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China’s Diplomacy: 2025 Review and 2026 Outlook

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On the whole, the year 2025 has witnessed a volatile international landscape and extraordinary diplomacy practiced by China. The volatility of the international situation is manifested in the spillover of geopolitical conflicts, fluctuations in the economic and financial sectors, dysfunction in rule-based governance, escalating technological competition, and the overlapping of non-traditional risks. The core of such uncertainties lies in the fact that the old international order is unsustainable while a new one has yet to take shape. The extraordinariness of China’s diplomacy is reflected in its sustained economic development amid global turbulence and transformation, along with a more proactive and assertive foreign policy. This has fostered a positive cycle of mutual empowerment between development and diplomacy, enabling China to emerge as a defender, builder and contributor to the current international order.

A. Proposing an Initiative–the Global Governance Initiative (GGI)

On September 1, 2025, General Secretary Xi Jinping put forward the Global Governance Initiative (GGI) at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit, offering an in-depth elaboration on China’s vision of global governance for the new era. As another major global initiative following the Global Development Initiative (GDI), the Global Security Initiative (GSI), and the Global Civilization Initiative (GCI), it demonstrates that as a responsible major country, China is not only committed to participating in global governance but also taking a leading role in advancing it, so as to promote the building of a community with a shared future for mankind.

Since the advent of the new era, President Xi Jinping has put forward a series of significant concepts and notions. Nevertheless, for Chinese scholars, there remains a need for in-depth research and summarization to understand these concepts and clarify the connections between them. To draw an analogy: if the “Chinese Dream” serves as the overarching goal, “peaceful development” as the pathway, the three major global initiatives as crucial strategic tools, the “new type of major-country relations” as China’s vision for the desired international relations, and the “community with a shared future for mankind” as China’s blueprint for the ideal world, then the “Global Governance Initiative” not only acts as a vital strategic tool for China’s diplomacy but also embodies China’s vision for the desired international order, which is based on the following principles: adherence to sovereign equality, abidance by international rule of law, practice of multilateralism, advocacy of a people-centered approach, and focus on action orientation.

B. Hosting Two Major Home Ground Diplomacy Events–the SCO Summit and the September 3rd Military Parade

First, hosting the SCO Summit in Tianjin. The significance of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) is not merely a political platform distinct from Western blocs, but an important cornerstone for the future integration of Eurasia.

  1. Though initially established as a regional security organization, the SCO has now evolved into a pivotal cross-regional platform that coordinates regional and global affairs spanning security, economy, culture and other fields.
  2. The prior accession of Belarus has enabled the SCO to further expand its reach into Europe, while the earlier membership of India, Iran and Pakistan has solidified the organization’s strong standing in South Asia.
  3. In addition, a host of countries including Turkey, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the Maldives have expressed their aspiration to join the SCO, which fully attests to the organization’s appeal and promising prospects.
  4. Most importantly, the SCO is one of the few international organizations where China (with Russia) holds sufficient discourse power, serving as a reliable and crucial lever for China (with Russia) to advance the building of a global order.

Second, the September 3rd Military Parade stood as China’s most significant home ground diplomacy event in 2025. It had to fulfill two criteria of excellence: first, a spectacular display in the square–a goal well within China’s capacity; second, a compelling showcase from the rostrum–a task falling under the purview of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Success in this regard would serve as a powerful endorsement and rallying call for China. Without meeting these two requirements, it would be impossible to fully demonstrate the significance of China’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression to the global fight against fascism.

Despite obstruction from the United States and Japan, the event was still attended by leaders, heads of government and heads of international organizations from 26 countries, with the participants representing a broad cross-section of the international community. The two dimensions of excellence achieved by the parade not only bolstered national cohesion at home, but also elevated China’s international influence abroad, while simultaneously enhancing China’s strategic deterrence. Through the parade, China identified who its friends and foes are–all those who came to Beijing are friends.

