Sunday, May 10, 2026

The Monroe and China doctrine

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Title: The Monroe Doctrine Just Faded Away, and No One Heard a Sound
By: Digvijay Mourya

We’ve been asking the wrong question.

For months, the chatter has been the same: “Why is China so quiet while the U.S. tries to weaken it?” “Where is Beijing’s counterpunch?”

The assumption is that China is on the defensive. That silence equals weakness.

That is a dangerous miscalculation.

Because while the world was watching Trump’s tariffs and trade wars, China just did something no nation has done in 200 years. It didn’t send a single warship. It didn’t threaten nuclear escalation. It didn’t even raise its voice.

It invested.

And with that quiet act, one of the most unbreakable rules in global geopolitics—the Monroe Doctrine—simply faded into history.

Let me walk you through what happened, because almost no one noticed.

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The 200-Year-Old Rule No One Was Allowed to Break

In December 1823, President James Monroe sent a routine annual message to Congress. Inside it was one sentence that would shape two centuries of world order:

“Latin America is the United States’ sphere of influence. Intervention by other powers in the region is cause for war.”

That was the Monroe Doctrine. No treaties. No alliances. Just raw American will.

For 200 years, it held. The only serious test came in 1962, when the Soviet Union tried to place nuclear missiles in Cuba. The world held its breath for 13 days. The U.S. Navy blockaded the island. The Soviets blinked.

After that, no major power even thought about challenging U.S. dominance in Latin America.

Until 2025.

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China Didn’t Bring Tanks. It Brought Checks.

Here’s what everyone missed.

While the Trump administration was slapping a 50% tariff on Brazilian coffee, steel, and meat, China was doing something entirely different.

In the same period, China invested $6.1 billion in Brazil.

Not in weapons. Not in military bases.

In renewable energy projects. In mining companies. In port infrastructure. In railways.

China quietly embedded itself into the most critical veins of Brazil’s economy—without firing a single shot.

And Brazil’s reaction? President Lula said openly: “We will not be dependent on the U.S.”

Then Brazil closed its economic door to Washington and opened it wide to Beijing.

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Why Brazil? This Wasn’t Random

Most analysts will tell you two things: Brazil is a BRICS member, and Lula’s administration has tilted hard toward China. (He visited China five times in just one year.)

But those are surface-level reasons.

The real answer is far more strategic.

Brazil has quietly become an energy and resource superpower—and almost no one in the West is paying attention.

Consider these numbers:

· 88% of Brazil’s energy comes from renewable sources. The global average is around 30%.
· Itaipu Dam (world’s second-largest hydroelectric dam) sits on Brazilian soil.
· Brazil is a top-ten global oil producer, thanks to massive pre-salt offshore fields.
· It is the world’s largest producer of sugarcane ethanol.
· It is one of the largest iron ore producers on earth—the backbone of China’s steel industry.
· And here’s the kicker: 85% of the world’s niobium comes from Brazil. Niobium is critical for high-tech, military, and aerospace industries.

One country. Four strategic pillars. Energy, oil, steel, and a rare military-grade metal.

For China, Brazil isn’t just a trading partner. It’s a keystone.

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The Go Game on the World Map

I’ve said this before, and I’ll say it again: China doesn’t play chess. Chess is about head-on confrontation.

China plays Go.

In Go, you don’t attack directly. You place stones quietly, one by one, on seemingly unimportant points. Then one day, you look at the board—and the territory is already yours.

This is exactly what Beijing has been doing for twenty years.

First stone: Africa.
China built ports, railways, and fiber-optic networks across the continent. Today, China is Africa’s largest trading partner—by a massive margin.

Second stone: Europe.
In 2019, Italy joined the Belt and Road Initiative. Since then, European trade with China has deepened while transatlantic tensions have risen.

Third stone: Latin America.
Right now. Brazil is the anchor. But watch for Argentina, Chile, and Peru next.

Each move looks small in isolation. Together, they redraw the global map.

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My Personal Analysis

Here’s what the headlines won’t tell you.

The Monroe Doctrine didn’t die because China overpowered the U.S. militarily. It died because China outmaneuvered the U.S. economically—and the U.S. helped it happen.

When Washington imposes tariffs, it punishes. When Beijing invests, it partners.

One approach closes doors. The other builds roads, ports, and long-term dependency—in the most strategic sectors of an economy.

Brazil now gets more from China than it fears losing from the U.S. That’s the calculus that ended 200 years of American hemispheric dominance.

No nuclear standoff. No naval blockade. Just $6.1 billion in the right places at the right time.

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What Comes Next?

The world isn’t paying attention yet. But they will.

China is now free to operate in Latin America without the ghost of Monroe looking over its shoulder. And this blueprint—investment over invasion, partnership over punishment—will be repeated elsewhere.

The U.S. is still asking: “Why is China so quiet?”

China has already answered. Just not in words.

I’ll keep watching the board. And I’ll keep you informed.

— Digvijay Mourya
Author | Strategic Analyst

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Trump and world order


The Unraveling of Pax Americana: Is Trump Dismantling the Global Order or Redefining It?

By Digvijay Mourya

For nearly eight decades, a single phrase has underpinned the safety, prosperity, and geopolitical architecture of the non-communist world: The Rules-Based Order. Born from the ashes of World War II and solidified during the Cold War, this American-led system was designed to promote stability, respect for territorial integrity, and the free flow of capital. It was a "gentleman's agreement" with the US acting as the global sheriff.

Until Donald Trump walked into the saloon.

As an observer of strategic affairs, I have often argued that the post-war order was never as altruistic as advertised. The 2003 invasion of Iraq—a war justified on faulty intelligence that violated international law—proved that Washington plays by its own rules when convenient. However, Trump’s foreign policy is not merely hypocritical; it is revolutionary. It is chaotic yet coherent, aggressive yet strangely strategic. To understand the future of global politics, we must stop asking if Trump is "destroying" the alliance system and start asking if he is simply accelerating the inevitable shift toward a multipolar world.

The End of the "Indispensable Nation"

Historically, the United States sold its dominance as a public good. In exchange for dollar supremacy and military basing rights, Europe and Asia received a security guarantee. Trump tore up that receipt.

