The Next 100 Years


partly from being unable to bear the cost of holding it, and partly because



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The Next 100 Years A Forecast for the 21st Century ( PDFDrive )


partly from being unable to bear the cost of holding it, and partly because 
the United States simply did not want them to continue to hold it. The em­
pire melted away over the next twenty years, with only desultory resistance 
by the Europeans. The geopolitical reality (that could first be seen in Spain’s 
dilemma centuries before) had played itself out to a catastrophic finish. 
Here’s a question: Was the United States’ clear emergence in 1945 as the 


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t h e n e x t 1 0 0 y e a r s
decisive global power a brilliant Machiavellian play? The Americans achieved 
global preeminence at the cost of 500,000 dead, in a war where fifty million 
others perished. Was Franklin Roosevelt brilliantly unscrupulous, or did be­
coming a superpower just happen in the course of his pursuing the “four 
freedoms” and the UN Charter? In the end, it doesn’t matter. In geopolitics, 
the unintended consequences are the most important ones. 
The U.S.–Soviet confrontation—known as the Cold War—was a truly 
global conflict. It was basically a competition over who would inherit Eu­
rope’s tattered global empire. Although there was vast military strength on 
both sides, the United States had an inherent advantage. The Soviet Union 
was enormous but essentially landlocked. America was almost as vast but 
had easy access to the world’s oceans. While the Soviets could not contain 
the Americans, the Americans could certainly contain the Soviets. And that 
was the American strategy: to contain and thereby strangle the Soviets. 
From the North Cape of Norway to Turkey to the Aleutian Islands, the 
United States created a massive belt of allied nations, all bordering on the 
Soviet Union—a belt that after 1970 included China itself. At every point 
where the Soviets had a port, they found themselves blocked by geography 
and the United States Navy. 
Geopolitics has two basic competing views of geography and power. 
One view, held by an Englishman, Halford John Mackinder, argues that 
control of Eurasia means the control of the world. As he put it: “Who rules 
East Europe [Russian Europe] commands the Heartland. Who rules the 
Heartland commands the World- Island [Eurasia]. Who rules the World-
Island commands the world.” This thinking dominated British strategy and
indeed, U.S. strategy in the Cold War, as it fought to contain and strangle Eu­
ropean Russia. Another view is held by an American, Admiral Alfred Thayer 
Mahan, considered the greatest American geopolitical thinker. In his book 
The Influence of Sea Power on History
, Mahan makes the counterargument to 
Mackinder, arguing that control of the sea equals command of the world. 
History confirmed that both were right, in a sense. Mackinder was cor­
rect in emphasizing the significance of a powerful and united Russia. The 
collapse of the Soviet Union elevated the United States to the level of sole 
global power. But it was Mahan, the American, who understood two crucial 
factors. The collapse of the Soviet Union originated in American sea power 


t h e d aw n o f t h e a m e r i c a n a g e
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and also opened the door for U.S. naval power to dominate the world. Ad­
ditionally, Mahan was correct when he argued that it is always cheaper to 
ship goods by sea than by any other means. As far back as the fifth century 
BC, the Athenians were wealthier than the Spartans because Athens had a 
port, a maritime fleet, and a navy to protect it. Maritime powers are always 
wealthier than nonmaritime neighbors, all other things being equal. With 
the advent of globalization in the fifteenth century, this truth became as 
near to absolute as one can get in geopolitics. 
U.S. control of the sea meant that the United States was able not only to 
engage in but to define global maritime trade. It could make the rules, or at 
least block anyone else’s rules, by denying other nations entry to the world’s 
trade routes. In general, the United States shaped the international trading 
system more subtly, by using access to the vast American market as a lever to 
shape the behavior of other nations. It was not surprising, then, that in ad-
Soviet Allies 

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