 C. Properly Managing Three Major Bilateral Relationships–China-U.S., China-Russia and China-EU Relations

The year 2025 saw China-U.S. relations experience violent storms. In April, the Trump administration imposed exorbitant tariffs on more than 100 countries and regions around the world, including China, under the pretext of “reciprocity”. At the end of September, it further escalated export controls against China. These two moves both triggered resolute countermeasures from the Chinese side. However, each of the two rounds of volatility lasted only about a month. The economic and trade consultations held in Geneva in May and the meeting between the two heads of state in Busan, South Korea at the end of October drove a temporary détente, and the speed at which bilateral relations returned to stability was unprecedented. With the release of the U.S.’s latest National Security Strategy, the U.S. has begun to regard China as an equal competitor. It is expected that the heads of state of China and the U.S. will meet on multiple occasions in 2026, which will surely provide fundamental guidance and strong impetus for the two countries to explore a sound path of coexistence in the new era.

In 2025, China-Russia relations forged ahead against all odds and scaled new heights. Marking the 80th anniversary of the victories of the Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, the Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War and the World Anti-Fascist War, President Xi Jinping and President Vladimir Putin exchanged visits within the year, attending the 80th-anniversary commemorative events in each other’s countries respectively. The two countries intensified coordination on strategic issues and jointly safeguarded the post-WWII international order. On the Taiwan question, Russia firmly upheld China’s propositions. Regarding the Russia-Ukraine conflict, China welcomed positive progress toward a political settlement of the Ukraine crisis, stood ready to maintain communication with Russia, implement the important common understandings reached by the two heads of state, and make unremitting efforts together to uphold regional and global peace and stability. Besides, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the BRICS cooperation mechanism serve as crucial platforms for China and Russia to conduct comprehensive strategic coordination, advocate multilateralism, strengthen practical cooperation, and enhance solidarity among the Global South.

China attaches great importance to Europe’s role within the quadrilateral framework of China, the United States, Russia and Europe. The year 2025 marks the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and the European Union. Since the start of this year, China-EU interactions have been frequent, with high-level exchanges, economic and trade cooperation, and people-to-people exchanges witnessing a continuous upsurge. As the EU’s second-largest trading partner and vice versa, China has seen the mutual importance of bilateral trade further highlighted.

At present, the EU is confronted with a host of difficulties and severe challenges. Domestically, populism continues to gain ground and protectionism keeps rearing its head, making it increasingly difficult for governments to govern. Externally, the protracted Russia-Ukraine and Palestine-Israel conflicts have led to a worsening security environment, while the United States’ sabotage of global rules has resulted in constant trade frictions between Europe and the US. The EU needs to have a clearer understanding of this: China is not the creator of the EU’s problems, but a force that the EU can draw on to address the aforementioned difficulties and challenges. China’s cooperation is indispensable for Europe’s economic development–particularly its green transition–as well as for Europe to achieve strategic autonomy, uphold multilateralism and strengthen global governance.

D. President Xi Undertakes Four Overseas Visits, with Head-of-State Diplomacy Playing an Increasingly Prominent Role

From April 8 to 9, 2025, the Central Conference on Work Related to Neighboring Countries was held in Beijing, highlighting the pivotal role of neighboring countries in China’s diplomacy. Subsequently, from April 14 to 18, 2025, President Xi Jinping paid state visits to Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia at their invitation. In May, he made a state visit to Russia and attended the celebrations marking the 80th anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War of the Soviet Union. In June, he traveled to Astana, Kazakhstan to participate in the Second China-Central Asia Summit. From October 30 to November 1, he visited the Republic of Korea to attend the 32nd APEC Economic Leaders’ Informal Meeting and conducted a state visit to the country. Recently, political instability has emerged in some of China’s neighboring countries, which has directly hindered the smooth advancement of the Belt and Road Initiative in South and Southeast Asia. To counter and break the United States’ attempts to divide China and its neighboring countries, China should step up efforts to mediate disputes among neighboring states and further deepen its relations with them.

E. The Evolving Trend of the Current International Landscape

A distinct objective trend is emerging in the trilateral relations among major powers: a shift away from the traditional balance of power among established powers toward greater reliance on countries of the Global South. The current international landscape is defined by three key blocs: first, the Western bloc led by the United States; second, the resistance bloc spearheaded by Russia; and third, the Global South, with China included, which adheres to a strategic stance of non-alignment, non-partisanship and independent peaceful development. These three sides form a clear tripartite balance of power, while various multi-party configurations—such as China-U.S.-Russia, China-EU-Russia and China-U.S.-E—directly or indirectly drive the evolution of the aforementioned core trilateral framework.

Against this backdrop, three distinct trends in the current international landscape can be identified: The U.S. policy of “allying with Russia to contain China” is moving toward failure, and Russia’s “Look East” trend has become increasingly pronounced.

