Sunday 15th of March 2026

back at the beginning of bullshit times...

The International Order [AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY] seeks to manage the complex relationship of institutions, nations, and their conflicting goals. A recent workshop by the Center for Global Security Research [A THINKTANK SUBSERVIANT TO THE AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY] sought to tie the dynamics of this order to the domain of nuclear weapons.

 

Blog #149 – With a Little Help from My Friends: The Need for a Strong Alliance Network to Shape Global Affairs

BY Matthew Bennett

 

This commentary comprises my own view of the issue at hand. It draws insight specifically from discussions on the importance of alliances in maintaining progress towards foreign policy goals.

The Old Order

The current International order [AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY] has three major descriptive components, each facing pressure to change. First is the fact that the order operates on a set of rules-based norms. The order is also liberal, meaning there is a set of Western values [AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY] that guide decisions and rules. Relevant values include interstate compromise and concepts like consent of the governed. A major threat to these pillars is the increasing impunity for those who violate the rules [ESPECIALLY THE AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY]. This, in turn, weakens the institutions at the backbone of the International Order. Finally, the order is American-led [THANK YOU, WE DID NOT KNOW...].

This last component is critical because it is currently the most contested. Shifting global power now allows middle-power nations to act as rule-setters and influence the establishment and enforcement of norms [SET BY THE AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY]. Additionally, for any nation, even close American allies, there is no downside to hedging relationships that maintain some connection with the adversaries of the current International Order [AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY]. Already, the West no longer enjoys hegemonic influence. [THANK YOU FOR ADMITTING THIS]. Some of this decline stems from ongoing conflicts and general instability. The ongoing military conflicts in Ukraine [PROVOKED BY THE [AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY] and the Middle East [CONTINUED BY THE [AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY AND ISRAHELL], for example, complicate the status quo and call into question the Western World’s ability to exert definitive control on all fronts. The current stutter of American leadership [THE AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY] in the global order partially manifested from within, as well. An increasing narrative of isolationism and disavowing of global institutions has only further reduced America’s role. However, this is not an irreversible trend. [NOT ACCORDINT TO SOME COUNTRIES]

A key contributor to the decades of stability under this current International Order is America’s vast network of alliances. Presently, many factors, both in and out of the nuclear domain, threaten to destabilize these relationships.

Alliance Anxiety

Maintaining a convincing commitment to any Ally is a difficult task. This challenge is notably more daunting for America, specifically, as it continually seeks to appease a global network of allies, each with different security needs, domestic politics, and hedging options.

It is easy to itemize the common aspects of allies’ anxiety but appeasing any specific one requires a tailored solution. The rise of external threats, for example, is common across the globe. In the Pacific, American Treaty Allies are facing an increasingly assertive DPRK as a regional nuclear pariah) with a diverse nuclear arsenal and strengthened ties to Russia. In Europe, Allies are facing active Russian aggression [NO... RUSSIA IS ONLY DEFENDING THE RUSSIANS IN THE DONBASS — BEING PROVOKED BY THE NAZIS IN KIEV PUSHED BY MI6 ON BEHALF OF THE AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY... RUSSIA DOES NOT WANT TO "INVADE" EUROPE...] and persistent violations of territorial integrity.

Domestic attitudes also heavily influence the transformations these alliances may experience in the future. South Korea, for example, has vast support for the development of its nuclear arsenal. Japan’s recent election showed increased support for a more nationalistic party that may be indicative of changing attitudes in the long term. Recent American rhetoric has also increased popular interest for more “locally-owned” European deterrent forces, including in Germany.

The aforementioned rhetoric is, of course, another major contributor to the anxiety of a perceived decline in American commitment abroad. Much of the recent “America-first” [ISRAHELL FIRST] commentary emphasizes the transactional nature of alliances. As this doctrine gains a foothold in the American public, there may be doubt cast on the long-term continuation of security guarantees. Europe is also noticing the spotlight move from its theater to the Indo-Pacific. Some may worry that a reduced American presence cannot fulfill NATO obligations or deter Russia.

