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Global power shifts rarely begin with a single decision. They emerge from accumulated choices, domestic pressures, and inherited assumptions about how power should be exercised. What this conversation exposes is not simply a moment of turbulence, but a deeper transition away from the post–Cold War order toward a far more fragmented and regionalised system. And as Dr Sarah 'Sally' Paine argues in this part 2 of 3 at the centre of this shift is a changing American strategic outlook. Trump’s vision reflects a distinctly continentalist logic: sceptical of globalism, dismissive of international law, and more comfortable with spheres of influence than multilateral constraint. This is not just a foreign-policy adjustment but a philosophical one. It assumes that power is best exercised through dominance and leverage rather than rules, institutions, or long-term alliance management. That strategic turn is inseparable from America’s internal condition. Domestic violence, political polarisation, and social cruelty are not side issues; they shape leadership, risk perception, and decision-making. A society struggling with internal cohesion is more prone to miscalculation abroad, particularly when force is normalised at home and restraint is seen as weakness. Leadership, in this sense, reflects the stresses and values of the society that produces it. Russia’s trajectory fits uneasily into this landscape. Its growing dependence on China is less a strategic masterstroke than a symptom of long-term economic and institutional decay. As Moscow leans further into Beijing’s orbit, it sacrifices autonomy in exchange for survival. The uncertainty surrounding a post-Putin Russia only compounds this risk, raising the possibility of fragmentation rather than renewal — with destabilising consequences well beyond its borders. Meanwhile, the United States faces its own structural contradictions. Military spending continues to rise even as public debt balloons, narrowing the margin for strategic error. History matters here. Leadership decisions do not occur in a vacuum; they are shaped by past commitments, unresolved failures, and the cumulative erosion of credibility. Ignoring that context leads to policies that feel bold in the short term but brittle over time. What ultimately emerges is a picture of systemic strain. The decline of international law, the retreat into regional power blocs, and the normalisation of coercion all feed into one another. 👉 Let me do the overthinking for you. Support me on Patreon: / theglobalgambit ✍️ Get my newsletter: https://pyotrskurzin.substack.com/. Because the world’s a mess, and someone needs to mock it intelligently. ☕ KEEP ME CAFFINATED ☕ https://www.buymeacoffee.com/thegloba... ✨ LETS CONNECT ✨ / pkurzin / pyotrsfootprints https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... https://bsky.app/profile/pyotrkurzin.... 🚨 YOUTUBE MEMBERSHIP 🚨 / @theglobalgambit #ukraine #russia #usa #internationalrelations #geopolitics #nato