Emerging and developing countries have emerged as a pivotal force shaping the trajectory of the international landscape. Despite Trump’s return to power, the room for improvement in U.S.-Russia relations remains limited, and the contradictions between Russia and the EU are still acute.

F. Challenges Confronting China’s Diplomacy

China has always adhered to an independent foreign policy, with its overall diplomatic framework underpinned by the principle that “major powers are the key, neighboring countries a priority, developing countries the foundation, and multilateral platforms an important arena”. However, China’s relations with Western countries, particularly the United States, are currently characterized by strategic competition—a situation that has emerged as one of the most significant challenges facing China’s diplomacy.

The key to addressing this challenge lies in China assuming greater international responsibilities and enabling countries around the world to recognize the rationality of China’s system. This is already, and should continue to be, reflected in China’s responses to global crises. Looking across the globe, Europe has been re-tethered to the U.S. chariot by the Russia-Ukraine conflict; Russia is preoccupied with its own affairs; Japan, South Korea, Australia and the Philippines lean on the U.S. to contain China; India plays both sides among major powers; Latin America is geographically distant from China; Africa largely represents a defensive front for China; and the situation in the Middle East remains intricate and volatile. Under this background, the proposal of the Global Governance Initiative signifies that we are committed not only to China’s own peace and development, but also to putting forward a long-term international strategic vision with a broader global perspective to promote peace and development for all countries in the world.

G. Expectations for China-Middle East Relations in 2026

Next year will be a landmark year for China-Middle East relations. The major home ground diplomacy events will include the Second China-Arab States Summit, the China-Saudi Arabia Summit, the 55th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and Turkey, the 70th anniversary of China-Egypt diplomatic ties, the 10th anniversary of the establishment of the comprehensive strategic partnership between China and Saudi Arabia, as well as the 10th anniversary of China-Iran comprehensive strategic partnership.

It is anticipated that China will further engage actively in Middle Eastern regional affairs. By participating in addressing regional issues in the Middle East, China can better accumulate experience in governing and managing international conflicts in this process, and also notably elevate its status as a major power amid such complex geopolitical maneuvering. The success of China’s Middle East policy will serve as compelling evidence of China’s major-power diplomacy advancing from the periphery to the center of the world stage.

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NATO as the apparatus of aggression and occupation of US imperialism

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Contrary to what is written in its founding charter and press releases, or what its proponents claim, NATO is no ordinary defense and security organization. It is far more than that. It is a multidimensional, multifaceted organization driven by distinct ideological, political-economic, and class-based preferences. Moreover, as an organization born in the early stages of the Cold War, while its primary objective was ostensibly defined as “opposing the USSR and communism,” its actual function went far beyond this: it served as a mechanism to keep alliance members aligned with and under the control of the United States. Through NATO, the US has established immense influence not only over the defense, security, and foreign policies of member states, but also over their domestic politics, economic policies, educational institutions, universities, academia, think tanks, trade unions, and cultural industries.

As the apparatus of aggression and occupation of US imperialism, NATO launched its first out-of-area military operation in the mid-1990s in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Balkans. This was followed by the intervention in Kosovo in 1999. In the Gulf War of 1990–1991, during the US assault on Iraq, NATO was not directly involved as an alliance or a corporate entity. Instead, there was a US-led coalition that included numerous NATO members. At the time, NATO provided air defense systems to Türkiye but did not launch a direct military attack on Iraq.

In those years, with less than a decade having passed since the end of the Cold War in 1991, liberals and neoliberals alike were busy extolling the virtues of a single-centered, monocentric world order (note: not a “unipolar” world order, as a “pole” logically requires at least two opposites; to call it unipolar is incorrect both linguistically and logically). A tempest of liberalism, capitalism, postmodernism, globalization, and the “New World Order” was sweeping the globe. The United States had triumphed. The USSR had dissolved. The Warsaw Pact had collapsed. The Eastern Bloc had been consigned to history. The Berlin Wall had fallen. Socialism and communism had been defeated.

Under those circumstances, since NATO’s raison d’être had ceased to exist, it should logically have been consigned to history as well. Its utility was being questioned; people were asking whom it would protect, and against whom. Consequently, there was an active search for an enemy—or enemies—for NATO. And indeed, they were found.

