration's October 2025 Sharm el-Sheikh summit notably excluded Saudi Arabia from top-level negotiations, with Turkey and Qatar now dominating regional mediation.

Europe: The Sovereignty Paradox

Europe confronts 2025 navigating what analysts term "strategic decoupling" from Washington amid unprecedented internal and external pressures. The continent faces a dual challenge: responding to American demands for burden-sharing while defending against what Washington characterizes as civilizational decline.

The Trump administration's National Security Strategy paints European allies as weak and accuses them of facing the prospect of civilizational erasure due to migration policies, declining birthrates, censorship of free speech and suppression of political opposition. The document suggests that if present trends continue, Europe will be "unrecognizable in 20 years or less," raising doubts about whether certain European countries will have economies and militaries strong enough to remain reliable allies.

These extraordinary criticisms catalyzed a historic defense spending commitment. At the June 2025 NATO summit in The Hague, members agreed to spending the equivalent of 5% of annual GDP on defense by 2035, structured as 3.5% for core defense requirements and 1.5% for defense-related infrastructure. All NATO allies are now expected to meet the previous 2% of GDP target in 2025, compared to only three allies in 2014.

EU countries' defense spending reached a record €343 billion in 2024, a 19% increase from 2023. Poland has emerged as NATO's highest defense spender by GDP percentage at nearly 3.8%, with Estonia and Latvia at 3.3% each. The European Defence Agency projects defense investments could reach €381 billion in 2025, bringing the bloc's spending to 2.1% of GDP and exceeding the 2% guideline for the first time. Yet reaching 5% will require an additional €254 billion, bringing total defense expenditure to roughly €635 billion.

For the first time in recorded NATO history, a European ally—Norway—has surpassed the United States in defense spending per capita, symbolizing the depth of Europe's military transformation. However, analysts warn that defense cost inflation often outpaces general inflation, meaning even significant nominal increases may yield modest real capability gains. The risk of wasteful spending proliferating is substantial given supply constraints and limited economies of scale in European defense industries.

The ongoing war in Ukraine remains the defining friction point in transatlantic relations. A fundamental rift has emerged between the Trump administration seeking a rapid settlement and European allies fearing a Russian revanchist precedent. Trump stated he believes talks to end the war in Ukraine are "getting close to something" as Trump envoys plan to meet a Russian delegation in Miami. However, European leaders remain skeptical of any settlement that would allow Russia to retain occupied territories without credible security guarantees for Ukraine.

Internal politics are characterized by what observers call a "Rightward Ratchet," with national-populist governments in multiple member states challenging EU-wide migration and environmental norms. Far-right parties have described the U.S. strategy as "a foreign policy reality check for Europe and particularly for Germany". Poland and France have led a drive for "European Sovereignty," attempting to forge defense and industrial autonomy independent of U.S. guarantees, yet fiscal constraints and political fragmentation continue to limit progress.

China: Manufacturing Superpower 2.0

Beijing has spent 2025 executing a sophisticated strategy of economic insulation from G7 "de-risking" efforts while simultaneously expanding its global commercial footprint. Despite growth moderating from post-pandemic highs, China has demonstrated remarkable resilience and strategic agility.

Goldman Sachs upgraded its forecast for China's 2025 real GDP growth from 4.9% to 5.0%, with even bigger increases for the next two years, driven by expectations of 5-6% annual export growth. China's GDP growth accelerated to 5.4% in Q4 2024, from 4.6% in Q3, boosting annual growth to 5%. While growth has since moderated, with Q2 2025 showing 5.2% year-on-year expansion and Q3 at 4.8%, China continues to outperform initial forecasts.

The key to China's resilience has been its export machine's remarkable pivot. While exports to the United States fell 28.6% year-on-year in November 2025, exports to Africa increased by 27.5% and exports to ASEAN increased 8.2%. This geographic diversification has enabled China to maintain export momentum despite tariff pressures, with December 2024 export growth reaching 10.7% year-on-year as importers front-loaded orders ahead of anticipated tariffs.

China's dominance in the "Green Transition" export market has solidified dramatically in 2025. The country has captured commanding market share in EVs and solar infrastructure across the Global South, positioning these sectors as the vanguard of what analysts term "China Shock 2.0." Unlike the first China Shock, which crowded out labor-intensive, low-value-added manufacturing, this new wave targets tech-intensive, high-value-added sectors. China's growth is coming at the expense of other high-tech producers such as Europe and Japan, with these economies facing particularly acute competitive pressures.

