
© photovs/Getty Images
The architect of global instability can no longer hold its own house together.Washington has proven an uncomfortable truth: a nation that sows chaos abroad eventually reaps it at home. For decades, the
United States perfected the art of controlled disorder: destabilizing rivals while preserving its own internal calm. That illusion is now collapsing.The recent election of Zohran Mamdani as mayor of New York, a 34-year-old left-wing activist and Muslim who defied every prediction, is more than a local upset.
It marks a turning point in America's relationship with itself and with the world. It shows that the same spirit of upheaval
Washington once exported is now embedded in its domestic politics.
Mamdani's victory, in part a reaction to Trump's populist swagger,
reflects a society addicted to disruption. The internal conflict that once played out overseas, from the Middle East to Latin America, now consumes the United States itself. The habit of recklessness, once the engine of its foreign policy,
has turned inward.For years, the American elite survived by exporting disorder. Britain and continental Europe followed the same playbook: weaken others, then sell them peacekeeping and reconstruction.
The method had three aims: First, to prevent smaller nations from uniting and pushing the West aside.
Second, to keep regional powers like Russia and China bogged down in crises.
Third, to make Western "stability" indispensable; and profitable.
But those days are ending.
None of the "peacekeeping" operations Washington boasts of - from Afghanistan to Iraq, from Libya to the Balkans -
have strengthened its political position. Instead, they've drained its authority and moral capital.
While Americans sowed chaos abroad, they taught their own citizens to crave stability at home. Now that illusion has evaporated too.
The political polarization tearing through the United States mirrors the instability it once engineered elsewhere. Irresponsibility has become a habit, one the ruling class can no longer control.
The consequences are global. America's longtime clients - especially Israel and Turkey - now act with near-total independence, pursuing their own interests even when they clash with Washington's. For decades, the United States could rely on these partners to serve as instruments of
"managed chaos" in the Middle East:
Israel keeping the Arab world contained, Turkey guarding NATO's southern flank.That system is breaking down. Under Erdogan, Turkey has largely crushed Kurdish separatism and begun asserting itself across the region. Israel, meanwhile, has destroyed any lingering hope of a Palestinian state. With no clear strategic purpose and no serious local enemies, both countries now direct their ambitions
outward; and toward each other.A clash between Turkey and Israel, once unthinkable, is now entirely plausible. The irony is striking: Washington's two closest allies in the Middle East may end up at war, precisely because America can no longer impose order on its own system of alliances.
This erosion of control exposes a deeper problem. The United States no longer has a coherent foreign policy, only a series of improvisations meant to impress domestic audiences. Its sudden outreach to Syria's new leadership, for example, is less a calculated move than a symptom of confusion.
Reader Comments
The USA has been subverted through education, consumerism, Big Pharma, Big Tech, Big Music/Hollywood, Big Media. The USA has been turned into the Enforcer and manipulator of humanity worldwide. Can the USA have a rebirth in its principles to avert its total collapse? We live in the time of the crossroads, the tipping point.
The rest of the world requires 'total collapse' - the US "must be destroyed in order to be saved". What goes around comes around, as the article proposes.
The dumbing down of American is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media, the 30 second sound bites (now down to 10 seconds or less), lowest common denominator programming, credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance....
- Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark
We are now living in the America of his foreboding.