You might be interested in Thomas P. M. Barnett’s new piece at Politico. In the piece Dr. Barnett finds a connecting thread in President-Elect Trump’s remarks on Greenland, Canada, and Panama. Here’s a snippet:
Three key trends animate the globe right now: (a) an East-West decoupling dynamic, (b) a re-regionalization imperative along North-South lines that brings “near-shoring” production close to home markets, and (c) a growing superpower clash animating all these “races” — namely, adapting to climate change, winning the energy transition, achieving AI supremacy, etc.
Trump, love him or loath him, sees just enough of this world and the fear it generates to know the right plan of attack.
Trump’s approach to international affairs reflects Americans’ judgment that we are done building a world order — which we’ve overseen from 1954 to 2008 —and now must vigorously embrace an aggressively competitive approach to this multipolar world; in other words, be less the generous market-maker and more the selfish market-player.
I haven’t followed Dr. Barnett much since reading his book, The Pentagon’s New Map. My remarks on it are in this twenty year old post. I think that my observations have aged better than his.
Quite a bit has changed over that twenty years. Russia, clearly, is no longer “New Core” to use Dr. Barnett’s terminology. Or is there a Core 2? Is China still “New Core”? I think the slug provided by Politico is notable:
Do you want a future in which Canada defects to the EU, Russia rules the Arctic and China runs Latin America? That’s the default outcome of non-action.