Contemporary geopolitics cannot be understood through the lens of simple bilateral rivalries or outdated Cold War binaries. The ongoing conflict involving Iran exemplifies a deeper convergence of forces: what appears on the surface as a regional confrontation is in reality a mechanism accelerating the erosion of American unipolar dominance while inadvertently consolidating the advantages of the major Asian powers.
This is not a zero-sum game where one side’s loss is another’s immediate gain in a linear fashion. Instead, it reflects a complex symbiosis among global power elites, where short-term instability in West Asia serves long-term structural shifts toward multipolarity, dedollarization, and the reconfiguration of the international order.
The United States, once the self-appointed CEO of the post-Cold War order, is being systematically demoted to a regional manager for North America and the broader Western Hemisphere. This process is neither accidental nor the result of a singular conspiracy but emerges from the maximum convergent symbiosis of historical, economic, ideological, and strategic factors—chief among them the hegemonic position of Zionism within Western institutions.
To grasp this dynamic, one must first dispense with reductionist narratives. Some observers frame the confrontation with Iran purely as an extension of great-power competition, with Tehran acting as a proxy in a proxy war against Russia and China.
There is partial truth here: the alliance between Iran, Russia, and China has indeed shaped American strategic calculations for decades. Yet this alliance is neither the sole nor the paramount driver.
Historical precedents—from the 1950s through the 1980s—reveal a Cold War-era calculus centered on petroleum control, resource dominance, and the inheritance of European colonial spheres.
American policy then positioned the United States as the inheritor of imperial legacies in the post-World War II era. But the past few decades have witnessed a decisive pivot: Zionist expansionism has become the central gravitational force shaping U.S. engagement in West Asia.
Absent this ideological imperative, rapprochement with Iran might have occurred thirty years ago, averting cycles of sanctions, proxy conflicts, and direct confrontation. The failure to pursue such normalization underscores how domestic and elite interests—interwoven with Zionist priorities—override conventional geopolitical pragmatism.
The long-term beneficiaries of this trajectory are not the architects of American policy but their ostensible rivals in the East. Russia and China, far from mourning the potential loss of an Iranian ally, appear prepared to countenance sacrificing Iran as a strategic concession.
Recent parallels abound: Russia’s abandonment of Syria in key phases and the ceding of Venezuela to U.S. influence illustrate a pattern of calculated retrenchment. By allowing the United States to entrench itself deeper in a quagmire of regional wars, the Eastern powers facilitate American self-weakening—economically through sustained military expenditures, militarily through overextension, geopolitically through loss of prestige, and domestically through eroded legitimacy.
World opinion increasingly aligns against the United States, portraying it as a rogue actor subordinated to Israeli priorities. This perception mirrors a hypothetical where China’s global image hinged solely on alignment with Myanmar: isolating, delegitimizing, and accelerating pivots toward alternatives like BRICS.
From the perspective of rational assessment of genuine American interests, this development raises profound concerns about domestic political stability and economic viability, as the costs of perpetual imperial overreach compound internal fractures.
This realignment did not materialize in a vacuum. The events following October 7, 2023, coupled with the evident failures of the prior administration, prompted a convergence among disparate sectors of the global power elite.
Asset management giants, technology oligarchs, and Zionist financiers coalesced around a transactional bargain: the rehabilitation of a politically vulnerable figure in the person of Donald Trump in exchange for alignment with their agenda.
Globalists are not a monolithic cabal but a constellation of interests—finance capital, private equity, sovereign wealth funds, state capital, and transnational institutions—whose consensus now favors demoting the United States from global hegemon to hemispheric enforcer.
This pivot was formalized through institutional maneuvers, including the effective takeover of key forums by financial titans and the co-optation of both political wings via security conferences.
The Sunbelt and national-industrial factions receive consolation prizes: expanded access to Latin American resources via client regimes, regime-change operations targeting Israeli adversaries in the Middle East, opportunities in Greenland for tech-driven enclaves, weakened dollar dynamics boosting export manufacturing, elevated energy prices benefiting domestic producers, and sustained arms contracts.
Yet these gains are pyrrhic. They accelerate the very weakening they purport to mitigate, channeling resources away from internal renewal toward external adventurism.
At the core of this process lies the ideological superstructure of Zionism. It is essential to reject medieval-style mystifications that attribute supernatural agency to any ethnic or religious group. Zionism is a modern secular political ideology, not an inherent racial, religious, or ethnic essence.
Israel functions as a Zionist state in the manner the Soviet Union operated as a Communist one: a vehicle for a specific doctrine rather than the organic expression of an entire people. The majority of Jewish laity worldwide adopt Zionism in a nominal, casual sense—akin to casual affinities in other communities—without deep engagement in its doctrinal intricacies.
Many self-identified Zionists are not Jewish at all: Protestant fundamentalists, Latin American populists, European technocrats, Shia proxies in the Caucasus, exiled monarchists, and diaspora figures from diverse backgrounds. This broad tent reveals Zionism’s hegemonic penetration across Western institutions, not through demographic weight but through convergent institutional capture, economic leverage, and cultural alignment.