His "America First" doctrine is not isolationism; it is transactional nationalism. By withdrawing from the World Health Organization, scoffing at NATO’s collective defense provisions, and treating allies like Germany and South Korea as clients rather than partners, Trump has done something no adversary could: he has made the US commitment look fickle.

European capitals are now openly debating a reality that was unthinkable five years ago: nuclear proliferation without American cover and a strategic pivot away from transatlantic reliance. When the guarantor of your security becomes the greatest source of unpredictability, the alliance ceases to be a shield and becomes a liability.

The Monroe Doctrine 2.0

While Trump retreats from distant conflicts in the Middle East and Europe, he has doubled down on a very old American tradition: hemispheric hegemony. The aggressive posture toward Venezuela—including threats of military action and crippling sanctions—is a revival of the Monroe Doctrine for the 21st century.

The argument here is stark. Trump understands that the era of policing every corner of the globe is over, but he refuses to cede the backyard. This creates a dangerous imbalance: a superpower that refuses to enforce global rules but violently rejects any local rivals. It is the worst of both worlds. It tells China and Russia that the US is overstretched, but it tells Latin America that the gendarme is still armed.

The Two-Front Trap: China and Russia

Here lies the most critical strategic calculation of the Trump era. The Biden administration attempted to isolate Russia to focus on China. Trump is attempting to manage Russia to focus on China.

The analysis of his willingness to engage with Moscow—despite the historical baggage—suggests an acceptance of spheres of influence. Trump appears to view Ukraine as a distraction and NATO expansion as a provocation rather than a victory. By signaling that he is willing to trade Eastern Europe for stability, he implicitly recognizes Russian dominance in its near abroad. Simultaneously, he labels Beijing the "strategic competitor."

But this is a gambler’s bet. By weakening the European alliance to pivot to Asia, Trump assumes that a fractured NATO can survive without US leadership. He forgets that the US military, despite its vast network of 800 global bases, is a finite asset. Overextension is not a theory; it is arithmetic. The US cannot fight a naval war in the South China Sea while a resurgent Russia tests the borders of Poland.

The Chaotic Genius Thesis

Critics call it madness. I call it coherent strategy.

Trump’s flouting of international law and multilateral norms is not a bug; it is the operating system. He believes the rules-based order was a racket that benefited globalist elites and Chinese manufacturers at the expense of American workers. By withdrawing from the Iran Nuclear Deal (JCPOA) and the Paris Climate Accords, he wasn't being erratic; he was signaling that there is no moral authority in global governance—only power.

This approach is accelerating the shift toward a multipolar world. When the United States refuses to play the role of the benevolent hegemon, other powers fill the vacuum. China’s Belt and Road Initiative continues to expand. India recalibrates its non-alignment. Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Brazil begin to act as regional bullies, no longer fearing a phone call from the White House.

The Verdict: Order or Chaos?

If the goal of Trump’s foreign policy is to preserve a unipolar American moment, it is failing spectacularly. The world is more unstable, alliances are frayed, and the credibility of American promises is at an all-time low.

However, if the goal is to redefine American interest—to shed the costly burden of global management and transition to a fortress-like, mercantilist superpower—then the strategy is terrifyingly effective. Trump is forcing the world to grow up. He is telling Germany to pay for its own army, Japan to worry about its own missiles, and the UN to figure things out without US dues.

For better or worse, the post-war era is over. We are entering the age of the "G-Zero"—a world with no global leader. And whether you view Donald Trump as the cause of this chaos or the only politician honest enough to admit the US can no longer afford the title of "global policeman," one fact remains: the old order is bleeding out, and no one has agreed on what comes next.

About the Author: Digvijay Mourya is an author and geopolitical analyst focusing on the decline of Western hegemony and the rise of multipolar systems. His work examines the intersection of strategic culture and economic warfare.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Trap closes


The Geopolitical Trap: Why the Iran-U.S. Conflict is a Prelude to a New World War

By Digvijay Mourya

On the surface, the headlines scream of a familiar rhythm: America vs. Iran. Missiles, sanctions, and rhetoric flying across the Persian Gulf. But as students of grand strategy, we must look beyond the obvious. We are not watching a regional spat. We are witnessing the setup of a masterful geopolitical trap—one that has the potential to dismantle the existing world order.

In a recent deep-dive analysis, a strategic mind laid out a terrifyingly coherent theory: the current conflict is a chess game where Iran has already moved its pieces, and the real target is not American bases, but the strategic alliance between the West and the economic giant of the East, China.

Let me break down why this isn’t just another Middle Eastern skirmish, but the opening gambit of a new world war.

The 25-Year Partnership Nobody is Talking About

To understand the current chaos, we must rewind to 2021. While the world was distracted by the pandemic, Iran and China signed a 25-year strategic partnership. On paper, it was an economic deal: China would pour billions into Iranian infrastructure, energy, and telecommunications. In return, they would receive a steady stream of heavily discounted oil.

But this was never just about money. For China, this deal was about survival. A massive portion of Chinese oil imports flows through the narrow strait of Hormuz – waters that Iran effectively controls. By tying Beijing’s economic stability directly to Tehran’s survival, Iran created an insurance policy against Western aggression.

For Washington, this was a nightmare. They couldn’t strike Iran without hitting China’s economic lifeline.

China’s Impossible Dilemma

This brings us to the crux of the trap. As the U.S. Navy squares off with Iranian proxies, China is sitting on a razor’s edge.

· If China remains passive while Iran is crippled, they lose their $400 billion investment. They admit to the world that their "Wolf Warrior" diplomacy is a bluff. The Belt and Road Initiative would crumble because no partner would trust Beijing to protect them.
· If China intervenes to save Iran, they trigger a direct military confrontation with the United States—a war they are not ready for, but one they cannot afford to lose.

This is the genius of the Iranian strategy. They have created a situation where the survival of the American empire is now predicated on China’s weakness. Tehran has effectively hostage-taken the global power transition.