Weapons of mass destruction and weapons of mass persuasion

NATO—which stood idly by, biding its time and waiting for the right conditions while Yugoslavia was being torn apart, its people massacred, and ethnic cleansing and mass rapes were being carried out—finally mobilized at the exact moment and under the specific conditions dictated by US imperialism, delivering a clear message to the world. It announced to the globe that its mandate now encompassed missions such as “peacebuilding, peacekeeping, and combating radical movements and terrorism.” This, of course, aligned seamlessly with the rhetoric of “human rights, freedom, democracy, and the civilized world” championed by the United States as NATO’s founding leader. For the United States cast itself as the guardian of these values and concepts; yet in their name, and hiding behind them, it attacked, bombed, and occupied other nations. It would go so far as to first instigate disputes and conflicts in target nations, lay the groundwork for ethnic, religious, and sectarian strife, actively encourage and provoke these clashes, and then proceed to occupy those countries under the pretext of resolving these very problems and restoring stability.

And there were millions of people across the world who believed these American lies. In particular, the US media, along with global outlets, academics, non-governmental organizations, and think tanks supported by Washington, operated virtually as weapons of mass persuasion, designed to convince and deceive the public.

The United States grew so arrogant in this policy that US Presidents began to declare this mission to be far more than a mere political duty—it was, they claimed, a religious, divine, and moral responsibility. The US peddled this falsehood in Iraq, as it did in Yugoslavia. As Yugoslavia was disintegrating—or being disintegrated—NATO sought to project an image and send a message that, as an alliance whose sole Muslim member was Türkiye, it was defending Muslim Bosniaks and Kosovars against Christian Serbs, thereby shielding the righteous and oppressed from the unjust and tyrannical.

The collapse of the Atlantic system

Years have passed. The global balance of power has shifted. The imperialist dominance and hegemonic capacity of the United States have eroded and continue to decay. Russia, particularly after Putin took power, staged a rapid recovery starting in the 2000s. It consolidated its influence, beginning with its near abroad. China, alongside its economic prowess, expanded its political, military, scientific, and technological power, emerging as the primary competitor and most worrisome adversary of the United States. Within the Atlantic system and the Western alliance—whose rules and institutions were established by the US itself—deep-seated divisions have emerged, running parallel to its fragmentation and loss of power. Under these conditions, the United States is both failing to manage its own deep internal fault lines and socio-class contradictions, and experiencing major friction with its allies. Its intent to reduce Canada to a mere province, its ambition to annex Danish-administered Greenland, its barbarism in Venezuela and Palestine, its joint aggression with Israel against Iran, and its threats directed at Cuba must all be interpreted through this lens.

In the past, an imperialist power would at least superficially fabricate lies to rationalize, justify, and legitimize its invasions, aggression, plunder, and barbarism. For instance, when the United States invaded Afghanistan in 2001, immediately following the September 11 attacks, it cited the presence of Osama bin Laden—the Saudi leader of the Al-Qaeda terrorist network—in Afghanistan as its justification for the invasion. Similarly, during its 2003 invasion of Iraq, the US propagated the lie that “Saddam Hussein possesses chemical weapons and weapons of mass destruction.” When the German dictator Adolf Hitler invaded Poland in 1939, and the Italian dictator Mussolini invaded Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935, they too presented historical, political, and geopolitical pretexts, however fabricated, to justify their actions.

Today, US imperialism does not even feel the need to construct such lies or manufacture pretexts. US President Trump openly talks of withdrawing from NATO, while scolding member states and insulting European leaders with arrogant remarks.

For this reason, NATO must be analyzed not by reading the words written in its founding treaty, but by grasping the shifting needs of US imperialism.

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Chinese diplomacy ascendant under Xi: All roads lead to Beijing

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Beginning in late 2025 and extending throughout 2026, one of the most striking developments in world politics has been the successive convergence of major powers upon Beijing. Direct, high-level engagement with China by actors at the very core of the global system—such as the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany—is widely interpreted as a potent signal of a shifting international order. These visits are indubitably far from routine diplomatic encounters. Rather, they represent symbolic and strategic maneuvers indicative of a fundamental realignment of the world’s power centers. In particular, the intensive engagement with China by four of the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council within a brief window demonstrates that Beijing has evolved far beyond a mere economic powerhouse, establishing itself as a principal locus of global diplomacy.

