Shifting dynamics in the Middle East: Is the West losing ground?
Although the Western-American global hegemony is obsolete, no non-Western state wants to claim the global hegemony, mainly due to the burden and responsibility that comes with this claim.
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Although the Western-American global hegemony is obsolete, no non-Western state wants to claim the global hegemony, mainly due to the burden and responsibility that comes with this claim.
On the one hand, for the last several decades, China has been enjoying being a free rider and benefitting from American hegemony. As a politically communist state, China has become one of the champions of economic liberalism, enjoying a comparative advantage in most financial issues. On the other hand, the United States is unhappy about the current international system established by the U.S.-led West and is trying to change it. Therefore, most Western countries have been following unilateral revisionist policies and want to maintain their hierarchical relations with the rest of the world, including their allies.
Washington still maintains military force in almost every region to support its hegemony. However, the U.S. and its Western European allies have recently lost interest in maintaining the military force in different areas and have withdrawn their militaries. In many cases, the West is being challenged by non-Western countries such as China and Russia. These two countries have increased their military presence in different Middle Eastern and African countries, traditionally controlled by the traditional colonial powers. The more the West withdraws from the crisis areas and creates a power vacuum in different regions, the more the non-Western countries fill the power vacuum and become effective in regional crises.
The Western countries have been following policies that will keep other states largely dependent on them. Therefore, many Western allies in the Middle East have begun to flirt with non-Western global powers such as China and Russia. On the other hand, the mistakes and miscalculations made by the Western countries have paved the way for rapprochement processes between the Western allies and the Western global challengers – for example, when the Western countries refused to sell air defense systems to Ankara, pushing Türkiye to purchase S-400s from Russia.
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