The approval of China's 15th Five-Year Plan in October 2025 signaled Beijing's determination to double down on industrial policy and technological self-reliance. The plan reiterates the goal of reaching moderately developed country status by 2035, implying real annual GDP growth of approximately 4.5% for 2026-2030. Critically, the plan emphasizes gaining global market share in manufacturing over stimulating domestic consumption, despite rhetorical commitments to rebalancing.

Investment contributed a mere 0.91% of GDP growth in 2025 compared to an annual average of 2.1% over the prior decade, revealing the limitations of China's traditional growth model. Property sector weakness continues to drag on domestic demand, and tepid consumption despite government trade-in programs for vehicles and appliances underscores persistent consumer confidence challenges.

Strategically, China has leveraged the U.S. retreat from multilateralism to position itself as the "stable hegemon" at COP30 and through expansion of the BRICS+ framework. A December 2025 Trump statement indicated that the United States would allow NVIDIA to ship its H200 products to approved customers in China, suggesting potential thawing in technology restrictions. In August 2025, Trump and Xi Jinping met at a summit that produced commitments to roll back most tariffs, with a follow-up meeting in London in June establishing a framework including expedited rare-earth export approvals from China and eased advanced technology access from the U.S.

India: The Indispensable Pivot

India has emerged in 2025 as perhaps the primary beneficiary of global realignment, successfully navigating a "multi-aligned" foreign policy that maximizes strategic autonomy while capturing economic opportunities from great power competition.

Maintaining robust growth at approximately 6.5%, New Delhi has attracted substantial "China+1" manufacturing shifts as companies diversify supply chains. The U.S. National Security Strategy singles out India, stating: "We must continue to improve commercial relations with India to encourage New Delhi to contribute to Indo-Pacific security". This reflects Washington's recognition of India's central role in any strategy to counterbalance China in the Indo-Pacific.

India has successfully maintained its strategic balancing act: deepening defense ties with the United States, France, and Japan through mechanisms like the Quad, while simultaneously preserving energy imports from Russia and positioning itself as leader of the "Global South" caucus. This multi-vector diplomacy has enabled India to avoid the zero-sum choices that have constrained other middle powers.

The country's leadership of the Global South narrative has proven particularly effective. While China emphasizes infrastructure through the Belt and Road Initiative, India has championed developing country interests in multilateral forums, positioning itself as a democratic alternative to Beijing's model. This soft power diplomacy complements hard economic gains from manufacturing relocations and infrastructure investments.

Iran and the Persian Gulf: Fragile Equilibrium

The Persian Gulf has witnessed what analysts characterize as a pragmatic "cold peace" in 2025. U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities in June 2025 significantly degraded Iran's nuclear program, yet Tehran continues nuclear hedging while avoiding direct confrontation with either Israel or the United States.

The GCC states, led by Saudi Arabia, have focused intensively on economic diversification through "Vision" projects, accelerating efforts to reduce oil dependence despite—or perhaps because of—the U.S. production surge to over 3 million additional barrels per day. Trump's May 2025 visit to Riyadh and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's November trip to Washington produced announcements of $600 billion in Saudi investments in the United States, AI cooperation, and Nvidia chip purchases, yet the core U.S. demand that Saudi Arabia join the Abraham Accords and recognize Israel went nowhere. Riyadh insisted that Saudi-U.S. relations must stand independently.

This Saudi intransigence has carried costs. Saudi Arabia was conspicuously absent from the October 2025 Sharm el-Sheikh summit where Trump signed the Gaza peace declaration alongside leaders of Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey. Doha and Ankara have consequently expanded their influence in Gaza mediation, Lebanon's Sunni politics, post-Assad Syria, and Iraq—terrain Riyadh once considered its natural sphere.

Iran's late-2025 entry into the Organization of Turkic States and deepening alliance with Azerbaijan have created a new Eurasian corridor bypassing traditional Western maritime routes. This northern orientation reflects Tehran's adaptation to sustained Western pressure, seeking alternative economic and diplomatic pathways that reduce vulnerability to sanctions and isolation.

Africa: Resource Competition and Strategic Marginalization

Africa's strategic position in 2025 reflects the contradictions of great power competition: immense resource value coupled with institutional neglect.