Escalation Dominance vs. Escalation Control

The United States has always relied on a doctrine of "Escalation Dominance"—the idea that they can always bring more aircraft carriers, more bombs, and more firepower than any adversary. It is the psychology of the bully.

Iran and China, however, are playing "Escalation Control." They are deciding when and how the ladder is climbed.

China holds a massive advantage here: proximity. The conflict is happening in America’s backyard? No. It is happening in China’s neighborhood. While the U.S. Navy sails for weeks to reach the Gulf, China is just over the mountains in Pakistan and Central Asia. In a prolonged engagement, time and distance favor the defensive power. America is playing a game of global reach; China is playing a game of regional strangulation.

The Overstretch of the American Leviathan

Look at the board honestly. The United States is bleeding political and military capital in Ukraine, propping up Israel against a multi-front insurgency, staring down China in the South China Sea, and now bracing for impact with Iran.

This is strategic overstretch. It is the same disease that killed the British Empire after World War II.

When you are fighting everywhere, you are strong nowhere. The American military machine is incredible, but it is not infinite. By forcing the U.S. to engage on multiple simultaneous fronts—European land war, Middle Eastern naval war, Asian Pacific standoff—the Axis of Resistance is draining the American treasury and, more importantly, its will.

The Death of the Petrodollar?

Here is the prediction that will keep central bankers awake at night.

The Gulf States (Saudi Arabia, UAE) are watching this very carefully. They have historically traded oil in U.S. dollars and parked their wealth in American Treasury bonds in exchange for American security guarantees.

But what happens if the U.S. Navy fails to secure the Gulf? Or if the U.S. gets bogged down in a losing war?

The Chinese have already signaled they are willing to trade in petroyuan. If the Gulf states pivot to Beijing for security—or simply to protect their oil shipments—the dollar’s reserve status collapses. That is the checkmate. Not a nuclear bomb in Tel Aviv, but a quiet shift in the currency markets.

The Final Prediction: How This Ends

I do not believe we are heading for a clean Hollywood ending. Based on the structural analysis of this trap, here is how the next 24 months likely unfold:

1. The U.S. will need an exit. Not a victory, but a "face-saving" retreat. Iran will not be destroyed; they will negotiate from a position of strength.
2. China will emerge stronger. By merely threatening intervention, or providing limited logistical support to Iran, China will be seen as the new guarantor of Middle Eastern stability. The Gulf will look East.
3. The Dollar will weaken. Once the Gulf realizes America cannot protect the Strait of Hormuz alone, the diversification away from the dollar will begin in earnest.

Conclusion: Wake Up

We have been conditioned to view these conflicts as isolated events. They are not. The Iran-U.S. conflict is the surface ripple of a tectonic shift. It is an asymmetrical war designed not to destroy the American military, but to bankrupt its influence and isolate its economy.

As readers of my work know, I detest simplistic media narratives. This isn't about good guys and bad guys. It is about structure. And the structure of the current world favors the nation that can control its escalation, protect its supply chains, and outlast the overstretched hegemon.

Watch the Strait of Hormuz. Watch Beijing’s silence. The trap is already closed. We are just waiting for the spring.

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About the Author: Digvijay Mourya is a strategic analyst and author specializing in geopolitical realignments, asymmetric warfare, and the decline of Western hegemony.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

The Petro dollar and Multipolar world.

THE PETRODOLLAR CRACKS: Why the UAE Just Walked Away from OPEC and What It Means for Global Power

By Digvijay Mourya

History has a peculiar way of announcing itself—not with thunderous declarations, but with quiet signatures on withdrawal papers. On May 1, 2026, the United Arab Emirates will formally exit OPEC, severing a 59-year relationship that began in the era of Beatles records and Apollo missions. And make no mistake: this is not a footnote in energy history. This is the sound of the old world order cracking wide open.

Let me tell you why this matters more than any barrel count or production quota you'll read about in the financial press.

The Cartel That Controlled the World

When OPEC was born in Baghdad in 1960, the world ran on a simple premise: control oil, control nations. Five founding members—Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela—understood something that Western powers were slow to grasp. The age of coal was dying, and the age of crude was rising. By 1967, when the UAE joined, the organization had already transformed from a theoretical collective into the most consequential cartel in human history.

But here's what your economics textbook won't tell you. OPEC's power was never just about barrels. It was about the dollar. The 1972 agreement between the United States and Saudi Arabia—the so-called "Petrodollar" system—was the real masterstroke. In exchange for military protection, Saudi Arabia would ensure that every barrel of oil traded globally would be priced exclusively in US dollars.

Think about the genius of that arrangement. Every nation on earth needs oil. Every nation on earth therefore needs dollars. And the United States, as the sole printer of those dollars, could effectively export its inflation, run perpetual trade deficits, and maintain geopolitical dominance without firing a single shot.

For fifty years, it worked beautifully. For the Saudis, who controlled OPEC's swing production. For the Americans, who controlled the world's reserve currency. And for the UAE, which grew wealthy playing by those rules.

But rules, like sandcastles, eventually meet the tide.

The Perfect Storm No One Saw Coming

The past eighteen months have been brutal for the Gulf region. I've spent considerable time speaking with energy analysts and regional political observers, and the picture that emerges is nothing short of alarming.

The trigger, as these things often are, was threefold.

First, the rise of Russia as an unapologetic energy powerhouse operating entirely outside Western financial systems. When sanctions hit Moscow, something unexpected happened. Russia didn't collapse. It pivoted. Directly to India and China. And those two giants—representing nearly three billion people—were more than happy to settle deals in rubles and yuan. The dollar's monopoly on energy trade suddenly had a crack in it.

Second, the Strait of Hormuz. In early 2026, regional hostilities escalated to the point where this narrow waterway—through which one-fifth of global oil passes—was effectively closed. The UAE's export capacity collapsed from 4.85 million barrels per day to just 1.9 million. That's not a slowdown. That's economic strangulation.

Third, the drones. Sustained, sophisticated attacks on UAE infrastructure. Shipping routes disrupted. Tourism devastated. Airlines grounded. The diversification that Dubai and Abu Dhabi worked decades to build—the gleaming towers, the global airline hub, the luxury destination—came under sustained assault.