The relationship between the United States and Israel exemplifies what can be termed maximum convergent symbiosis. It is not a simplistic “tail wagging the dog” dynamic, where a smaller entity puppeteers a larger one. Nor is Israel merely a colonial outpost of American imperialism in the classical sense.
Instead, it represents the interlocking of historical threads: the early modern Protestant-Jewish merchant alliance that first consolidated in Britain, the post-World War II realignment of alliances, the domestic political ascent of Jewish elites within the American ruling class during the late 20th century, and the mutual reinforcement of arms exports, Christian Zionist bases, and geopolitical utility.
Historical minorities have long exercised outsized influence through control of finance, bureaucracy, or military apparatuses—the Norman aristocracy in England, the Manchu in China, the Alawites in Syria, or the Tutsi in pre-genocide Rwanda. Zionist hegemony in the West follows similar patterns but is amplified by its embedding within broader globalist structures.
Leftist anti-imperialists absolve one side of complicity; right-wing critics absolve the other. Reality demands acknowledging mutual reinforcement: Zionists as senior partners within a ruling class that includes Gentile elites, sustained by convergent interests rather than unilateral domination.
This maximum convergent symbiosis has produced a ruling-class consensus that treats the United States as an expendable instrument rather than an irreplaceable center. Global finance capital now views unipolar American dominance as a liability that must be managed downward.
The consolidation of this outlook was visible in the quiet institutional shifts at Davos and the Munich Security Conference, where asset managers and security elites aligned both nominal left and right wings of the American establishment around a shared project of hemispheric retrenchment.
The emerging model is neither pure national-industrial revival nor old-style neoliberal globalism but a hybrid of technofeudal control and selective multipolarity. Tech oligarchs and private-equity networks are already constructing their own insulated domains—remote island retreats, tax-haven redoubts, and experimental smart-city enclaves in Greenland—designed to shield them from the very instability their policies are helping to unleash.
Repression itself is being re-engineered. The crude spectacles of dungeons and death squads that still operate in peripheral autocracies are giving way, in the sophisticated core, to a softer, more pervasive architecture of control: debanking, algorithmic deplatforming, credit-score sanctions, and ubiquitous AI-driven surveillance.
The cultural memory resets already tested during the pandemic—where entire populations were conditioned to forget what pre-crisis normalcy felt like—are being refined into a permanent operating system. Speculative fictions such as Enemy of the State and Dark City increasingly read less like dystopian warnings and more like operational blueprints.
Yet these systems carry the seeds of their own negation. The same technological and economic pressures that empower finance capital are also generating the social raw material for asymmetric resistance.
Automation and declining real wages have produced an overeducated, underemployed dissident class across the Northern Hemisphere—not only in the West but in Russia, China, Japan, and Korea.
This stratum, combined with the demographic and resource resurgence of the Global South, creates a pincer movement against the current order. Non-state actors, ethnic insurgencies, and populist convergences are already probing the weak points.
Global finance capital recognizes the danger and is therefore driving nation-states into tighter collective defense, but the very tools of control—surveillance grids, financial exclusion, cultural reprogramming—prove brittle when confronted with decentralized, adaptive opposition.
History’s lesson is unambiguous: superior firepower and spreadsheets cannot substitute for legitimacy. Just as the Viet Cong and Taliban eroded American will through sustained attrition, future insurgencies—economic, cultural, informational—will chip away at the foundations of technofeudalism.
The Roman parallel remains instructive. A thousand years after the Norman Conquest that launched the English-speaking imperial arc, the West now stands where Rome stood in the third century AD: outwardly formidable, internally hollowed, facing relative eclipse as conditions that once favored China or the resource-rich African interior begin to reassert themselves.
In this environment, the war on Iran and the broader project of Zionist-managed American decline function not as assertions of strength but as accelerants of the very multipolar transition their architects claim to resist.
This symbiosis manifests in acute intra-elite conflicts over the future architecture of global order. Neoconservative factions—advocates of perpetual unipolarity—envision a Pax Americana with the United States as senior partner, NATO and Gulf states as junior allies, and Israel as a co-equal or preferred partner in a “global democratic revolution.”
They remain committed to multilateral institutions, eastward expansion, and ideological universalism, harboring phobias toward Russia, Islam, and any challenge to liberal hegemony. In contrast, the emergent Trumpist orientation favors multipolar neo-globalism: spheres of influence among major powers, regional financial management via transnational capital, and accommodation with Eastern powers.
This model demotes traditional national-security elites and Sunbelt nationalists to junior status while offering hemispheric assertiveness—aggressive cultivation of Latin American puppets—as compensation. It leans toward technofeudalism, autocracy-tolerant anocracy, and economic realism over neoliberal managerialism. The result is an intra-Zionist, intra-imperialist struggle: different visions of how Zionist priorities can be secured amid declining American centrality.