North Africa: Economic volatility in Egypt and Tunisia has been partially mitigated by massive Gulf investment, though both nations remain high-risk zones for climate-driven migration. Egypt's strategic importance as a Gaza mediator has elevated its profile in U.S. Middle East diplomacy, yet structural economic challenges persist despite international support packages.

Sub-Saharan Africa: The G20-Africa agenda has prioritized infrastructure investment, yet the "mineral wars" for cobalt, lithium, and rare earths have intensified dramatically. Local governments increasingly demand higher value-addition—insisting on local processing rather than raw ore exports—leading to mounting friction with G7 mining interests accustomed to extractive arrangements.

The Trump administration's 2025 National Security Strategy gives Africa and the Middle East short shrift, adopting a policy of transactional realism. The U.S. brokered a peace deal between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda, formally signed in Washington on December 4, yet fighting continues in eastern DRC where minerals central to the U.S.-DRC minerals agreement are located.

The NSS ignores two of the most significant developments in U.S.-African relations during 2025: increased tensions with South Africa and Nigeria, the continent's two largest economies. These conflicts risk driving both nations closer to China, influencing other African countries—particularly those without resources of interest to the United States under its transactional approach—toward alternative partnerships.

The ongoing Sudan conflict exemplifies the gap between rhetoric and action. Secretary of State Rubio called for international action to stop weapons flowing to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) responsible for mass killings in Darfur, emphasizing that the U.S. knows which countries are supplying the RSF. The United Arab Emirates is widely accused of being the RSF's main foreign backer, yet the administration has taken no concrete action, reflecting the prioritization of Gulf partnerships over African humanitarian concerns.

Latin America: The Crime-State Nexus

Latin America in 2025 is defined by what observers term "Drug War 2.0." The U.S. designation of major cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations in December 2025 has led to cross-border strikes and a military buildup around Venezuela. Experts describe these operations as "gunboat diplomacy," representing the most aggressive U.S. military posture in the region since the Cold War.

The "Trump Corollary" to the Monroe Doctrine, formally articulated in the National Security Strategy, seeks to deny non-hemispheric competitors the ability to position forces or control strategically vital assets in the Americas. This has translated into a policy of "rewarding and encouraging" governments, political parties, and movements aligned with U.S. principles. Trump has already put this approach into action by publicly backing conservative politicians in Latin America and providing Argentina with a $40 billion bailout under right-wing President Javier Milei.

Brazil's hosting of COP30 in BelĂ©m has highlighted acute tensions between regional environmental protection commitments and the "New Extractivism" demanded by the global energy transition. Critical mineral extraction—essential for batteries, solar panels, and renewable energy infrastructure—requires intensive mining operations that conflict with rainforest preservation. This paradox has no easy resolution and will continue generating friction throughout the hemisphere.

The Ukraine-U.S. reconstruction fund established as part of the Trump-pushed minerals deal approved its asset policies in December 2025 and will begin reviewing investment opportunities in 2026, focusing on critical minerals extraction, energy development, and maritime infrastructure. This signals the administration's transactional approach extending beyond Latin America to other regions offering strategic resources.

II. Conflict Dynamics: Ukraine and the Grinding Attrition

The Russia-Ukraine war as it stands in mid-December 2025 represents a conflict in strategic flux, with territorial dynamics, casualty figures, and diplomatic initiatives all pointing toward a potential—though uncertain—inflection point.

Territorial Control and Military Dynamics

Russian forces have gained 215 square miles of Ukrainian territory in the four weeks from November 18 to December 16, 2025. Since January 1, 2025, Russia has averaged 176 square miles in monthly gains. As of mid-December, Russia occupies approximately 19.2% of Ukrainian territory, totaling roughly 115,966 square kilometers—an area equivalent to Ohio.

However, these aggregate figures mask significant tactical developments that challenge Russian narratives of inexorable advance. Ukraine steadily took back control of almost all of the northern city of Kupiansk after isolating Russian forces within it, belying Russian claims to have seized it. Ukrainian President Zelensky visited the frontline town on December 12, posting video from approximately 1 kilometer from Russian lines, though Putin taunted him to "come inside" if truly in control.

Russian forces were also unable to dislodge Ukrainian defenders from the eastern city of Pokrovsk to back up Moscow's claims of total control. The fortress city, which would be the largest Ukrainian loss since Bakhmut in May 2023, remains contested despite Russian forces establishing presence in multiple neighborhoods.

