US Naval Hegemony Might Come To Its End Soon

US Naval Hegemony Might Come To Its End Soon

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Can an overburdened and overextended America maintain its sea hegemony while engaging in land wars?

Written by Uriel Araujo, researcher with a focus on international and ethnic conflicts

Recently, Brazil allowed two Iranian warships to dock in Rio, despite Washington’s pressure. Iranian oil tankers in fact have also been crossing the Caribbean sea and entering Venezuela’s waters undisturbed for a while – largely thanks to Chinese backing. Beijing’s rising presence in the Caribbean in turn is just another sign of declining American sea supremacy. Not only a new multipolar world order might be emerging, but also a multipolar sea. Is the age of American naval dominance as a sea power coming to an end? Jerry Hendrix, retired Navy captain, formerly an adviser to Pentagon senior officials, and now a senior fellow with the Sagamore Institute, thinks so – although he laments it.

Writing for the Atlantic, Hendrix offers an interesting insight, from an American perspective, on the United States power and its “mission”. Although he concedes that historically there have been very few “true seapower nations”, namely Carthage, Venice, the Dutch Republic, and Great Britain, Hendrix describes his own country as a “sea power” by vocation – drawing on the ideas of the US Navy captain Alfred Thayer Mahan and his 1890 The Atlantic article “The United States Looking Outward”, which he quotes.

Mahan ideas, together with Sir Halford John Mackinder’s own ones, arguably constitute the core of classic geopolitics – and US foreign policy to a large degree remains, to this day, shaped by geopolitical ideas about controlling the core of Eurasia to dominate the world. Washington’s rivalry with Russia, for instance, is partly framed by the American Establishment in geopolitical terms:  it is part of a struggle for the Heartland, as Mackinder calls it. According to the British geographer, whoever controls Eastern Europe controls the Heartland – and whoever controls the Heartland, controls the world island.

These ideas have shaped US policy since World War II at least. At the end of the Cold War, Soviet communism came to an end, and the so-called Iron Curtain fell, but even so NATO kept on expanding, no matter how much the Kremlin signaled its good will towards the political West, as it did a number of times back then. It would appear that, in the end, it does not matter what flag is flying over the Kremlin in terms of ideology, when the US political elite sees Russia as a natural adversary, geopolitically.

To understand Washington’s pursuit of world supremacy and unipolarity, one must add American exceptionalism to geopolitical thinking – that in turn can be traced back to the Puritan’s biblical metaphor about the “city upon a hill”, as Thomas E. Woods Jr., senior fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute, argued in a 2012 piece which remains relevant. In these terms, being the world’s sole superpower is the US role and its very raison d’être – and thus any threat to American unipolarity is perceived as an existential threat in itself, according to Andrew Latham, a professor of international relations and political theory at Macalester College in Saint Paul.

Washington’s own quest for the Heartland contradicts, however, its supposedly “sea power” nature. In the aforementioned Atlantic piece, Hendrix urges the United States to, once again, “think and act like a seapower state”, with a focus on deriving its might from “seaborne trade”, using “instruments of sea power” to promote its interests. Hendrix describes the post-World War II as an exceptional “free sea” period, characterized by a “secure environment” which has allowed trade to flourish in a globalized planet. This, according to him, has been enabled by the US-led world order.

One could of course argue that such a “free” sea is not so free after all – the way the US and the European powers weaponize protectionism is well known enough. In any case, Hendry does have a point regarding declining American hegemony.

Although both China and Russia are normally described as “land powers” in the parlance of traditional geopolitics (while the US and UK in turn would be good examples of “sea powers”), it would seem that, in today’s world, both Beijing and Moscow are increasingly  looking closer to the ocean. One can in fact wonder how much theoretical value the concepts of “sea power” and “land power” may still hold in the 21st century.

Trilateral naval exercises of warships and vessels of the Navies of Russia, China and Iran:

 

As I have written, in 2019, for example, in the Gulf of Oman and in the Indian Ocean, an unprecedented Russia-China-Iran joint naval exercise took place. Since then, many other developments have challenged American naval supremacy.

Be it as it may, the US has indeed lorded over the seas (replacing England, who used to hold such a post) – but this is being challenged by some new developments.

The main issue can be stated thusly: can an overburdened and overextended America maintain its sea hegemony while engaging in land wars? In Hendrix’s words: “to the degree possible, a seapower state seeks to avoid direct participation in land wars, large or small”. However, the US is today “financially constrained by debt”, and “burdened by recent military conflicts – for the most part, land-based actions” in places such as Iraq and Afghanistan. He concludes: “we can no longer afford to be both a continentalist power and an oceanic power.” Planning on pivoting to the Pacific while committing to Ukraine, Washington seems to want it both ways.

To sum it up, the US great existential dilemma is not merely about being (or not being) a sea power. It is about being (or not being) the world’s sole superpower. In order to accommodate a kind of peaceful coexistence with other great powers, Washington must rethink its own mission and role in the world – in a paradigm shift manner. Such however is not an easy endeavor at all, because American exceptionalism is deeply rooted in the very foundations of US political thinking, with cultural, emotional and psychological resonances. The hard facts of reality however should have their weight.