After the first few months of the new administration, the worst-case fears of an immediate and total American withdrawal have subsided. Now, many are attempting to gauge the level to which their own increased defense spending appeases American demands for a “fair” deal in the long term. One commenter described European feelings as having recovered from a panic to anxiety. There is an understanding that European abandonment is not a consideration for this US administration. However, there are further assurances that European leaders seek as an indication of long-term commitment to the region. Listed actions call for consistency in signals and include continued support for Ukraine, an expansion of NATO nuclear sharing, and maintaining assets currently emplaced.

Unlike the Europeans, Pacific Allies require varied approaches. Korea, for example, has explicitly requested visits from American nuclear-armed submarines. Japan, conversely, seeks more diplomatic than material assurances. The Japanese find many parallels between themselves and the Ukrainians. They want to be confident of support in case of conflict with their “big nuclear neighbor.” For this same reason, not much credibility was provided by the recent American support of Israeli strikes on Iran. This involvement, some say, was too low-stakes to adequately display American resolve.

 

The International Nuclear Order

The stability of the old nuclear order stems from dynamics at play during the Cold War that continued into the 1990s. A primary contributor was the continued bipolarity and resultant simplicity. Although other nations possessed nuclear weapons, the arsenals of significance would continue to be the ones belonging to the two Cold War superpowers. This helped resolve core issues quickly as crises occurred. The decades of work establishing infrastructure for arms control and diverse adversarial communication channels provided options for the only two relevant parties to de-escalate. The survival of this bipolar relationship relied on diplomacy and institutions, all in support of maintaining the status quo.

Today, however, the status quo itself is under attack. The multipolarity of both international relations and proliferation of significant arsenals complicates the process of mitigating nuclear crises. Ideally, the United States could establish a mature deterrence relationship with each of the present nuclear players. This would include all the features of our relationship with the Soviet Union, such as “red” telephones, treaties, and launch notifications. However, some powers do not see the utility in even starting these conversations. China and Pakistan, for example, maintain that they have established well-defined tripwires and the topic requires no further discussion. Many of the features of this relationship with Russia itself are going or gone.

Along with this, nuclear non-proliferation discussions can no longer occur in a vacuum. Problems arising outside of the security domain influence a nation’s decision to nuclearize. The technology, environmental, and energy sectors must now be addressed to effectively stem nuclear proliferation. Outside of militaristic domains, economics is the backbone of international influence. If the West loses its power to meaningfully apply sanctions, for example, it will lose as well the ability to control the global non-proliferation regime and nuclear domain overall. An existing single-domain example is the comparatively weaker sanctions regime on Russian energy exports, notably including Rosatom.

Conclusions

For my contribution, I ended the final panel with a possibly juvenile question: “What does success look like? What policy goals should we be working towards now so they can come to fruition in 2100?”

Answers addressed the essential goals. Success is the absence of major nuclear exchanges and the timely deployment of the American modernized nuclear triad. They also expressed the need to think further on the topic of nuclear conflict and surprisingly opined that deterrence is not a permanent solution despite its perfect track record.

Although not a clear goal to work towards, my takeaway is an appreciation for the immense level of effort for a so-called status quo power to maintain the world it has  built. There is no cruise control for foreign relations. Keeping the world in a constant state of favor requires constant commitment [BULLSHIT FROM THE AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY]. Beyond funding, institutions require those who back them to abide by and enforce their decisions.  Alliances must be frequently proven, not just maintained on paper. It will be the strength of these alliances that determine the impacts of the current challenges facing the International Order [AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY].

https://pacforum.org/publications/yl-blog-149-with-a-little-help-from-my-friends-the-need-for-a-strong-alliance-network-to-shape-global-affairs/

 

Pacific Forum is a Honolulu-based foreign policy research institute focused on the Indo-Pacific. Founded in 1975, the Pacific forum collaborates with a network of research institutes from around the Pacific Rim, drawing on Asian perspectives and disseminating project findings and recommendations to global leaders, governments, and members of the public. The Pacific Forum states that its "studies are objective and nonpartisan [YET FULLY COMMITTED TO THE AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY], and it does not engage in classified or proprietary work"., and it does not engage in classified or proprietary work".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Forum_International?ysclid=mmqv8rg5y3615560285