And here's where the story takes its most revealing turn.

The Dollar Question That Changed Everything

According to sources close to the matter, the UAE approached the United States quietly, as allies do, requesting a currency swap line to stabilize the dirham against a rapidly strengthening dollar. This was not an unreasonable request. The Federal Reserve has extended such arrangements to numerous central banks during times of crisis.

But Washington hesitated.

Some say it was bureaucratic inertia. Others whisper that the Biden administration's successor was playing hardball, using the swap line as leverage in unrelated negotiations over Iran and regional security architecture. Whatever the reason, the message received in Abu Dhabi was unmistakable: you are not equal partners. You are clients.

When your survival depends on stable currency and open trade routes, and your supposed ally leaves you hanging, you start making other plans.

What Leaving OPEC Actually Means

Let me cut through the technical jargon. Under OPEC+ quotas, the UAE was forced to produce roughly 30 percent below its actual capacity. Thirty percent. That's like owning a factory that can run three shifts but being told you can only run two—while your competitors operate at full tilt.

By leaving, the UAE regains sovereign control over three critical levers:

Volume. They can now increase production immediately, flooding the market with crude. Lower prices per barrel, but more barrels overall. Basic math.

Pricing. Without OPEC's floor prices, the UAE can undercut competitors to lock in long-term contracts with the world's largest importers—India and China specifically.

Currency. This is the big one. The UAE can now negotiate trades in rupees, yuan, or any other currency its buyers prefer. The Petrodollar system, already weakened, just lost one of its most important pillars.

The Ripple Effect That Terrifies Riyadh

Let me tell you what keeps Saudi crown princes awake at night.

If India and China pivot toward UAE oil at competitive, non-dollar prices, two things happen simultaneously. Global oil prices experience a permanent structural decline. And global demand for US dollars—the very foundation of American financial power—erodes further.

The Saudi-UAE partnership, long considered unbreakable in OPEC negotiations, just fractured in public view. Riyadh now faces an impossible choice. Maintain OPEC quotas and watch its closest ally undercut the entire system. Or abandon the cartel itself and accelerate the very de-dollarization it fears.

Neither option is good.

The Gamblers of Abu Dhabi

I have to admire the audacity, even as I recognize the risk.

The UAE is betting that a multipolar world requires multipolar energy markets. They are betting that flexibility and speed will outperform bureaucratic coordination. They are betting that India and China's hunger for reliable, affordable oil will outweigh any loyalty to the Petrodollar system.

These are not foolish bets. But they are not safe ones either.

The United States still possesses formidable tools of economic coercion. The Saudi relationship, while strained, remains deep. And the global financial system, for all its flaws, still runs primarily on dollars.

What the UAE has done, in essence, is open a second front in the currency wars. Not with an ideological declaration or a United Nations speech, but with a simple letter of withdrawal from a cartel in Vienna.

Where We Go From Here

I write this from my study in Dwarka,  New Delhi, watching the sun set over a city that embodies the new multipolar reality. India buys Russian oil in rubles, Chinese goods in yuan, and may soon buy Emirati crude in rupees. The world is not ending. It is rebalancing.

For the average person reading this—whether in Chicago or Chennai, London or Lagos—the effects will be subtle at first. More volatile gasoline prices. A dollar that no longer feels invincible. Supply chains that shift in ways both confusing and consequential.

But for those who watch the architecture of global power, the message is clear. The Petrodollar is not dead, but it is wounded. OPEC is not finished, but it is diminished. And the United Arab Emirates, that glittering confederation of seven emirates, has just announced to the world that it will no longer wait for permission to secure its own survival.

History announces itself in quiet signatures.

Pay attention.

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Digvijay Mourya is an author and geopolitical analyst focusing on energy markets, currency systems, and the shifting architecture of global power.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Kindleberger trap

 Author Digvijay Mourya, reflecting on the current global situation through the lens of the original article’s themes—leadership vacuums, geopolitical fractures, and the haunting silence of the “Kindleberger Trap.”

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Title: The Silence Before the Storm: Why No One is Driving the World Anymore
Author: Digvijay Mourya

We are living through a strange kind of silence.

Not the silence of peace. Not the calm of resolution. It is the silence of a driver who has taken their hands off the wheel, while the passengers argue about who should take over. The engine is still running. The speed is still dangerous. But no one is steering.

This is the current world situation, and it has a name: the Kindleberger Trap.

I wrote recently about Charles Kindleberger’s haunting insight—that the Great Depression happened not because the world had too many rivals, but because it had no responsible leader. Britain was drained. America was reluctant. And the global system collapsed into itself like a lung without air.

Today, that same trap is not a theory. It is a headline.

The Old Guard is Exhausted

Look at the United States. For eighty years, it played the role of global sheriff—underwriting trade routes, stabilizing currencies, enforcing rules. But that sheriff is tired. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan bled more than treasure; they bled belief. The American public no longer wants to be the world’s policeman. And so Washington hesitates. It sends signals, then retracts them. It threatens, then negotiates. It withdraws from Afghanistan, hesitates on Ukraine funding, and turns inward with industrial policy that looks less like leadership and more like self-preservation.

This is not collapse. This is fatigue. But fatigue in a hegemon looks exactly like abandonment to the rest of the world.

The Rising Power is Calculating

And what of China? Beijing watches the West’s disorder with quiet calculation. It does not want to inherit the American role—not yet, maybe not ever. Why? Because global leadership is expensive. It requires sacrifice, transparency, and the willingness to be hated.

Instead, China builds parallel systems. The Belt and Road Initiative. The AIIB. A digital currency infrastructure that bypasses the dollar. It provides selective goods—roads, ports, loans—without accepting universal burdens like climate accountability, refugee sharing, or military security for allies outside its immediate orbit.

This is rational. But rationality at the national level is producing collective madness at the global level. The world is not getting two leaders. It is getting none.

