From the ashes of a world war that killed 80 million people and reduced great cities to smoking rubble, America rose like a Titan of Greek legend, unharmed and armed with extraordinary military and economic power, to govern the globe. During four years of combat against the Axis leaders in Berlin and Tokyo that raged across the planet, Americaās wartime commanders ā George Marshall in Washington, Dwight D. Eisenhower in Europe, and Chester Nimitz in the Pacific ā knew that their main strategic objective was to gain control over the vast Eurasian landmass. Whether youāre talking about desert warfare in North Africa, the D-Day landing at Normandy, bloody battles on the Burma-India border, or the island-hopping campaign across the Pacific, the Allied strategy in World War II involved constricting the reach of the Axis powers globally and then wresting that very continent from their grasp.
That past, though seemingly distant, is still shaping the world we live in. Those legendary generals and admirals are, of course, long gone, but the geopolitics they practiced at such a cost still has profound implications. For just as Washington encircled Eurasia to win a great war and global hegemony, so Beijing is now involved in a far less militarized reprise of that reach for global power.
And to be blunt, these days, Chinaās gain is Americaās loss. Every step Beijing takes to consolidate its control over Eurasia simultaneously weakens Washingtonās presence on that strategic continent and so erodes its once formidable global power.
A Cold War Strategy
After four embattled years imbibing lessons about geopolitics with their morning coffee and bourbon nightcaps, Americaās wartime generation of generals and admirals understood, intuitively, how to respond to the future alliance of the two great communist powers in Moscow and Beijing.
In 1948, following his move from the Pentagon to Foggy Bottom, Secretary of State George Marshall launched the $13 billion Marshall Plan to rebuild a war-torn Western Europe, laying the economic foundations for the formation of the NATO alliance just a year later. After a similar move from the wartime Allied headquarters in London to the White House in 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower helped complete a chain of military bastions along Eurasiaās Pacific littoral by signing a series of mutual-security pacts ā with South Korea in 1953, Taiwan in 1954, and Japan in 1960. For the next 70 years, that island chain would serve as the strategic hinge on Washingtonās global power, critical for both the defense of North America and dominance over Eurasia.
After fighting to conquer much of that vast continent during World War II, Americaās postwar leaders certainly knew how to defend their gains. For more than 40 years, their unrelenting efforts to dominate Eurasia assured Washington of an upper hand and, in the end, victory over the Soviet Union in the Cold War. To constrain the communist powers inside that continent, the U.S. ringed its 6,000 miles with 800 military bases, thousands of jet fighters, and three massive naval armadas ā the 6th Fleet in the Atlantic, the 7th Fleet in the Indian Ocean and the Pacific, and, somewhat later, the 5th Fleet in the Persian Gulf.
Thanks to diplomat George Kennan, that strategy gained the name ācontainmentā and, with it, Washington could, in effect, sit back and wait while the Sino-Soviet bloc imploded through diplomatic blunder and military misadventure. After the Beijing-Moscow split of 1962 and Chinaās subsequent collapse into the chaos of Mao Zedongās Cultural Revolution, the Soviet Union tried repeatedly, if unsuccessfully, to break out of its geopolitical isolation ā in the Congo, Cuba, Laos, Egypt, Ethiopia, Angola, and Afghanistan. In the last and most disastrous of those interventions, which Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev came to term āthe bleeding wound,ā the Red Army deployed 110,000 soldiers for nine years of brutal Afghan combat, hemorrhaging money and manpower in ways that would contribute to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
In that heady moment of seeming victory as the sole superpower left on planet Earth, a younger generation of Washington foreign-policy leaders, trained not on battlefields but in think tanks, took little more than a decade to let that unprecedented global power start to slip away. Toward the close of the Cold War era in 1989, Francis Fukuyama, an academic working in the State Departmentās policy planning unit, won instant fame among Washington insiders with his seductive phrase āthe end of history.ā He argued that Americaās liberal world order would soon sweep up all of humanity on an endless tide of capitalist democracy. As he put it in a much-cited essay: āThe triumph of the West, of the Western idea, is evident⦠in the total exhaustion of viable systemic alternatives to Western liberalism⦠seen also in the ineluctable spread of consumerist Western culture.ā
The Invisible Power of Geopolitics
Amid such triumphalist rhetoric, Zbigniew Brzezinski, another academic sobered by more worldly experience, reflected on what he had learned about geopolitics during the Cold War as an adviser to two presidents, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. In his 1997 book The Grand Chessboard, Brzezinski offered the first serious American study of geopolitics in more than half a century. In the process, he warned that the depth of U.S. global hegemony, even at this peak of unipolar power, was inherently āshallow.ā
For the United States and, he added, every major power of the past 500 years, Eurasia, home to 75% of the worldās population and productivity, was always āthe chief geopolitical prize.ā To perpetuate its āpreponderance on the Eurasian continentā and so preserve its global power, Washington would, he warned, have to counter three threats: āthe expulsion of America from its offshore basesā along the Pacific littoral; ejection from its āperch on the western peripheryā of the continent provided by NATO; and finally, the formation of āan assertive single entityā in the sprawling center of Eurasia.