Human Cost and Military Sustainability

The war's human toll continues mounting at staggering rates. Ukrainian President Zelensky stated that Putin "spends around 30,000 soldiers' lives on the front every month—not wounded, 30,000 killed each month", supported by drone footage. Russian Defense Minister Belousov claimed almost 410,000 Russians volunteered for military service in 2025, translating to 32,800 per month—a figure that barely replaces losses if Zelensky's casualty estimates are accurate.

By December 5, 2025, the death of 6,103 officers of the Russian army and other security agencies had been confirmed, though the proportion of officer deaths among overall casualties has steadily declined since the conflict began. By December 1, 2025, Russian courts had received almost 90,000 claims seeking to have servicemen declared dead or missing, with courts receiving about 2,500 such claims weekly by late autumn.

Casualty estimates vary widely. British intelligence suggests over 1 million Russian casualties including 240,000 killed, while U.S. intelligence estimated more than 750,000 Russian casualties in March 2025. Ukrainian casualties are similarly debated, with estimates ranging from 100,000 killed (Zelensky, April 2025) to 400,000 killed or injured (multiple sources).

Infrastructure Warfare and Energy Crisis

Russia has systematically targeted Ukraine's energy infrastructure throughout 2025, pushing the grid to critical thresholds. Russian strikes since October have pushed Ukraine's grid to the brink, with Kyiv residents facing up to 16 hours daily without power. The strike campaign is assessed to be close to splitting Ukraine's power grid east-west, with eastern regions "at the brink" of blackout.

About 180,000 consumers have been left without electricity across five Ukrainian regions after Russian attacks, with the southern regions of Mykolaiv and Zaporizhia, central regions of Cherkasy and Dnipropetrovsk, and northeastern Sumy particularly impacted. Russia has formed a military brigade equipped with the new Oreshnik hypersonic intermediate-range ballistic missile, which Putin claims is impossible to intercept and has destructive power comparable to nuclear weapons.

Diplomatic Landscape: The Search for Settlement

Russian President Putin stated that Russia had been asked to make compromises on Ukraine during his August 2025 summit with Trump in Alaska and had agreed to some, claiming he had "practically agreed" to Trump's proposals. Putin stressed that "the ball is entirely in the court of our Western opponents," though Russia refuses to drop demands that Ukraine completely withdraw from eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions, including parts Russia has been unable to capture.

Zelensky said he saw no need to change Ukraine's constitution enshrining its aim to become a NATO member state, certainly not because of calls from Russia. However, he suggested Ukraine could compromise on NATO membership if given bilateral security guarantees with protections similar to NATO's Article 5.

Ukraine is facing a foreign aid shortfall of 45-50 billion euros in 2026, with Zelensky warning that if Kyiv does not receive a first tranche of a loan secured by Russian assets by next spring, it will have insufficient resources. European Union leaders have agreed to provide an interest-free loan to Ukraine to meet its military and economic needs for the next two years.

The Wall Street Journal reported in mid-December that multiple senior Trump administration officials assess that Ukraine is losing the war and would lose if fighting continued. This assessment has intensified pressure for negotiations, with Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner meeting Russian delegations and Keith Kellogg, Trump's outgoing Ukraine envoy, stating that a deal is "really, really close."

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz revealed details about a potential European-led multinational force being considered for security guarantees for Ukraine, stating they would secure a demilitarized zone between warring parties and act against Russian incursions, though he emphasized "we're not there yet."

III. Socioeconomics: The New Fragmentation


Trade Architecture: From Multilateralism to Bilateralism

The WTO-led global order has effectively been replaced by what observers term a "patchwork of bilateralism." Trade in 2025 is viewed predominantly through the lens of "National Security Resilience," with the year seeing the highest number of tariff impositions in the post-WWII era.

The Trump administration's approach epitomizes this shift. Rather than negotiating within multilateral frameworks, Washington has pursued individual deals weighted toward extractive arrangements. The National Security Strategy explicitly frames trade policy as a tool for advancing American commercial interests rather than promoting global prosperity or economic integration.

This fragmentation extends beyond tariffs to encompass technology controls, investment screening, and supply chain restructuring. Allied nations increasingly implement their own versions of economic security measures, creating a complex lattice of overlapping restrictions that raises transaction costs and reduces efficiency across global commerce.