The Rest Are Caught in the Middle

Small and middle powers are no longer able to play the old game of hedging. The US demands loyalty against China. China demands silence on Taiwan and the South China Sea. Europe is distracted by its own backyard. Russia has abandoned the rules entirely. And the Global South is left asking: Who protects our trade? Who stabilizes our currency? Who responds when a pandemic or a debt crisis hits?

The answer, increasingly, is no one.

The Symptoms Are Everywhere

Do not be fooled by the absence of a third world war. The current world situation is not stable. It is precarious.

· The WTO is a corpse walking.
· Climate agreements are aspirational poetry with no enforcement.
· Cyber warfare happens daily, with no agreed rules of engagement.
· Supply chains are weaponized.
· Energy is a bargaining chip.
· Food security is held hostage by blockades and tariffs.

These are not separate crises. They are all symptoms of the same disease: a global leadership vacuum.

So What Now?

I do not write this to frighten you. I write this because naming the trap is the first step to escaping it.

The world does not need a new empire. It needs a new maturity. That means:

1. The United States must lead again, but differently — not as a bully, not as a savior, but as a convener. It cannot retreat into a fortress and expect prosperity to follow.
2. China must accept that global order is not a la carte — you cannot take the benefits of stability without paying the costs of maintaining it. That means transparency, accountability, and shared burdens.
3. The rest of the world must stop waiting for saviors — regional powers like India, Brazil, Indonesia, and South Africa must build intermediate institutions. Climate clubs. Digital trade pacts. Regional security frameworks. Resilience from below.

Final Thought

The Kindleberger Trap is not a prophecy. It is a choice. Every day that great powers posture instead of provide, the trap closes a little tighter. Every day that small powers hope for rescue instead of building redundancy, the storm grows a little darker.

I have studied history long enough to know that empires fall not with a bang, but with a shrug. A tired leader. A distracted rival. A silent room.

The question is not whether the world will face another crisis. It will. The question is whether, when that crisis comes, anyone will be left at the controls.

Right now, the cockpit is empty.

Let us hope that changes before the turbulence begins.

— Digvijay Mourya

Friday, April 3, 2026

Iran strategy


Title: The Phoenix and the Labyrinth: Decoding Iran’s Grand Strategy

By Digvijay Mourya

For decades, the Islamic Republic of Iran has been one of the most studied, yet most frequently misunderstood, actors in international relations. To Western policymakers, Tehran often appears as a singular, ideologically driven monolith—a revolutionary state hell-bent on expansion. To its regional rivals, it is a shadowy puppeteer, weaving a web of proxies from the Mediterranean to the Arabian Sea. But as with any great civilization with a history spanning millennia, the truth is far more complex.

In my years of analyzing the geopolitical tectonics of West Asia, I have observed that Iran’s strategic behavior is not merely a product of revolutionary fervor; it is a sophisticated, multi-dimensional chess game. It is a strategy born of necessity, forged in the crucible of the Iran-Iraq War, hardened by decades of sanctions, and refined through a pragmatic understanding of power. To truly comprehend Tehran’s moves, one must appreciate the delicate balance between ideological legitimacy and sheer survival.

Here is a deconstruction of the nineteen pillars that uphold Iran’s grand strategy.

1. The Multi-Dimensional Trinity

Iran’s strategic aims are never singular. At any given moment, the Supreme Leader and the military brass are balancing three distinct priorities: domestic legitimacy (the survival of the Islamic Republic system), regional influence (the projection of power to create a friendly buffer zone), and deterrence (making the cost of external pressure, particularly from the US and Israel, prohibitively high). A strategy that fails to satisfy all three is considered a failure.

2. The Art of Asymmetry

Iranian strategists are painfully aware of their conventional military limitations compared to the United States or a technologically superior Israel. To offset this, they have perfected the art of asymmetrical warfare. The "Axis of Resistance"—a network of proxies in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen—is not merely an ideological export; it is the ultimate cost-benefit tool. It allows Iran to project power, bleed adversaries, and establish forward defense lines without suffering the domestic political fallout of mass Iranian casualties.

3. Ideology as a Vehicle, Pragmatism as the Driver

This is perhaps the most misunderstood aspect of Iranian policy. The rhetoric of the "Great Satan" and the global revolution is non-negotiable for domestic consumption and revolutionary identity. However, actual policy is driven by realpolitik. We saw this when Tehran sat at the negotiating table with the US for the JCPOA (nuclear deal), or when it continues to engage in trade with European powers despite fierce ideological condemnations. In Iran, the slogan is the shield, but pragmatism is the sword.

4. The Weight of History

To understand Iran’s paranoia, one must look to 1953 (the CIA-backed coup against Mossadegh) and the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War. The memory of Saddam Hussein’s invasion, supported by Western powers, while Iran stood isolated, has created a strategic culture obsessed with self-reliance. Every decision today—from nuclear enrichment to naval tactics in the Strait of Hormuz—is filtered through the trauma of past vulnerability.

5. The Economic Battlefield

Sanctions are not an external shock to Iran; they are a permanent condition. Consequently, economic resilience is a primary strategic objective. Iran’s strategy is defined by its ability to circumvent sanctions, create barter systems with Russia and China, and maintain just enough oil revenue to keep the state afloat. When the economy collapses, strategic options shrink. When it stabilizes, regional adventurism increases.

6. The Domestic Labyrinth

Iran is not a dictatorship of one man, but a complex factional system. The constant tension between the Supreme Leader’s office, the Presidency, the judiciary, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) shapes foreign policy. The IRGC, in particular, acts as a state within a state, controlling the proxy networks and a large swath of the economy. Understanding who is winning the domestic power struggle on any given Tuesday is essential to predicting whether Tehran will lean toward diplomatic engagement or military escalation.

7. Soft Power of the Shia Crescent

Hard power is backed by sophisticated soft power. Iran leverages the Arbaeen pilgrimage—one of the largest annual gatherings in the world—as a tool of religious diplomacy. By positioning itself as the defender of Shia holy sites and the champion of the "oppressed" (Mostazafin), Iran extends its cultural reach across borders in a way that no missile can.