For decades, the global order was predominantly US-centric. Following the end of the Cold War, the United States attained an unrivaled position militarily, economically, and diplomatically. China, conversely, was viewed as a rapidly growing economy defined primarily by its manufacturing capacity and cheap labor force. While Beijing possessed influence within the global system, the primary decision-making mechanisms of world politics remained firmly anchored in Washington. However, the transformation of the past two decades has elevated China from a mere economic giant to the epicenter of global strategic competition.

Today, China stands as one of the most pivotal actors in world trade. The vast majority of global supply chains are intricately linked to Chinese networks. Across a multitude of critical sectors—ranging from electric vehicles and battery technologies to artificial intelligence and solar energy—China has established itself as both a dominant producer and a global standard-setter. This immense economic capacity has naturally engendered commensurate political and diplomatic leverage. Global leaders now recognize that international challenges cannot be effectively managed by bypassing or ignoring China.

It is precisely here that the core significance of these recent visits to China becomes apparent. Donald Trump’s journey to Beijing to meet with Xi Jinping underscored that despite the intense rivalry between Washington and Beijing, direct engagement has become an absolute necessity. Similarly, while Vladimir Putin’s strategic alignment with China has long been established, Moscow’s deepened cooperation with Beijing in the wake of its profound crisis with the West has significantly bolstered China’s geopolitical weight across Eurasia. Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit was interpreted as a sign of Europe pivoting toward a more pragmatic trajectory in its policy toward China. The prior engagements of French President Emmanuel Macron had already demonstrated that Europe has no desire for a complete decoupling from China. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s discussions in Beijing were particularly noteworthy from an economic standpoint, as the Chinese market remains indispensable to German industry. Furthermore, the intensive diplomatic relations maintained by Serbian President Alexander Vučić with China demonstrate that Beijing’s influence on the European continent is by no means confined to major Western European states. Through infrastructure investments, transport projects, technology transfers, and defense cooperation in recent years, Serbia has emerged as one of China’s closest partners in Europe.

The common denominator among these visits was the pursuit of direct engagement with Xi Jinping. Xi is no longer viewed merely as the leader of China; for many nations, he has become a preeminent figure shaping the future of the global system. The transformation of China under Xi into a more centralized, visionary state structured around long-term strategic planning has magnified the personal significance of his leadership. Today, the international community is intensely focused on Xi Jinping’s decision-making. Consequently, pilgrimages to Beijing represent an effort to establish a direct, unmediated channel to Xi himself.

Symbolism is of paramount importance here; in international politics, the optics of “who travels to meet whom” are central to the perception of power. If global leaders continuously travel to Beijing while Xi travels sparingly—yet remains the figure everyone seeks to audience with—it naturally reinforces the message: Xi Jinping is no longer just the leader of China, but a chief architect of the global system. Remarkably, Xi’s reduced international travel has not diluted China’s influence. On the contrary, Beijing’s emergence as the primary destination of diplomatic pilgrimage projects an image of profound self-assurance. To many observers, this stands as one of the most visible symbols of a shifting world order. By rendering their respects in Beijing as much as in Washington, global leaders signal that the global equation is now being formulated here.

This shift is driven by tangible geopolitical realities. The contemporary world operates within a highly interdependent framework. While intense competition defines US-China relations, their economies remain deeply intertwined, rendering total decoupling virtually impossible. Across a vast spectrum of critical arenas—including trade, semiconductor technology, artificial intelligence, energy security, the Taiwan question, the Russia-Ukraine war, the Iranian crisis, and global supply chains—China has emerged as a decisive actor. Consequently, no major power, including Washington, can formulate a viable global strategy by sidelining China.

For Europe in particular, the China question has grown increasingly complex. The period between 2022 and 2024 saw Europe adopt a more hawkish and distant posture toward Beijing. However, slowing economic growth, energy crises, and trade frictions with the United States have compelled Europe to seek a more balanced approach. The pivot of European leaders toward Beijing reveals that complete economic decoupling from China would carry prohibitive costs for Europe. This dynamic also underscores the divergent internal priorities within the US-led Western bloc.