 

 

GUSNOTE: IN REGARD TO IRAN'S NUCLEAR ACTIVITIES, THE PACIFIC FORUM [LIKE THE AMERICAN DICTATORSHIP/HEGEMONY] IS DELIBERATELY ANBIGUOUS AND LYING ABOUT IRAN'S MAKING OF "NUCLEAR BOMBS"... THE GERMAN NETWORK DW LET THE PACIFIC FORUM LIE...

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

deaded order....

 

Trump and Israel demolished the US-led global order. At Davos the West woke up

Joe Gill

23 January 2026

It was western backing for the Gaza genocide, not Trump’s push to take over Greenland, that destroyed the international rules-based system

 

It's something the rest of the world already knew, after two years of genocide in Gaza, and attacks on Iran and Venezuela. The old international order is dead.

Mark Carney’s speech at Davos may one day be compared to the speech made by Winston Churchill in Fulton, Missouri, in 1946 when he said an "iron curtain" had descended over Europe, marking the start of the Cold War. 

The Canadian prime minister declared the end of the post-1945 US-led order and the birth of a new one. "We live in an era of great power rivalry," he said, in which "the rules-based order is fading", and "the strong can do what they can, and the weak must suffer what they must".

Other western leaders took a similarly stark tone about how US President Donald Trump was tearing apart the western alliance.

"Until now, we tried to appease the new president in the White House but so many lines have been crossed…Being a happy vassal is one thing, being a miserable slave is something else," said Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever.

After weeks of threats against his Nato allies to hand over Greenland, the Danish-owned Arctic island, Trump arrived at Davos, swaggering about his achievements and calling Europe “not recognisable” due to mass migration. But in a classic Trump “weave” of escalating threats followed by a last-minute climbdown, he lifted the threat of sanctions and military action to seize Greenland by force.

For the rest of the non-western world, this sudden awakening must be galling. After all, it was not Trump’s push to take over Greenland that finally dismantled the international rules-based system created after World War Two. It was Gaza.

Gaza and the end of the 'rules-based order'

Carney, as the leader of a major western country backing Israel’s genocide, helped bury it. Now he has eloquently declared it dead. He even admitted in his Davos speech that the rules were never for everyone. That they were, in part, a convenient facade for western powers.

“We knew the story of the international rules-based order was partially false, that the strongest would exempt themselves when convenient, that trade rules were enforced asymmetrically, and we knew that international law applied with varied rigour, depending on the identity of the accused or the victim.

“This fiction was useful, and American hegemony in particular helped provide public goods, open sea lanes, a stable financial system, collective security...”

And so, Carney admits what many already knew. The rules didn’t apply to much of the Global South - from Palestine, to Venezuela, Iran to West Papua - anywhere where western economic interests wished to seize control of resources, or where people refused subordination to US diktat.

And Washington's allies had no problem with backing US aggression and brutal sanctions for countries outside the blessed circle of Europe and the G7.

Six months ago Carney was telling Christiane Amanpour on CNN that after two years of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, what was needed was a “Zionist Palestinian state living side by side with Israel”. The people whose children and loved ones had been systematically slaughtered, their homes and institutions destroyed, their land and villages annexed, should live willingly under the rule of their oppressor. This is the very opposite of the rule of law, it is the rule of the bully.

Carney was part of the western pro-Israel alliance that gave the apartheid state a blank cheque to commit crimes against humanity and genocide, shredding whatever pretence of a rules-based order was left in 2023.

As a Palestinian American wrote on X: “For two years, the Western world didn’t merely fail to restrain Israel; it funded it, armed it, vetoed accountability, rewrote legal standards in real time, and criminalized dissent at home. International law was selectively suspended, not overwhelmed like some people want to say, and once legality becomes conditional, the concept itself ceases to exist.”