The Demographic Divergence

G7 nations confront a "super-ageing" crisis of unprecedented scale. Birth rates have fallen below replacement levels across developed economies, with workforce shortages becoming acute in sectors from healthcare to advanced manufacturing. This has catalyzed a desperate search for technological solutions, particularly "Agentic AI," to fill labor gaps without resorting to immigration—which has become politically toxic in many Western democracies.

Conversely, South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa manage massive "youth bulges" that threaten domestic stability if not met with rapid industrialization and job creation. The global economy thus faces simultaneous challenges of labor scarcity in rich countries and labor surplus in poor ones, with political obstacles preventing the obvious solution of increased migration flows.

This demographic asymmetry is reshaping economic geography. Labor-intensive manufacturing continues shifting to countries with young, affordable workforces, while advanced economies attempt to substitute capital and technology for missing workers. The sustainability of this bifurcated model remains uncertain, particularly as automation advances unevenly across sectors and regions.

Financial System Bifurcation

The BRICS+ framework has evolved in 2025 from rhetorical aspiration to functional counter-pole to G7 financial systems. While the U.S. dollar remains dominant in global trade and reserves, alternative payment mechanisms and currency arrangements have gained traction, particularly in Global South commerce.

China's expansion of yuan-denominated trade settlements, Russia's pivot to non-SWIFT payment systems under sanctions pressure, and collaborative efforts to create alternative international financial infrastructure collectively represent the most serious challenge to dollar hegemony since the Bretton Woods system's establishment. The pace of change should not be overstated—dedollarization remains gradual—but the trend is unmistakable and accelerating.

IV. Technocultural Trends: The Agentic Revolution


The Promise and Reality of Agentic AI

2025 marks the proclaimed transition from "Generative AI" to "Agentic AI"—systems capable of executing complex workflows autonomously with minimal human oversight. The technology sector has aggressively marketed this shift, with predictions that these autonomous agents will "join the workforce" and fundamentally transform productivity.

Nearly nine out of ten survey respondents say their organizations are regularly using AI, though most have not yet embedded these tools deeply enough into their workflows to realize material enterprise-level benefits. The gap between adoption and value creation remains substantial, with most organizations stuck in pilot mode.

IBM and Morning Consult surveyed 1,000 developers building AI applications for enterprise, and 99% said they are exploring or developing AI agents, confirming 2025 as "the year of the agent" in development activity if not yet in deployed impact. However, the survey also revealed a critical constraint: most organizations aren't agent-ready, with the challenge being how to expose the APIs enterprises have today rather than model capabilities.

Agent use is most commonly reported in IT and knowledge management, where agentic use cases such as service-desk management and deep research have quickly developed. By industry, AI agents are most widely reported in technology, media, telecommunications, and healthcare sectors. Yet meaningful enterprise-wide impact remains rare—approximately 6% of survey respondents qualify as "AI high performers" seeing significant value.

The productivity impact has been substantial but uneven. Estimates suggest a 25% productivity boost in "non-degreed" technical roles where AI can handle routine coding, data analysis, and content generation tasks. However, this has been offset by an explosion in AI-driven misinformation, particularly deepfakes, which disrupted three major elections in 2025 and continues eroding trust in digital media.

By 2028, 15% of day-to-day work decisions could be performed by AI agents, and a third of all enterprise software applications are expected to include agentic AI, according to Gartner predictions. Yet third-party studies published throughout 2025 consistently show many organizations remain stuck in pilot mode, struggling to move from experimentation to scaled deployment.

Infrastructure and Trust Deficits

Agentic AI demands a radical reinvention of current infrastructure, with AI workloads requiring massive levels of compute, energy and network capacity. Multi-agent systems, where numerous AI agents communicate and collaborate in real-time to complete complex tasks, place unprecedented demands on data centers. Current architectures designed for conventional applications are too constrained to handle the scale and complexity efficiently.

The trust deficit represents an equally formidable challenge. As multi-agent workflows become pervasive, sophisticated identity validation is needed, and security teams must evolve from being perceived as barriers to adoption to becoming accelerators. Without trust, the promise of agentic AI cannot be fully realized, yet establishing appropriate governance frameworks while maintaining innovation velocity remains an unresolved tension.

The data gap compounds these challenges. Traditional AI model training has relied heavily on vast amounts of human-generated data, but the supply of publicly available data is nearing exhaustion. Privacy concerns are driving enterprises to repatriate data into private clouds, limiting the training corpus available for next-generation models. Synthetic data generation offers partial solutions but introduces new challenges around model collapse and bias amplification.