China’s rise should not be viewed solely through the prism of its relations with the West; the sphere of influence Beijing has cultivated across the Global South is of equal significance. In recent years, Chinese influence has expanded dramatically across Africa, Latin America, Central Asia, the Gulf States, and South Asia. Within this context, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to China carries profound weight. The China-Pakistan relationship has long been characterized as an “ironclad friendship.” Through the Belt and Road Initiative, China has constructed ports, railways, energy facilities, and critical infrastructure in numerous countries, most notably Pakistan. Furthermore, unlike Western financial institutions, Beijing extends credit and investment with fewer political conditionalities. Consequently, many developing nations view China not only as a vital economic partner but also as a geopolitical counterweight to the West.

All of this inevitably raises the question: “Is China ascendant?” Based on the current landscape, the answer must be in the affirmative. For global leaders, Beijing has now emerged as a diplomatic hub as critical as Washington. Moreover, beyond its sheer economic scale, China is increasingly distinguished by its capacity for conflict resolution. Its pivotal role in facilitating the Iran-Saudi Arabia normalization, coupled with its close ties to Russia and its sweeping influence over the Global South, has significantly amplified Beijing’s diplomatic gravity.

The diplomatic traffic observed throughout 2026 highlights a fundamental truth: the world is no longer unipolar or monocivilizational. Opposite the United States stands a China capable of challenging it economically, technologically, culturally, and diplomatically. Consequently, this new era diverges sharply from the unipolar structure of the “American Century,” resembling instead a multipolar, multi-civilizational order where all actors cooperate and compete with one another simultaneously.

Xi Jinping’s position is central to this paradigm shift. For many leaders today, meeting with Xi in Beijing is not merely a matter of bilateral diplomacy, but a strategic imperative for positioning oneself within the global balance of power. This has immensely enhanced Xi’s personal prestige. Within the international system, there is a growing consensus that on most critical issues, “if Beijing is not at the table, no resolution can be complete.” The acceleration of visits to China since late 2025 is not merely a reflection of a crowded diplomatic calendar; it must be understood as a tangible indicator of a shifting world order. Beijing has transcended its status as an economic core to become one of the primary power centers of global politics. Consequently, Chinese President Xi Jinping is emerging as one of the most influential figures of this new, multipolar, and multi-civilizational world order.

Today, the diplomatic traffic directed toward Beijing is by no means limited to the United States, Russia, or the major European powers. The efforts of leaders from a vast geographical span—from Serbia and Pakistan to the Gulf States and African nations—to establish direct contact with China render Beijing’s central position in the global system increasingly conspicuous. Consequently, these recent visits are interpreted as signs that the power map of the new international order is being redrawn. For many capitals, the path to understanding global developments and formulating future strategies now runs through Beijing as much as it does through Washington. Thus, the adage “All roads lead to Beijing” is rapidly transforming from a rhetorical trope into a defining reality of contemporary international politics.

Umur Tugay Yücel – Political Scientist & Author of the book “The Decline of American Power and the Rising Powers” (China-Russia-India-Brazil).

X: @umur_tugay

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Israel’s influence over the United States and America’s strategic impasse

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In remarks to the American media, Israel’s genocidal prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, declared: “The war with Iran is not over. The enrichment facilities must be dismantled, and the highly enriched uranium must be eliminated.” He insisted that the permanent destruction of Tehran’s nuclear capacity was imperative.

The broader picture in the Middle East is this: the United States is simultaneously attempting to make Israel more effective, more powerful, and territorially larger, while also attacking those countries that unsettle Israel or resist its regional influence. It fragments them, destabilizes them, occupies them. What occurred in Libya, Iraq, and Syria, as well as the joint American-Israeli aggression directed at Iran, must be understood from this perspective no less than from any other.

We know that Israel exercises enormous influence over the United States. The effects and reflections of that influence are visible even in Washington’s relations with Türkiye. Israel influences the United States to such an extent that America loves whom Israel loves and rejects whom Israel rejects. American presidents hesitate to take a step in the Middle East without first consulting Israel or securing its approval. For that reason, it is especially noteworthy that, in recent months, many American experts, politicians, and commentators have openly said of the attacks on Iran: “This is not America’s war; it is Israel’s war. It is wrong for the United States to place itself so completely under Israel’s direction and follow in its wake.” For the first time, Israel is being criticized this openly and this loudly within the United States itself. For the first time, America’s limitless and unconditional support for Israel is being questioned so directly.