Arguing for Eurasiaās continued post-Cold War centrality, Brzezinski drew heavily on the work of a long-forgotten British academic, Sir Halford Mackinder. In a 1904 essay that sparked the modern study of geopolitics, Mackinder observed that, for the past 500 years, European imperial powers had dominated Eurasia from the sea, but the construction of trans-continental railroads was shifting the locus of control to its vast interior āheartland.ā In 1919, in the wake of World War I, he also argued that Eurasia, along with Africa, formed a massive āworld islandā and offered this bold geopolitical formula: āWho rules the Heartland commands the World Island; Who rules the World Island commands the World.ā Clearly, Mackinder was about 100 years premature in his predictions.
But today, by combining Mackinderās geopolitical theory with Brzezinskiās gloss on global politics, itās possible to discern, in the confusion of this moment, some potential long-term trends. Imagine Mackinder-style geopolitics as a deep substrate that shapes more ephemeral political events, much the way the slow grinding of the planetās tectonic plates becomes visible when volcanic eruptions break through the earthās surface. Now, letās try to imagine what all this means in terms of international geopolitics today.
Chinaās Geopolitical Gambit
In the decades since the Cold Warās close, Chinaās increasing control over Eurasia clearly represents a fundamental change in that continentās geopolitics. Convinced that Beijing would play the global game by U.S. rules, Washingtonās foreign policy establishment made a major strategic miscalculation in 2001 by admitting it to the World Trade Organization (WTO). āAcross the ideological spectrum, we in the U.S. foreign policy community,ā confessed two former members of the Obama administration, āshared the underlying belief that U.S. power and hegemony could readily mold China to the United Statesā liking⦠All sides of the policy debate erred.ā In little more than a decade after it joined the WTO, Beijingās annual exports to the U.S. grew nearly five-fold and its foreign currency reserves soared from just $200 billion to an unprecedented $4 trillion by 2013.
In 2013, drawing on those vast cash reserves, Chinaās new president, Xi Jinping, launched a trillion-dollar infrastructure initiative to transform Eurasia into a unified market. As a steel grid of rails and petroleum pipelines began crisscrossing the continent, China ringed the tri-continental world island with a chain of 40 commercial ports ā from Sri Lanka in the Indian Ocean, around Africaās coast, to Europe from Piraeus, Greece, to Hamburg, Germany. In launching what soon became historyās largest development project, 10 times the size of the Marshall Plan, Xi is consolidating Beijingās geopolitical dominance over Eurasia, while fulfilling Brzezinskiās fear of the rise of āan assertive single entityā in Central Asia.
Unlike the U.S., China hasnāt spent significant effort establishing military bases. While Washington still maintains some 750 of them in 80 nations, Beijing has just one military base in Djibouti on the east African coast, a signals intercept post on Myanmarās Coco Islands in the Bay of Bengal, a compact installation in eastern Tajikistan, and half a dozen small outposts in the South China Sea.
Moreover, while Beijing was focused on building Eurasian infrastructure, Washington was fighting two disastrous wars in Afghanistan and Iraq in a strategically inept bid to dominate the Middle East and its oil reserves (just as the world was beginning to transition away from petroleum to renewable energy). In contrast, Beijing has concentrated on the slow, stealthy accretion of investments and influence across Eurasia from the South China Sea to the North Sea. By changing the continentās underlying geopolitics through this commercial integration, itās winning a level of control not seen in the last thousand years, while unleashing powerful forces for political change.
Tectonic Shifts Shake U.S. Power
After a decade of Beijingās relentless economic expansion across Eurasia, the tectonic shifts in that continentās geopolitical substrate have begun to manifest themselves in a series of diplomatic eruptions, each erasing another aspect of U.S. influence. Four of the more recent ones might seem, at first glance, unrelated but are all driven by the relentless force of geopolitical change.