Trump has now torn off the last of the tattered, bloodstained facade of the system, sanctioning the International Criminal Court over its charges against Israeli leaders, and defunding UN institutions. 

Now western countries are getting a taste of what the rest of the world has been living with for decades. 

New alliances

What this means is that all existing alliances and relationships are up for grabs, and new, surprising ones are emerging.

In China last week, Carney told President Xi Jinping that their new bilateral trade pact was the beginning of a new era of relations. “The partnership we’ve built sets us up well for the new world order,” he said.

Carney said the multilateral system of trade governed by the World Trade Organization and Trans-Pacific Partnership, and the rules-based order of the UN, WHO and Cop climate agreements was being "eroded and undercut". 

China was a more stable, predictable bet than Trump’s USA. The new trade pact with Beijing will include “clean energy, conventional energy, evolution of the global financial system, and cross-border payments… Rather than these being developed through the IMF and WTO and other multilateral organisations, it is going to be coalitions who develop them,” he said.

In other words, Trump’s threats pushed Canada into the arms of Beijing to reduce its dependence on US trade.

Meanwhile, the rapid redrawing of alliances is also happening in the Middle East.

Old rivals such as Turkey and Saudi Arabia are drawing closer, while former allies the UAE and Saudi Arabia are now on opposite sides of a struggle for regional supremacy. How far this struggle will go is not yet known, with its effects already affecting YemenSudan and Somalia, and putting the UAE’s regional alliances of proxy forces, built over 15 years, in great jeopardy.

In Saudi Arabia, where Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman had bannedexpressions of support for Palestine at the start of the genocide in Gaza, state media are now openly attacking Israel, Zionism and the Abraham Accords. In Mecca last Friday, the imam of the Grand Mosque prayed for victory for Palestine and the defeat of the "Zionist occupiers". Israel should be worried.

In post-Assad Syria, the US dropped its alliance with the Kurdish-led SDF, and backed the government of President Ahmed al-Sharaa as his forces seized back all the lands and oil fields previously controlled by the US-backed group. Once again, the Kurds know that their only friend is the mountains.

Replacing the UN

For Palestinians, the genocide has not ended, but instead entered a new phase under Trump’s Gaza Executive Board.

The same old discredited figures who made a mockery of the rules-based order, such as Tony Blair and US Secretary of State Mark Rubio, alongside US Zionist billionaires including Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, and Marc Rowan, have been made colonial governors of Gaza. Meanwhile Israel continues to besiege and attack Palestinians across the occupied territories.

Beyond Gaza, Trump’s Board of Peace appears to be a new US model of rules-free governance to replace the United Nations; a system established to prevent aggression and uphold human rights in the wake of the Holocaust. That history has been binned. The board’s charter gives Trump executive powers as chair, allowing him to appoint and remove member states. Global governance as corporate takeover. 

So far, states agreeing to join the board are mainly from the Middle East and Asia. They include Israel, Turkey, EgyptPakistanQatarMorocco, Vietnam, Belarus, Hungary and Kazakhstan, while western nations do not want to be on a body that Russia has been invited to join. Putin has yet to reply. 

Slovenia’s Prime Minister Robert Golob said the board "dangerously interferes with the broader international order".

A new order is emerging, with rapid shifts towards novel bilateral relations and alliances. China may still be the hegemon in waiting, but it is not ready to step into the mayhem that Trump’s chaos, Putin’s war in Ukraine and Netanyahu’s expansionist dreams have created.

Power is draining away from the global institutions that once governed international relations. As Carney put it: “We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition.” 

Before the last US presidential election I wagered that a Trump victory would ultimately be beneficial for the world for one reason only: the brutal policies he would pursue would accelerate the collapse of the US empire.

Friends looked shocked at the idea. But today, just over a year later, that collapse looks closer.

https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/trump-and-israel-demolished-us-led-global-order-davos-west-woke

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

SEE ALSO: 

the new doctrine......

 

being genocidal zionists is tough in the political battle, in the PR battle, even moral....