Human-Machine Synergy: Cultural Adaptation

Cultural norms are shifting toward "Knowledge Synthesis" over "Problem Solving" as the core cognitive skill. In an environment where AI can rapidly generate multiple solution approaches to well-defined problems, the competitive advantage increasingly lies in framing the right questions, synthesizing diverse information sources, and making nuanced judgments about ambiguous situations.

This transition has profound implications for education, workforce development, and organizational design. Traditional emphasis on specialized expertise must be balanced with generalist skills in prompt engineering, output evaluation, and system integration. The most effective human-machine teams are those that consciously design complementary role allocation rather than treating AI as simple automation.

Climate Technology vs. Climate Policy

While the U.S. federal government has retreated from climate goals under the Trump administration's second term, "Climate Tech"—particularly Carbon Capture and Modular Nuclear—has seen record private investment in 2025. This reflects a fundamental shift: climate technology development is increasingly driven by economic competitiveness rather than environmental altruism or regulatory compliance.

The decoupling of climate technology from climate policy creates both opportunities and risks. On the positive side, market-driven innovation may prove more sustainable than policy-dependent subsidies, and international competition in cleantech could accelerate deployment. On the negative side, without coordinated policy frameworks, technology deployment may be inefficient, and critical investments in adaptation infrastructure may be neglected in favor of profitable mitigation technologies.

V. Prospective Predictions: The 2026 Outlook


Geostrategic: The Two-Sphere Crystallization

2026 will likely witness the formalization of what analysts are already terming a "Two-Sphere World." One sphere will be led by the United States and its bilateral partners, focused on security guarantees, deregulation, and transactional relationships. The other will coalesce around China-led institutions emphasizing infrastructure development, alternative financial arrangements, and what Beijing terms "Global South solidarity."

This bifurcation will be neither complete nor stable. Countries like India, Indonesia, and Saudi Arabia will continue pursuing multi-aligned strategies, extracting concessions from both spheres while avoiding exclusive commitment to either. The non-aligned movement's modern iteration will consist not of Cold War-style neutrality but active hedging—participating in multiple overlapping frameworks to maximize flexibility.

The question is not whether spheres will form but whether they will be permeable or rigid. A permeable bifurcation allowing trade and technology flows between spheres, despite political separation, could prove manageable. A rigid separation with minimal cross-sphere interaction would fragment global supply chains catastrophically and risk miscalculation in crisis scenarios.

Economic: The Stagflationary Ripple

A "Stagflationary Ripple" is expected in early 2026 as the cumulative impact of 2025's tariff impositions hits consumer prices across G7 economies. This represents a worst-case scenario for policymakers: simultaneously elevated inflation constraining monetary policy and slowing growth limiting fiscal space.

Central banks will face impossible choices between fighting inflation through rate hikes (risking recession) and supporting growth through accommodation (risking inflation entrenchment). The most likely outcome is a G7-wide shift toward "State Capitalism" to protect domestic industries deemed strategically critical—semiconductors, batteries, rare earths, pharmaceuticals, and defense manufacturing.

This state capitalist turn will be justified through national security rhetoric but will fundamentally represent protectionism and industrial policy. The efficiency costs will be substantial, but the political appeal of "strategic autonomy" will override economic orthodoxy in most major democracies. The resulting subsidy competition could prove enormously wasteful, with taxpayers in multiple countries financing redundant capacity development.

Conflict: Flashpoints and Escalation Risks

The Venezuela-Guyana corridor and the South China Sea will remain the most likely flashpoints for kinetic escalation in 2026. Both involve territorial disputes, resource competition (oil in Venezuela-Guyana, fishing and minerals in the South China Sea), and great power interests.

In Latin America, the "Drone-based Insurgency" that evolved throughout 2025 will likely mature into a major regional security crisis requiring coordinated response. Cartels have demonstrated sophisticated use of commercial drone technology for surveillance, smuggling, and targeted killings. The Trump administration's designation of cartels as terrorist organizations may provide legal justification for intervention, but effective counter-drone capabilities and cross-border cooperation remain inadequate.