8. The Security Dilemma

Iran views its network of proxies as defensive; its neighbors view it as offensive. This is the classic security dilemma. When Iran arms the Houthis in Yemen, Saudi Arabia feels encircled. When Saudi Arabia normalizes relations with the US, Iran feels threatened. Tehran walks a cautious tightrope, trying to expand its influence without triggering a unified military coalition against it.

9. Strategic Partnerships with Non-State Actors

Unlike traditional nations that rely solely on state-to-state alliances, Iran has mastered the art of leveraging non-state actors. Hamas, Hezbollah, the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMU) in Iraq—these are not merely proxies; they are partners who have internalized Iranian strategic culture. This allows Iran to manage costs, ensure plausible deniability, and maintain a 360-degree security architecture at a fraction of the cost of a standing army.

10. The American Shadow

Every Iranian calculation is made with the United States looming in the background. Whether it is the presence of the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain or the periodic nuclear negotiations, Tehran’s strategy is built to outlast US presidents. Iran does not seek direct war with the US; it seeks to raise the cost of US presence in the region to the point where Washington opts for withdrawal.

11. Continuity and Change

While the core aim—survival of the system—remains absolute, tactics evolve. The shift from overt support for Sunni groups (in the early revolutionary days) to a focus on Shia networks; the transition from a purely anti-Western stance to a "Look East" policy under Ebrahim Raisi; these demonstrate that while the destination is fixed (regional dominance and regime security), the map is constantly redrawn.

12. The Lawfare Approach

Iran understands that in the modern world, legitimacy matters. It utilizes international legal mechanisms, the UN General Assembly, and the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) to frame itself as the aggrieved party. Even when engaging in covert operations, Tehran works to maintain a veneer of legal compliance, often using the IAEA as a diplomatic shield to buy time during nuclear negotiations.

13. Energy as Leverage

Oil and gas are not just revenue; they are strategic assets. Iran’s ability to threaten the Strait of Hormuz—through which 20% of the world’s oil passes—gives it disproportionate leverage. Furthermore, as Europe seeks to diversify away from Russian gas, Iran’s vast reserves remain a potential trump card to break diplomatic isolation.

14. The Battle of Narratives

How the world perceives Iran is often as important as what Iran does. Tehran is acutely aware of the "Iranian threat" narrative used by its adversaries. Sometimes, Iran plays into this to project strength; other times, it deliberately moderates its rhetoric to defuse a potential war coalition. Signaling is a high art in Tehran; misperception can lead to unwanted escalation.

15. Strategic Ambiguity

The nuclear program is the ultimate example of this. By enriching uranium but not (publicly) testing a weapon, Iran keeps the world guessing. This ambiguity maximizes deterrence—no one knows the precise red line—while avoiding the catastrophic consequences of an overt weaponization that could trigger a unified international intervention.

16. Gradualism

Iran rarely makes sudden, dramatic leaps. Instead, it prefers gradualism. Whether it was the slow creep of nuclear centrifuges or the gradual expansion of its military footprint in Syria, Tehran prefers to advance step by step. This incremental approach is designed to avoid provoking a sharp retaliatory response while solidifying irreversible facts on the ground.

17. Sanctions as a Catalyst

Ironically, decades of sanctions have forced Iran to develop indigenous industries—from drone manufacturing to nuclear technology. The "resistance economy" is a strategic doctrine that posits that self-sufficiency is the ultimate form of sovereignty. Iran’s current prowess in drone warfare and ballistic missiles is a direct result of being locked out of the global arms market.

18. Tactical Flexibility

Iran is a master of the "hybrid" approach. If diplomacy fails, it turns to proxies. If proxies are exposed, it turns to cyber warfare. If cyber warfare escalates, it pulls back to maritime harassment. This tactical flexibility ensures that Iran can modulate the temperature of a conflict, escalating or de-escalating to suit its strategic needs without ever fully committing to a total war it knows it cannot win conventionally.

19. The Patronage Trap

While Iran enjoys strategic alignment with Russia and China, there is a deep-seated anxiety in Tehran about over-reliance. Dependence on Moscow for technology or on Beijing for oil sales creates vulnerabilities. If Russia decides to sacrifice Iranian interests for a grand bargain with the US, or if China enters a recession, Tehran’s strategic position weakens. Hence, Iran constantly tries to diversify its dependencies.

20. The Calculus of Risk

Ultimately, the Iranian regime is a risk-management machine. It is willing to endure significant economic pain and regional conflict, but it draws a hard line at existential threats. The "proportional response" is the golden rule. When the US assassinated Qasem Soleimani, Iran responded with a military strike on US bases—significant enough to restore deterrence, yet calibrated to avoid mass American casualties that would have triggered a war.

Conclusion

To view Iran solely through the lens of ideology is to misunderstand it. To view it solely through the lens of power politics is to underestimate it. The Islamic Republic is a unique entity: a revolutionary state that has survived for 45 years by institutionalizing pragmatism under the guise of ideology.

For those watching the current conflagration in West Asia, it is essential to remember that Iran plays a long game. It thinks in decades, not election cycles. Its strategy is a labyrinth—confusing to outsiders, but logically structured from within by the nineteen principles outlined above. As long as it maintains the balance between deterrence and diplomacy, between economic endurance and military projection, the Islamic Republic will remain the central pillar—and the central challenge—of West Asian stability.

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Author Digvijay Mourya specializes in West Asian geopolitics, strategic studies, and the political economy of emerging powers. His work focuses on the intersection of ideology and statecraft in non-Western governance systems.

Friday, March 13, 2026

Multi-polar world order

The War That Exposed America's Strategic Blind Spots: China's Silent Victory in the Middle East

By Author Digvijay Mourya

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Introduction: The Conflict America Didn't Understand

As the world watches the devastating conflict unfolding in the Middle East, most observers remain fixated on the immediate horrors: the precision strikes, the civilian casualties, the escalating rhetoric from world capitals. But beneath the surface of this tragedy, a far more consequential story is unfolding—one that may ultimately reshape the global balance of power for generations.

The United States, in its zealous commitment to supporting Israel and confronting Iran, has walked into a strategic trap of its own making. And sitting quietly on the sidelines, taking meticulous notes and reaping unprecedented advantages, is China.