The extent of Israel’s hostility toward Türkiye

Israel’s influence over the United States, as seen in the joint American-Israeli aggression against Iran, also became apparent during the ceasefire negotiations. Israel did everything in its power to prevent the United States from accepting a ceasefire. Although Pakistan succeeded in persuading both Washington and Tehran to accept a regional ceasefire, Israel immediately pressured the United States and ensured that Lebanon was excluded from the scope of the agreement.

Israel’s hostile posture toward Türkiye is likewise striking. By supporting terrorist organizations operating against Türkiye, Israel seeks to force the country to exhaust its energy and resources in prolonged struggles against armed groups both domestically and along its immediate periphery. In this regard, the most functional and useful instrument at Israel’s disposal is the PKK terrorist organization. The United States also supports the PKK. Accordingly, the American-Israeli axis jointly backs structures affiliated with the PKK, namely the PYD-YPG in Syria and PJAK in Iran. It will be recalled that Israel also supported the 2017 independence referendum organized in northern Iraq under the leadership of the Barzani administration. Israel announced that, should the referendum produce a declaration of independence, it would be among the first states to recognize an independent Kurdish state separating from Iraq.

The American economy Is not on a healthy trajectory

From an economic standpoint as well, the United States is compelled to wage wars, launch attacks, create new customers for its arms industry, and secure fresh military contracts. The American economy has become dependent on war. Within the country’s dominant sectors, the military-industrial structure occupies a singularly privileged and strategic position. U.S. public debt has surpassed 39 trillion dollars. Private-sector debt, including household debt, has reached 42 trillion dollars. The budget deficit approached 1.8 trillion dollars in 2025. Last year, the trade deficit climbed to 901.5 billion dollars. At the same time, the country’s productive capacity and competitive strength continue to erode.

By attacking Iran alongside Israel, the United States sought not only to neutralize Iran’s missile capacity and nuclear capabilities, but also to alter the regime in Tehran and, if possible, even redraw the country’s borders. It inflicted severe damage on Iran and struck heavy blows, yet failed to force capitulation. It achieved neither its military objectives nor its political aims.

Another American calculation was this: by striking Iran, which sells 90 percent of its oil exports to China, Washington hoped to open a serious breach in China’s energy supply chain. China obtains nearly half of the oil it consumes from Gulf countries such as Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. Altogether, 45 percent of the oil China uses passes through the Strait of Hormuz. It should also be noted that the Strait of Hormuz is critically important not only for China, but also for Asia’s major economies such as Japan, India, and South Korea. One must not forget that all three maintain close relations with the United States.

While attacking Iran, the United States also sought to weaken China — and failed

While calculating that Iran would emerge weakened, the United States also intended to batter China in the process. It failed. That failure rendered Washington even more aggressive and drove it into deeper panic. For regardless of what the United States does, the trajectory of history continues to favor China.

Consider the figures. In 1990, China accounted for just 1.8 percent of the global economy. Today, that figure stands at 18.5 percent. In other words, over the past thirty-six years, China’s share of the world economy has increased tenfold. The United States, by contrast, accounted for 34 percent of the global economy in 1985; by 1990, its share had already fallen to 26 percent. Today it has declined further, to 22 percent. As can clearly be seen, America’s share has been steadily diminishing. Across the Atlantic, Europe’s decline has been even more pronounced. In 1990, the European Union accounted for more than 27 percent of the global economy. Today its share has fallen to 17 percent. In other words, over the past thirty-six years, the European Union has contracted by ten percentage points.

This decline in Europe inevitably weakens the European Union’s appeal while simultaneously intensifying internal disputes within the bloc. It has also emboldened those advocating withdrawal from the Union. Following Britain’s departure from the European Union through the 2016 Brexit referendum, similar debates have proliferated across Europe. Those advocating France’s withdrawal speak of “Frexit,” while proponents of Sweden’s departure invoke the term “Swexit.”

These debates are not confined to the European Union alone. Parallel discussions are also emerging within NATO, particularly as President Trump publicly humiliates NATO members and even suggests that the United States itself could leave the alliance. Slovenia, for example, one of NATO’s smaller members, is debating the possibility of putting withdrawal from the alliance to a referendum. For a small-scale country, this is undoubtedly a bold and highly consequential discussion.

What ultimately becomes visible is this: as the United States weakens, the fractures within the Atlantic alliance deepen, and disputes within major Western institutions such as NATO and the European Union grow increasingly severe. The joint American-Israeli attacks against Iran, together with Iran’s resistance, are making those fractures even more visible.

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