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Ivan Freely

Hendrix is correct. Economic reality have and will continue to dictate reality. What the public knows of US debt is just the tip of the iceberg. Hard times is coming. Strong arming their vassals to relocate their factories to US soil will have limited success.

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bert33

Make other countries fight their own naval battles and stop wasting so much money on the military if other countries want to shoot it out on the high seas and get in big territorial pishing contests then get out of the way

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Erik Nielsen

Iran and China is only operating in the Caribbean after permission and agreement with US.
So Jimi Hendrix must play a better tune on the next record……………LOL.

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AI8UT

The US is just about done… overly done… as a world power. Sanction this, sanction that and if you do not do as we say we will withhold funding and support. 😂
30+ years in the Middle East and around the world the US has attempted to persuade or threaten countries with financial assistance and military might only to witness China negotiations accomplish the same task in less than 30 days ( mid February thru today)..

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spock

The era of Uncle Sam’s gunboat diplomacy is coming to an end.

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AI8UT

“ US NAVAL HEGEMONY MIGHT COME TO ITS END SOON”.
It’s about time. The US does not need to police the world. Their doing so only promotes long term hate and discontent among world nations. There is not one person who can factually state any world incident involving US intervention in which the US has been the sole benefactor of the result of action.
The US needs to read the definition of the word “diplomacy”… quickly… before the rest of the world tells the US to take a hike… which is nearer than the US, it’s MainStream Propaganda publishers want to accept.

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Edgar Zetar

The city upon the hill in the XVIII Century was the foundation of the ‘black stone’ over the USA Empire exist… They have forgotten before World War 1 and WWII all the knowledge of their ancestors. .. they have been corrupted in the XX Century after WWII converting into Excepcionalism .. The founding fathers light were lost in oblivion converting the city upon the hill into the city burning on flames upon in the hill spreading his fire all over the world

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Edgar Zetar

USA is the Naval Power by far and guess would be #1 at least until 2040… This planet is called Earth but should be called Water instead… Whoever controls the Seas and Commercial Sea Routes controlled the world… British Empire knows this also Netherlands centuries before the British… The civilization give their step forward in the middle ages when they learn how to navigate into high seas and its not easy to ride the sea… Also British Empire ships used two flags, and one was Pirate flag to destroy all competition and be the Hegemon of the Seas…

Edgar Zetar

Also the USA Military might still is #1 by far, their dominion of the battlefield in land, sea and air is the Best of this World… Also they fight in so many fronts, layers, domains… Their Organizational Level and Tactics are Superior and they understand the first law of the Ancient ‘Book of Power’ 1. Power must be delegated and distributed on a Lower or Layer never on the same level.. So USA created NATO also after conquer Japan Germany France ans other countries they rebuild their military in a lower domain… The Ancient Book of Power, the race who understand the Laws and know how to apply correctly would rule the World for sure and the AngloSaxons managed to understand most of their Laws…. By the way: Was SATAN who wrote the Book of Power not the Gods.

Thoughtful

Where is this book?

Gordana

The 48 laws of power.

Gordana

The 48 powers of law #1 :

Law 1: Never outshine the master

Always make those above you feel comfortably superior. In your desire to please or impress them, do not go too far in displaying your talents or you might accomplish the opposite—inspire fear and insecurity.

Gordana

Chronology order of books to read :

All Robert Greene Books ( in Chronological Order ) :

The 48 Laws of Power (1998)

The Art of Seduction (2001)

The 33 Strategies of War (2006)

The 50th Law (2009)

Mastery (2012)

The Laws of Human Nature (2018)

The Daily Laws (2021)

Gordana

In research bar write :

48 Laws of power law 1

When you finish reading it, erase number 1, add instead number 2, do same with all other numbers, so you can save money not buying book.

Example :

48 Laws of power law 20

48 Laws of power law 21

48 Laws of power law 22
etc.

Gordana

Satan is coward. The other part of the world knows this. To win game, find weak spot. So, its time to play dare game.

Gordana

And its not americans, its jews. Jews make law and order, americans do as they tell them to do.

Gordana

Jews are the ones who always editing, deleting history of mankind. Turning it in the way they like, as hiding they were masters of all slaves, they were killing germans and not germans killing jews. No surprise why rest of world does not want Israel anywhere near.

Herald

Russia China alliance will back fire on Russia. The USA helped China immensely to develop into a modern economy. Now they are back stabbing the USA. In 15 years they will rule large parts of Russia.

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JHK

us fagemony destined to be burned.

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Koh Soo Thiam

While the US is busy encircling China with a show of force in the Eastern Seas, China and Russia are busy conducting peaceful diplomacy, the US seriously lacking or even has one😂

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Stephan B

Warships are too easy to destroy these days. The navy is just for show.

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