Researches about Ukraine

Who Gets a Seat at the Multipolar Table?

Ron Paul Institute

The unipolar club is closed. The United States no longer holds the only key. A new table is being set in global politics, and the question isn’t whether the world is becoming multipolar. It aleady is. The question is: who actually gets a seat? Not who is invited. Not who is hoped for. Who earns it.

For decades, there was no table. There was only a throne. The United States sat alone at the head of the global order. Everyone else stood below – either as vassals secured by American protection or as enemies targeted by American power. There were no peers, only subjects and adversaries. But that hierarchy is crumbling. Look at the Philippines. For decades, a treaty ally, a strategic outpost in the American empire. Now, in light of developments in the Persian Gulf, Manila is in direct talks with Beijing to co-develop gas fields in the South China Sea. This isn’t hedging. It’s a recognition that the throne is, if not vacant, certainly vacillating. When a vassal starts negotiating with the hegemon’s rival over disputed territory, it’s not because the protection is “insufficient.” It’s because the hegemon can no longer fully enforce the hierarchy.

The lesson is being written …read more

Source:: Ron Paul Institute

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