First came the sudden, unexpected collapse of the U.S. position in Afghanistan, forcing Washington to end its 20-year occupation in August 2021 with a humiliating withdrawal. In a slow, stealthy geopolitical squeeze play, Beijing had signed massive development deals with all the surrounding Central Asian nations, leaving American troops isolated there. To provide critical air support for its infantry, U.S. jet fighters were often forced to fly 2,000 miles from their nearest base in the Persian Gulf ā an unsustainable long-term situation and unsafe for troops on the ground. As the U.S.-trained Afghan Army collapsed and Taliban guerrillas drove into Kabul atop captured Humvees, the chaotic U.S. retreat in defeat became unavoidable.
Just six months later in February 2022, President Vladimir Putin massed an armada of armored vehicles loaded with 200,000 troops on Ukraineās border. If Putin is to be believed, his āspecial military operationā was to be a bid to undermine NATOās influence and weaken the Western alliance ā one of Brzezinskiās conditions for the U.S. eviction from Eurasia.
But first Putin visited Beijing to court President Xiās support, a seemingly tall order given Chinaās decades of lucrative trade with the United States, worth a mind-boggling $500 billion in 2021. Yet Putin scored a joint declaration that the two nationsā relations were āsuperior to political and military alliances of the Cold War eraā and a denunciation of āthe further expansion of NATO.ā
As it happened, Putin did so at a perilous price. Instead of attacking Ukraine in frozen February when his tanks could have maneuvered off-road on their way to the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, he had to wait out Beijingās Winter Olympics. So, Russian troops invaded instead in muddy March, leaving his armored vehicles stuck in a 40-mile traffic jam on a single highway where the Ukrainians readily destroyed more than 1,000 tanks. Facing diplomatic isolation and European trade embargos as his defeated invasion degenerated into a set of vengeful massacres, Moscow shifted much of its exports to China. That quickly raised bilateral trade by 30% to an all-time high, while reducing Russia to but another piece on Beijingās geopolitical chessboard.
Then, just last month, Washington found itself diplomatically marginalized by an utterly unexpected resolution of the sectarian divide that had long defined the politics of the Middle East. After signing a $400-billion infrastructure deal with Iran and making Saudi Arabia its top oil supplier, Beijing was well positioned to broker a major diplomatic rapprochement between those bitter regional rivals, Shia Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia. Within weeks, the foreign ministers of the two nations sealed the deal with a deeply symbolic voyage to Beijing ā a bittersweet reminder of the days not long ago when Arab diplomats paid court in Washington.
Finally, the Biden administration was stunned this month when Europeās preeminent leader, Emmanuel Macron of France, visited Beijing for a series of intimate tĆŖte-Ć -tĆŖte chats with Chinaās President Xi. At the close of that extraordinary journey, which won French companies billions in lucrative contracts, Macron announced āa global strategic partnership with Chinaā and promised he would not ātake our cue from the U.S. agendaā over Taiwan. A spokesman for the ĆlysĆ©e Palace quickly released a pro forma clarification that āthe United States is our ally, with shared values.ā Even so, Macronās Beijing declaration reflected both his own long-term vision of the European Union as an independent strategic player and that blocās ever-closer economic ties to China
The Future of Geopolitical Power
Projecting such political trends a decade into the future, Taiwanās fate would seem, at best, uncertain. Instead of the āshock and aweā of aerial bombardments, Washingtonās default mode of diplomatic discourse in this century, Beijing prefers stealthy, sedulous geopolitical pressure. In building its island bases in the South China Sea, for example, it inched forward incrementally ā first dredging, then building structures, next runways, and finally emplacing anti-aircraft missiles ā in the process avoiding any confrontation over its functional capture of an entire sea.
Lest we forget, Beijing has built its formidable economic-political-military power in little more than a decade. If its strength continues to increase inside Eurasiaās geopolitical substrate at even a fraction of that head-spinning pace for another decade, it may be able to execute a deft geopolitical squeeze-play on Taiwan like the one that drove the U.S. out of Afghanistan. Whether from a customs embargo, incessant naval patrols, or some other form of pressure, Taiwan might just fall quietly into Beijingās grasp.
Should such a geopolitical gambit prevail, the U.S. strategic frontier along the Pacific littoral would be broken, possibly pushing its Navy back to a āsecond island chainā from Japan to Guam ā the last of Brzezinskiās criteria for the true waning of U.S. global power. In that event, Washingtonās leaders could once again find themselves sitting on the proverbial diplomatic and economic sidelines, wondering how it all happened.
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