The Ukraine conflict trajectory remains the greatest uncertainty. If negotiations produce a settlement freezing current lines with credible security guarantees, European defense spending could stabilize at elevated but sustainable levels while reconstruction investment flows eastward. If negotiations collapse and fighting intensifies, European unity may fracture, defense spending could prove insufficient to deter Russian revanchism, and NATO's Article 5 credibility would face its gravest test since the alliance's founding.

Technocultural: Quantum Awareness and the Security Transition

2026 will be the year of "Quantum Awareness" as the first commercially viable quantum-safe encryption protocols become mandatory for G7 financial institutions. The recognition that quantum computers capable of breaking current encryption standards may arrive within 5-10 years has catalyzed urgent migration efforts.

The "harvest now, decrypt later" threat—adversaries capturing encrypted data today to decrypt once quantum computers become available—has particular resonance for financial services, defense contractors, healthcare systems, and government communications. The National Institute of Standards and Technology finalized post-quantum cryptography standards in August 2024, but implementation across complex enterprise systems remains in early stages.

AI-accelerated hacking compounds this urgency. Machine learning systems can now identify vulnerabilities, craft exploits, and execute attacks at speeds human security teams cannot match. The combination of AI-powered offense and impending quantum-powered decryption creates what some analysts term an "encryption cliff"—a precipitous decline in data security unless defensive measures are deployed rapidly and comprehensively.

The cultural dimension of quantum awareness extends beyond technical implementation to organizational behavior. Security hygiene that seemed adequate for the classical computing era must be fundamentally reconsidered. Data retention policies, zero-trust architectures, and cryptographic agility will shift from best practices to existential necessities.

VI. Emerging Wildcards: Low-Probability, High-Impact Scenarios


The AI Capability Surprise

Throughout 2025, debate has intensified over whether large language models are approaching or hitting capability plateaus. Some researchers suggest diminishing returns from scaling, while others argue breakthrough capabilities emerge unpredictably at sufficient scale. A wildcard for 2026 is a sudden, unexpected capability leap—perhaps in mathematical reasoning, scientific discovery, or strategic planning—that renders current governance frameworks obsolete.

Such a development could trigger immediate calls for pause or regulation from alarmed governments, acceleration from competitive nations fearing strategic disadvantage, and market disruption as entire business models are upended. The geopolitical implications would be profound if one nation or company achieved a decisive lead in advanced AI capabilities.

The Climate Tipping Point Cascade

While gradual climate change is priced into most forecasts, the possibility of cascading tipping points—Amazon rainforest dieback triggering atmospheric changes that destabilize Greenland ice sheet leading to disrupted ocean currents—remains a genuine tail risk. Evidence emerging in 2026 that multiple climate systems are approaching irreversible transitions could force even climate-skeptical governments to reconsider their positions.

The economic shock of such recognition would be immediate: stranded fossil fuel assets, insurance market disruption, mass migration from uninhabitable regions, and agricultural system stress. The geopolitical consequences would be equally severe as resource scarcity, territorial disputes over habitable land, and climate refugee flows overwhelm existing governance structures.

The Financial System Shock

Persistent inflation, elevated interest rates, commercial real estate distress, and emerging market debt vulnerabilities create conditions for a systemic financial crisis. The specific trigger could be a major bank failure, a sovereign debt crisis, a derivatives market dislocation, or contagion from an overleveraged sector. The 2008 playbook of massive central bank intervention and fiscal stimulus may not be available if governments are already fiscally constrained and central banks lack credibility on inflation.

A financial crisis in 2026 would interact dangerously with geopolitical tensions. Economic distress historically correlates with political extremism, scapegoating of external actors, and increased willingness to take risks in international relations. The combination of economic crisis and great power competition could prove particularly volatile.

VII. Strategic Recommendations: Navigating the Two-Sphere World


For Western Democracies

Prioritize Alliance Coherence Over Expansion: NATO's credibility depends on demonstrating that existing commitments are honored before expanding the alliance further. The 5% of GDP defense spending target by 2035 must be met with actual capability development, not wasteful procurement. European strategic autonomy should be pursued as complement to rather than substitute for transatlantic partnership.

Develop Economic Resilience, Not Autarchy: Strategic autonomy in critical technologies and resources is necessary, but attempting comprehensive self-sufficiency would be economically ruinous. Identify genuinely critical dependencies—advanced semiconductors, rare earths, certain pharmaceuticals—and develop redundancy through friend-shoring and strategic reserves. For everything else, maintain open markets.