This is not conspiracy theory or anti-American rhetoric. This is cold, hard strategic analysis based on observable facts, military data, and economic indicators that paint a disturbing picture of American miscalculation and Chinese strategic patience.

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Part One: The Flawed Assumptions Behind American Strategy

The Illusion of Air Power Supremacy

When Operation Epic Fury launched on February 28, 2026, with 900 air strikes in just 12 hours, Pentagon planners believed they were demonstrating the overwhelming superiority of American military technology. They were wrong.

What they didn't understand—or chose to ignore—is that air power alone cannot achieve regime change in large, resilient nations like Iran. The United States has now consumed roughly half of its initial 8,000-9,000 high-end precision munitions stockpile, only to discover that many of these expensive weapons were destroying carefully constructed decoys.

Iran, drawing on decades of studying American military doctrine, had prepared extensively for exactly this scenario. With an estimated 45,000 missiles and between 50,000 and 100,000 drones, they possess the capability to absorb enormous punishment while retaining the capacity to retaliate.

The Navy That Cannot Protect Global Shipping

Perhaps the most embarrassing revelation of this conflict is the United States Navy's inability to secure vital shipping lanes. With nearly 1,000 tankers—approximately 22% of the global fleet—stuck in or near the Strait of Hormuz, the world has witnessed something unprecedented: the world's most powerful navy unable to guarantee passage through one of the planet's most critical waterways.

The Strait of Hormuz sees roughly 20 million barrels of crude oil flow through it daily, with 80% of that heading to Asian markets. When that flow is disrupted, it's not just an inconvenience—it's a potential global economic catastrophe.

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Part Two: China's Shadow War—The Gains Nobody Is Talking About

The Shadow Fleet That Beat American Sanctions

While American politicians boast about "maximum pressure" campaigns against Iran, China has been quietly operating one of the most sophisticated sanctions-evasion networks in modern history. Through a vast "shadow fleet" of tankers—representing approximately 18% of global tanker capacity—China continues to import roughly 1.5 million barrels of Iranian oil daily.

How does this work? Through ship-to-ship transfers in international waters, constant reflagging of vessels, and a complex web of shell companies that makes tracking ownership nearly impossible. The result is that Iran remains economically viable despite American sanctions, and China secures approximately 17% of its oil imports at discounted prices.

For context, this represents only about 1.5% of China's total energy consumption—meaning Beijing could absorb a complete cutoff of Iranian oil without catastrophic economic consequences. The same cannot be said for America's traditional allies.

Building a Financial System Beyond American Control

Perhaps the most existential threat to American hegemony isn't military at all—it's financial. While the United States has long relied on its control of the SWIFT payment system as a weapon against adversaries, China has been quietly constructing alternatives.

Consider these developments:

· The Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIP) now processes 928 billion RMB (approximately $128 billion) in daily transactions.
· Mbridge, a digital currency platform, surpassed $55 billion in transaction volume by early 2026.
· Chu Shin, another Chinese-led financial network, channeled $8.44 billion in 2024 alone.

These parallel financial systems allow China, Russia, Iran, and increasingly Middle Eastern partners to conduct trade completely outside Western financial surveillance and control. When the United States threatens to cut countries off from the dollar system, they now have alternatives.

Real-Time Intelligence on American Military Operations

Here's something that should keep Pentagon planners awake at night: China is watching every missile launch, every tactical decision, every operational success and failure in this conflict in real time.

When American commanders discover that their precision munitions are being wasted on decoys, Chinese military analysts are noting the same thing. When the U.S. Navy struggles to coordinate responses to drone swarms, Chinese observers are documenting those weaknesses. When supply chains for critical components like advanced chips show vulnerabilities, Chinese industrial planners are taking notes.

This conflict is, in effect, a live-fire exercise for China's military planners—a chance to study American capabilities and limitations without firing a single shot.

The Eurasian Energy Bloc Takes Shape

Perhaps the most significant geopolitical development of the past two years has been the quiet consolidation of a Sino-Russian energy alliance that now includes key Middle Eastern producers. While American attention has been focused on battlefield tactics, China has been securing its long-term energy future.

Through massive infrastructure investments—totaling $89 billion in direct investment in the Middle East between 2019 and 2024—China has positioned itself as the indispensable partner for Gulf energy producers. When these countries grow frustrated with American security guarantees that seem increasingly unreliable, China offers something the United States cannot: consistent, long-term economic partnership without military entanglement.

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Part Three: The Coming Economic Catastrophe

The Derivatives Time Bomb

If you want to understand why this conflict threatens global economic stability, you need to understand the derivatives market—specifically, the approximately $600 trillion to $1 quadrillion in notional value of derivatives tied to energy prices.

Here's the terrifying reality: these financial instruments are backed by only about $300 billion in real collateral. This is leverage at a scale that most people cannot comprehend. If oil prices spike to $150 or $200 per barrel—entirely possible if the Strait of Hormuz remains disrupted—the cascading defaults could trigger a financial crisis dwarfing 2008.

Why America's Allies Are More Vulnerable Than China

China's energy self-sufficiency rate stands at approximately 84%. With onshore oil reserves sufficient for 100-115 days of net imports, Beijing has built resilience into its system. Moreover, because China's oil imports come through multiple overland pipelines from Russia and Central Asia, it is far less dependent on maritime chokepoints than traditional American allies.

Compare this to Japan, South Korea, or many European nations, which remain heavily dependent on sea-borne energy imports. When the next oil shock hits—and it will—these American allies will suffer disproportionately while China rides out the storm with its diversified supply chains and strategic reserves.

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Part Four: The Five Public Lessons China Learned from This War

Lesson One: Internal Security Is Critical

The conflict has demonstrated how espionage and internal subversion can decisively weaken leadership. China has taken this lesson to heart, with espionage prosecutions in Taiwan rising from 16 to 64 cases as Beijing tightens internal security.

Lesson Two: Diplomacy Under U.S. Dominance Is Unreliable

The speed with which the United States committed to military action, apparently without fully consulting Gulf allies, has reinforced Beijing's conviction that it cannot rely on American diplomatic restraint. Military action can come without warning, regardless of diplomatic engagements.

