Controlled Instability: The Power Game the U.S. Kept Losing

avatar
(Edited)

Welcome! While this isn’t my first post on Hive, it is my first under this account. Since I’ll be tackling political and geopolitical topics here, I prefer to keep my main account separate from the inevitable debates that may follow.

If you know who I am — cool, let’s keep it that way.


Now, onto the article — hope you enjoy it!


The Illusion of Stability: How the West’s Retreat Fuels Global Power Plays

Let’s start with the obvious: The world is a game of power balances, and it has been played since time immemorial. For most of history, it was fought through direct conflicts — empires rising and falling through wars of conquest. But in the modern era, especially since World War II, the battlefield has shifted.

Instead of open wars between superpowers, the fight happens in the shadows — through funding, economic influence, and propaganda. The result is what we might call controlled instability — a carefully maintained balance where things look stable enough to prevent total chaos, but beneath the surface, global powers are constantly pushing and pulling, testing limits, and seizing opportunities whenever an opponent slips.

Ukraine is the perfect example of this dynamic. For decades, it was in a limbo — a state that appeared stable on the surface, but was always a battleground between spheres of influence. The moment the balance shifted too far in one direction, Putin moved in to take advantage.

The West’s Mistake: Misreading “Stability”

The problem with Western leaders — at least since Obama — is that they’ve misunderstood what stability really is. They believe that:

✅ If we avoid direct conflict, we maintain peace.
✅ If we disengage from geopolitics, we reduce tensions.
✅ If we stop spending on foreign interventions, we save money.

But that’s not how global power works. To players like Putin and Xi Jinping, disengagement is not "peace" — it’s an invitation.

Every time the West hesitates, it signals weakness. And every time the U.S. or Europe steps back from influence, another player steps in. Whether it’s China expanding through the Belt and Road Initiative, or Russia taking Crimea, the pattern is the same:

🔹 2014 – Ukraine’s political landscape shifts, and Putin moves into Crimea.
🔹 2015 – The U.S. pulls back from Syria, and Russia steps in to support Assad.
🔹 2021-Present – The U.S. and NATO hesitate on military aid, and Russia invades Ukraine.
🔹 Ongoing – Africa becomes a new Cold War zone between Western-backed governments and Chinese/Russian influence.

The recent Western-style passive diplomacy and self-imposed restraint don’t necessarily lead to peaceful resolutions, but can — and often do — create power vacuums ready to be exploited by other world powers, disrupting the delicate balance of global influence. This shift in approach comes largely from internal political pressures. In the U.S. and Europe, growing demands to scale back foreign interventions stem from financial concerns, war fatigue, and ideological movements that frame past global involvement as imperialist overreach.

Trump’s Blind Spot: Ending Spending vs. Losing the Game


Trump, of course, isn’t the first president with a mind to reduce spending. Obama, too, launched government audits aimed at cuts in overlapping or inefficient programs, particularly after the 2008 financial crisis. However, much of his effort got bogged down in legislative battles, and critics argue he never fully realized the scale of cuts he promised.

While Obama’s cuts remained incomplete, Trump’s approach goes beyond mere audits, instead resetting global relationships on explicitly transactional terms.

Trump, for all his “America First” rhetoric, is making the same mistake, just from a different angle. He sees foreign aid and military spending as a waste of money, but fails to realize that in geopolitics, money equals control.

His instinct is to cut spending and reduce involvement, believing this will free the U.S. from endless conflicts. But in reality, all this does is:

Leave the door open for China and Russia to expand their influence.
Weaken alliances, making NATO and U.S. partners vulnerable.
Shift the balance in favor of authoritarian regimes that don’t play by the same rules.

I think we all must recognize that not all of this spending is “aid” in the traditional sense — it’s an investment in geopolitical influence, deterrence, and leverage. While humanitarian aid is part of the equation, much of the funding labeled as “assistance” is about tilting the balance of power, reinforcing alliances, and preventing adversaries from gaining ground.

In some cases, these interventions create an illusion of stability — not solving underlying problems but containing them enough to keep rival powers from taking advantage. When Trump and other isolationists cut off this funding, they’re not just saving money — they’re dismantling key strategic footholds, often without a replacement strategy.

The global chessboard doesn’t stop moving just because America stops playing. If Washington backs off, Beijing and Moscow don’t just sit still — they make their moves.

Realpolitik in Action: Trump, Zelensky, and the Harsh Reality of Global Power

Donald Trump’s stance on Ukraine has always been controversial, but his recent claim that Volodymyr Zelensky is an “unelected dictator” left many confused — even among his supporters. The statement is factually wrong — Zelensky was elected in 2019 by an overwhelming majority, defeating incumbent Petro Poroshenko with over 73% of the vote. But beyond the inaccuracy, it reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of the geopolitical game.

Trump’s framing implies that Ukraine bears responsibility for its own war, as if Putin had no role in the invasion. This echoes Kremlin talking points and ignores the reality that Ukraine has been under Russian pressure for over a decade, dating back to Moscow’s involvement in Crimea and Donbas since 2014.

However, Trump’s pressure campaign had real consequences. After initially rejecting a U.S. deal that would exchange mineral rights for aid, Zelensky flip-flopped under pressure and accepted the deal. Trump also proposed a controversial repayment requirement for past military aid, making it clear that any future support from the U.S. would come with transactional conditions. While this move might seem ruthless, it is a classic power play — forcing Ukraine to make concessions to maintain U.S. backing.

From a layman’s perspective, this resembles mafia-style protection money. However, the harsh reality is that if the U.S. doesn’t play this game, China and Russia will — without even pretending to respect moral boundaries.

The West has spent decades attempting to build alliances based on trust and mutual cooperation. But in a world where power is the ultimate currency, such an approach often falls short.

While Western policymakers believe in stability through diplomatic agreements, their adversaries — Russia, China, and others — view these alliances as temporary, transactional, and expendable. To them, ‘trust’ is simply a tool to extract as many concessions as possible before shifting allegiance when it’s convenient.

This fundamental difference in perspective is why the West finds itself repeatedly outmaneuvered on the global stage.

Trump's actions, while harsh, might achieve results that the West's previous reliance on vague diplomatic guarantees failed to secure. By applying relentless pressure, he forced Ukraine into a binding deal — whether it felt fair or not, it was a demonstration of realpolitik in action.

Controlled Instability: The Only True Stability

The real takeaway? There is no such thing as lasting global stability. What we call "stability" is actually controlled instability — a constant, delicate game of push and pull where power is never static.

🔹 The moment one side stops pushing, the other takes ground.
🔹 When the U.S. steps back, Russia or China steps forward.
🔹 When a vacuum appears, someone always fills it.

If the West wants to keep the world from falling into authoritarian control, it has to stay in the game. That doesn’t mean endless wars, but it does mean:

Keeping influence in key regions (Ukraine, Taiwan, Africa, South America).
Maintaining strategic spending (military, foreign aid, intelligence).
Understanding that disengagement = surrendering the board.

Because the alternative isn’t peace. It’s simply losing the game.



0
0
0.000
1 comments
avatar

Congratulations @realpolitik! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain And have been rewarded with New badge(s)

You received more than 10 upvotes.
Your next target is to reach 50 upvotes.

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

Check out our last posts:

Hive Power Up Day - March 1st 2025
0
0
0.000