Follow us on social

google cta
Puck-scaled

Biden must reject the pull of the American hegemonic mindset

The unipolar world is over, but it's taking some on both sides of the ideological spectrum a long time to admit it.

Analysis | Washington Politics
google cta
google cta

Since the dramatic failure of the Iraq War in the mid-2000s, much ink has been spilled about the path forward for American foreign policy. With total global hegemony shown consistently to be a high-cost and low-reward approach, U.S. policymakers have begun debates as to what kind of global strategy should replace that of the wreckage of the “War on Terror.”  

One of the more frequent rhetorical devices used by establishment actors to steer the narrative has been that of a “New Cold War.” But whether policymakers are speaking of a new bipolar competition or of the necessity of dominating all regions of the world for the security of a liberal world order, as potential future Defense Secretary Michelle Flournoy does, it is increasingly clear that the age of American expansionism under the guise of exceptionalism should be retired as obsolete.

Any attempts to resurrect U.S. unipolarity, be it through cold war rhetoric or any other alternative strategy, implies that both Russia and China as well as their minor allies are slotted firmly into the perpetual enemies’ camp. Beijing would be the most likely primary target of any such policy. The problem with such an approach is that 21st century China is nothing like the Soviet Union. While Beijing holds itself up as an alternative model to the United States, it does not seriously engage in exporting its values or ideology across the globe. Rather, it follows a model of autonomous and nationalist divergence from the post-Cold War consensus — something that holds no universal project in common no matter how many countries might decide to do something similar. 

In this world of less ideological great power competition, alliances cannot be assumed to be permanent, and neither can enemies. As Nixon bucked the Cold War assumptions by going to China to counter a common and more potent Soviet threat, so might a Biden or a future Harris administration have to swallow their pride and go to Moscow to open up previously closed diplomatic pathways with a country formerly assumed to be beholden to Beijing.

The competition for influence in the developing world is now between multiple countries, and is based on trade, resources, and developmental assistance. To remain competitive in such a multipolar environment the United States would do well to drop claims of universal values and move towards flexibility and upholding the sovereignty of smaller powers who feel threatened by larger rivals. This could be done with much less cost than present hegemonist strategies given the geographic advantages of U.S. naval power and its distance from the major potential conflict zones of rival powers. 

If the United States simply retains its economic dynamism and acts as a guarantor of international commerce, it becomes more of a potential partner to be wooed, rather than a potential threat to nations not allied directly with it.

A continuation of the geopolitical strategies considered “normal” in Washington for the past two decades, as may very well happen in a Biden administration, would freeze out diplomatic options that would otherwise be available to the United States as well as guarantee a dangerous escalation of great power tension. While an incoming Biden administration is taking a welcome second look at resurrecting the Iran deal, it should also consider that adopting a framework of perpetual animosity with Beijing or Moscow might make such diplomatic efforts more difficult to achieve. If Tehran can choose both a nuclear deal with the U.S. and be integrated into the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative, however, it could very well increase its autonomy and neutrality in any great power rivalry rather than automatically taking the side of Beijing. 

A U.S. approach that prioritizes flexibility over dividing the world into camps of ideology will not have to make foreign policy decisions in an absolute “with us or against us” binary, and this flexibility will be a net gain for the United States given its inherent geographic advantages over its rivals. On the other hand, should policymakers in Washington insist on continuing the quest for world hegemony, or even just rebooting the Cold War in a new context, they risk squandering these vital assets in the multipolar world that is to come. To be first among many is better than to be a scorned and declining hegemonic force.


"His 128th Birthday" cover of Puck magazine, 1904. (public domain)
google cta
Analysis | Washington Politics
Marco Rubio Munich Security Conference
Top photo credit: U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio waves, next to Chairman of the Munich Security Conference Wolfgang Ischinger, as he gets a standing ovation after his speech at the Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. Alex Brandon/Pool via REUTERS

Rubio's spoonful of sugar helps hard medicine go down in Munich

Europe


U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrived in the Munich Security Conference this weekend to sooth transatlantic anxieties. After Vice President J.D. Vance's criticisms of the old continent in 2025, the European dignitaries were looking for a more conventional American performance.

What they got was a peculiar mix of primacist nostalgia and civilizational foreboding, with an explicit desire to forge a path of restoration together.

keep readingShow less
Viktor Orban Peter Magyar
Top photo credit: Viktor Orbán (shutterstock/photoibo) and Peter Magyar (Shutterstock/Istvan Csak)

Could this be the election that brings Hungary's Orban down?

Europe

With two months remaining before the April 12 parliamentary elections, Hungary’s Prime Minister Victor Orban and his Fidesz party face by far their toughest challenge since winning power in 2010.

Many polls show challenger Peter Magyar’s Tisza (Respect and Freedom) party with a substantial lead. Orban’s campaign has responded by stressing his international clout, including close relations with U.S. President Donald Trump, and the prominent role he plays among right-populist Eurosceptics in Europe.

keep readingShow less
Trump hasn't bombed Iran yet. He must be reading these polls.
Top photo credit: Members of the media raise their hands to ask questions as U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (not pictured) hold a joint press conference in the State Dining Room at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., September 29, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Trump hasn't bombed Iran yet. He must be reading these polls.

Middle East

When the George W. Bush administration invaded Iraq in March 2003, that war had 72% support among Americans, according to Gallup.

If Donald Trump now wants to start a U.S. war with Iran, the president would not remotely enjoy that level of support. He doesn’t even have half of it. Scratch that, not even a quarter of Americans want him to bomb Iran today.

keep readingShow less
google cta
Want more of our stories on Google?
Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

LATEST

QIOSK

Newsletter

Subscribe now to our weekly round-up and don't miss a beat with your favorite RS contributors and reporters, as well as staff analysis, opinion, and news promoting a positive, non-partisan vision of U.S. foreign policy.