Lesson Three: Superior Firepower Matters—But Is Insufficient Alone

China has responded to this lesson with a 7% increase in its defense budget and accelerated military modernization focused on drones, electronic warfare, aircraft carriers, and readiness for potential conflicts, particularly regarding Taiwan.

Lesson Four: The Illusion of Victory

Perhaps the most important lesson is that military destruction does not guarantee political outcomes. The United States can destroy Iranian infrastructure, but it cannot force Iranian capitulation or regime change from the air alone.

Lesson Five: Self-Reliance Is Vital

Control of supply chains and technology is not just an economic advantage—it's a strategic necessity. China's investments in domestic semiconductor manufacturing, energy independence, and critical mineral processing reflect this understanding.

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Part Five: The Unpublished Lesson—Taiwan

Here's what American strategists seem to be missing: this conflict serves as a proxy stress test for a potential Taiwan conflict.

Every Tomahawk missile expended against Iranian targets is one less available for a Pacific contingency. Every month of naval operations in the Persian Gulf is a month of wear on vessels that might be needed in the South China Sea. Every tactical lesson learned by Chinese observers is intelligence that could be applied in a future confrontation over Taiwan.

The United States is depleting its military resources and revealing its operational limitations in real time, while China watches, learns, and prepares.

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Part Six: The Geopolitical Realignment Nobody Saw Coming

Gulf States Looking East

The Gulf States were excluded from American war planning, yet they suffer direct attacks on their infrastructure when conflict escalates. This has produced profound dissatisfaction with American security guarantees.

Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and other Gulf powers are now actively hedging their bets. The China-brokered reconciliation between Iran and Saudi Arabia was not an accident—it was the logical outcome of Gulf states recognizing that their long-term interests may lie with Beijing rather than Washington.

The Post-American Middle East

We are witnessing the emergence of a post-American Middle East, where U.S. influence diminishes while Chinese economic power and regional autonomy grow. This doesn't mean American military bases will disappear overnight, but it does mean that when the next crisis comes, Gulf states may not automatically align with Washington.

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Part Seven: What This Means for Ordinary People

The Inflation You Haven't Felt Yet

The full economic impact of this conflict hasn't reached American and European consumers yet, but it will. When oil prices spike—and with over 25% of global oil production currently offline, a spike is inevitable—the effects cascade through every sector of the economy.

Fuel prices rise. Electricity costs increase. Food prices surge because transportation costs and fertilizer prices both depend on energy. The comfortable assumption that global conflicts only affect distant populations is about to be tested.

Financial Instability and Retirement Security

For millions of people with retirement savings in pension funds and 401(k)s, the derivatives time bomb represents an existential threat. If major financial institutions collapse under the weight of energy derivative defaults, the contagion could wipe out years of savings.

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Part Eight: The Strategic Miscalculations That Led Us Here

Underestimating Resilience

The United States consistently underestimates the resilience of nations it considers adversaries. Iran is not Iraq. It possesses geographical depth, industrial capacity, and a population that—whatever its grievances with the regime—will rally against foreign attack.

Overestimating Technological Solutions

There is a persistent belief in American military circles that technology can solve political problems. Precision munitions can destroy targets, but they cannot create stable political outcomes. This is a lesson the United States has learned repeatedly—in Vietnam, in Afghanistan, in Iraq—yet seems incapable of internalizing.

Ignoring the Rise of Alternatives

Perhaps the most significant miscalculation has been the assumption that American-dominated institutions—whether military alliances, financial systems, or energy markets—would remain dominant indefinitely. China has spent two decades building alternatives, and this conflict has revealed just how robust those alternatives have become.

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Part Nine: Looking Forward—The World That Is Emerging

The Multipolar Reality

We are not moving toward a world of American decline and Chinese ascendancy in any simple sense. Rather, we are moving toward a genuinely multipolar world where power is distributed among multiple centers: the United States, China, Russia, India, and regional powers in the Middle East and elsewhere.

This is not inherently worse than the unipolar moment that followed the Cold War, but it is different—and it requires different strategies, different assumptions, and different approaches to international relations.

The Lessons America Refuses to Learn

The tragedy of American strategy in this conflict is not that mistakes were made—mistakes are inevitable in any complex human endeavor. The tragedy is that the United States seems incapable of learning the lessons these mistakes should teach.

The reliance on military solutions to political problems. The assumption that technological superiority guarantees victory. The neglect of economic statecraft and alliance maintenance. The failure to understand how adversaries perceive American actions.

These are not new problems, but they are newly dangerous in a world where competitors like China have learned from American mistakes without repeating them.

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Conclusion: The War That Changed Everything

History will record that the Middle Eastern conflict of 2024-2026 was not primarily about Israel and Iran, or about Gaza and the West Bank, or about any of the immediate triggers that captured media attention. It was about something far larger: the transition from a unipolar American-dominated world to a multipolar world of competing powers and alternative systems.

China understood this from the beginning. While American policymakers focused on tactical military objectives, Beijing focused on strategic outcomes: securing energy supplies, building alternative financial systems, gathering intelligence on American capabilities, and positioning itself as the indispensable partner for a post-American Middle East.

The United States, by contrast, charged ahead with the same assumptions that have guided its foreign policy for decades—assumptions about military supremacy, about the universality of American values, about the permanence of American-led institutions—that no longer reflect reality.

The result is a conflict that has weakened America, strengthened China, and left ordinary people around the world to bear the costs of strategic miscalculations made in distant capitals.

As we look toward an uncertain future, one thing is clear: the world that emerges from this conflict will not be the world that entered it. And those who adapt to this new reality—whether nations, businesses, or individuals—will be far better positioned than those who cling to assumptions that no longer hold.

The question is not whether change is coming. It is already here. The question is whether we have the wisdom to recognize it and the courage to respond accordingly.

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Author Digvijay Mourya is a strategic analyst focusing on great power competition, economic statecraft, and the geopolitical implications of emerging technologies. His work examines the intersection of military power, financial systems, and international relations in an increasingly multipolar world.