Invest in Adaptation, Not Just Mitigation: Climate technology development is market-driven and proceeding rapidly. What lacks funding and attention is climate adaptation infrastructure: resilient agriculture, water systems, coastal defenses, and migration management. These investments have immediate economic returns and reduce future crisis vulnerability.

Regulate AI for Safety, Not Control: Agentic AI systems require governance frameworks ensuring safety, transparency, and accountability. However, heavy-handed regulation that stifles innovation risks ceding the field to less scrupulous competitors. The goal should be enabling responsible development while preventing reckless deployment.

For Emerging Economies

Exploit Multi-Alignment Strategically: The two-sphere world creates unprecedented opportunity for countries willing to extract concessions from both sides. India's approach of deepening defense ties with the U.S. while maintaining Russian energy imports and leading the Global South caucus offers a template. The key is maintaining sufficient value to both spheres that neither demands exclusive alignment.

Demand Value-Addition in Resource Deals: The "raw materials trap" of exporting unprocessed minerals while importing finished goods perpetuates underdevelopment. Governments should insist on local processing, technology transfer, and skills development as conditions for resource access. The current tight market for critical minerals provides leverage to demand better terms.

Prioritize Education and Infrastructure: The demographic dividend of young populations becomes reality only with adequate education and infrastructure investment. Countries that fail to provide opportunities for youth bulges risk instability, while those that succeed can capture decades of rapid growth. The difference between South Korea's trajectory and many African economies is fundamentally about human capital investment.

Build Regional Resilience: Relying on great powers for security and prosperity has historically proven unreliable. Regional cooperation mechanisms—whether African Union, ASEAN, or Latin American frameworks—provide insurance against abandonment and exploitation. Strengthening these institutions should be a priority even while engaging with external powers.

For China

Stabilize the Growth Model: The contradiction between prioritizing global market share in manufacturing while claiming to rebalance toward domestic consumption is unsustainable. Other countries will not tolerate export-driven growth that hollows out their industrial bases. China must genuinely boost domestic demand—through social safety nets, healthcare, and pension systems—to maintain growth without triggering defensive reactions.

Manage the Middle-Income Trap: Reaching moderately developed country status by 2035 requires more than industrial policy and technology acquisition. It demands institutional development, rule of law, and productivity growth in services. The current model of state-directed investment produces overcapacity and diminishing returns. Transitioning to innovation-driven growth requires allowing greater private sector dynamism and creative destruction.

Demonstrate Responsible Great Power Behavior: China's claims of representing the Global South and offering an alternative to Western hegemony require demonstration through action. This means restructuring unsustainable Belt and Road debt, providing global public goods, and resolving territorial disputes through negotiation rather than coercion. Abstract rhetoric about multipolarity will not suffice.

VIII. Conclusion: The Age of Strategic Scarcity

The defining characteristic of the emerging international order is strategic scarcity—scarcity of trust, of security, of resources, and of shared purpose. The optimistic assumptions of the post-Cold War era have evaporated. In their place emerges a world where cooperation is transactional, security is self-provided, and competition is zero-sum.

This age of strategic scarcity need not culminate in catastrophe. Managed competition within established guardrails, selective cooperation on shared threats like pandemics and climate change, and preservation of crisis communication channels could enable coexistence despite profound ideological and strategic differences.

The risk is that strategic scarcity becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. If nations assume the worst about adversaries' intentions, arm accordingly, and preemptively defect from cooperative arrangements, the resulting security dilemma will be difficult to escape. The margin for error is narrowing as weapons become more destructive, crises accelerate through social media, and artificial intelligence compresses decision timelines.

The challenge for 2026 and beyond is constructing minimal viable frameworks for coexistence in a world where the ambition of creating comprehensive international order has been abandoned but the necessity of avoiding catastrophic conflict remains. This requires neither naive optimism about convergence nor fatalistic pessimism about inevitable confrontation. It demands clear-eyed assessment of both shared interests and genuine conflicts, coupled with sufficient wisdom to distinguish between them and sufficient restraint to manage the latter without triggering the former.

The trajectory is not predetermined. The choices made in the coming year—about alliance commitments, economic policies, technology governance, and crisis management—will shape whether the two-sphere world proves a stable equilibrium or an unstable transition toward something worse. History will judge whether this generation of leaders possessed the strategic vision to navigate the age of strategic scarcity without descending into an age of strategic catastrophe.