Analysis: The end of the world order as we know it
The era of America the superpower is being tested in new ways across the globe.
Exactly 30 years after the fall of the Soviet Union, Russia is maneuvering to encroach further into Ukraine, one of its former republics. A post-Soviet growth of NATO is Russian President Vladimir Putin’s prey.
Western Europe
American influence needs buttressing. To unify NATO countries against Russia, the US is also playing the role of energy broker, seeking guarantees of fuel from the Middle East and Asia to blunt Russia’s leverage as a top supplier of natural gas to Germany.
Asia
Middle East
The American role
All of these situations are years in the making, but the emerging question is what role the US will play going forward.
The standoff over Ukraine suggests US opponents sense weakness and see an opening now.
He adds: “Despite Biden’s assurances that ‘America is Back,’ the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan last year raised questions about US competence and commitment. US adversaries know Americans are exhausted by 20 years of war abroad, a factor that may lead some to calculate that Washington could waver on its strategic obligations for political reasons.”
The Putin factor
Putin is directly or indirectly involved in most of these issues — from Ukraine to Syria to Asia.
She writes, “As he might put it: ‘Goodbye, America. Don’t let the door hit you on the way out.’ “
Putin senses American power is ebbing, according to Hill. He “believes that the United States is currently in the same predicament as Russia was after the Soviet collapse: grievously weakened at home and in retreat abroad.”
The Ukraine standoff, she writes, must be met by strength from the US since it will reverberate around the world.
She argues that in addition to challenging NATO, Putin’s aggression in Ukraine would threaten “the entire U.N. system and imperil the arrangements that have guaranteed member states’ sovereignty since World War II — akin to the Iraq invasion of Kuwait in 1990, but on an even bigger scale.”
The West is not entirely united on Russia
For all the geopolitical stakes, it is Putin’s economic leverage that has slowed European unity against his actions.
Germany has not vowed to arm Ukraine like other Western democracies. It has been slow to include the pipeline in conversations about sanctions against Russia.
“Given that Russia’s aim is to split everybody, if they’re seeking to break apart unity in the European Union and in NATO, this pipeline has been a wonderful vessel,” Kristine Berzina, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, told Kottasová.
CLARIFICATION: This story has been updated to clarify the location of Chinese planes near Taiwan.