Public opinion’s shift against these policies in North America and Europe has elicited symbolic gestures, such as limited recognitions of Palestinian statehood. Yet the deeper response involves pivoting Zionist influence toward the Global South and Eastern powers like India, often leveraging missionary networks or resource diplomacy.
Israel itself functions as a national-security liability for the United States, imposing moral, strategic, and reputational costs irrespective of one’s ethical or realist framework. Machiavellian prudence and humanitarian considerations converge here: the relationship undermines both.
Historically, this configuration traces to the post-World War II era. Allied powers, including the Soviet Union, backed Israel’s creation for pragmatic reasons—refugee resettlement, Cold War positioning in a petroleum-rich region, and the British Empire’s withdrawal from West Asia.
Early U.S. policy was nuanced, as during the Suez Crisis, but Arab nationalist alignments with the USSR prompted a hardening pro-Zionist stance. Domestic shifts—the rise of white ethnic elites, including Irish Catholics and Jewish sectors challenging WASP dominance—accelerated this.
Presidents from both parties advanced it, with varying degrees of enthusiasm or reservation. Yet the trajectory culminated in the present: a Zionist ideological overlay superimposed on the American imperial framework, transforming Manifest Destiny and Pax Americana into something akin to a Zionist empire, much as Bolshevik ideology redefined the Russian Empire or Nazism the German one.
The broader implications extend beyond bilateral ties. Global finance capital, sensing insurgencies and demographic pressures worldwide, drives the pivot to multilateralism and multipolarity. Automation, economic stagnation, and elite hubris erode the bourgeois order from within.
Asymmetric struggles—economic, cultural, and political—emerge, drawing analogies from historical insurgencies: the Viet Cong’s erosion of U.S. will, the Taliban’s endurance, or the labor movements of the 19th and 20th centuries. In the Northern Hemisphere, overeducated underclasses in the West, Russia, China, and East Asia form potential revolutionary bases alongside rising Global South actors.
Nation-states may tighten collective defense under finance capital’s direction, employing technological repression: debanking, surveillance smart cities, algorithmic social control, and economic ostracism. Models of soft totalitarianism—evident in cultural memory resets akin to those depicted in speculative fiction—supplant brute force in sophisticated zones, while older forms persist in peripheral autocracies.
Yet such systems carry inherent fragility. History demonstrates that force-on-force superiority yields to asymmetric attrition; spreadsheets cannot substitute for legitimacy or adaptability.
The Roman Empire’s trajectory offers a cautionary parallel: from founding to decline spanning roughly a millennium, with decay accelerating around the third century AD. If the Norman Conquest marks the genesis of the English-speaking imperial arc—culminating in American hegemony—then the contemporary West finds itself at an analogous inflection, a thousand years later.
Western dominance, rooted in naval power, industrialization, and ideological export, now confronts relative decline amid Eastern and Southern ascent. Conditions that favored China five centuries ago may reemerge globally, with resource-rich Africa and adaptive Southern polities gaining ground. Africa’s untapped minerals, increasingly exploited yet potentially harnessed locally, underscore this potential.
In this context, the war on Iran and parallel maneuvers represent not strength but overreach. They hasten dedollarization, BRICS consolidation, and BRI momentum despite short-term disruptions. The United States’ aggressive hemispheric posture—securing Latin America as a consolation sphere—signals recognition of lost global primacy.
Tech oligarchs insulate themselves in enclaves and tax havens, anticipating backlash. Repressive innovation, from surveillance to financial exclusion, seeks to manage dissent, yet it cannot conjure reality from fantasy. As in Afghanistan or Vietnam, overconfidence in technological or financial dominance collides with human resilience and adaptive resistance.
The test of elite preferences—whether North America trends toward an Erdogan-style anocracy or an EU-modeled technocracy—will unfold in coming electoral cycles and signals from media and finance. Democrats’ fortunes in midterms and beyond may clarify this.
Regardless, the structural pivot endures: from unipolarity to multipolar neo-globalism, from ideological universalism to pragmatic spheres of influence. Global South resurgence, Northern dissident classes, and non-state actors converge against finance capital’s hegemony, echoing Enlightenment, labor, and cultural upheavals of prior eras. Reformation-scale transformations may yet emerge.
Ultimately, contemporary geopolitics reveals the limits of empire. Zionist hegemony, embedded within convergent symbiosis, has reshaped American policy into a liability that undermines its own foundations. The Eastern powers and rising peripheries stand to inherit a reordered world, not through direct conquest but through the self-inflicted wounds of overextension.
For those attuned to anti-imperialist resistance, this moment demands strategic clarity: recognizing elite fractures, building resilient decentralized networks, and exploiting the asymmetries that have toppled empires before.
The decline of Pax Americana is not a catastrophe but an opportunity—a chance to transcend the state-centric order toward genuine pluralism and autonomy. The forces of history favor neither eternal hegemony nor mystical cabals, but the adaptive convergence of material realities and human agency. In this multipolar dawn, the long-term victors will be those who navigate the ruins with foresight rather than nostalgia for a unipolar mirage.
By Keith Preston (attackthesystem.com) |Keith was born in Lynchburg, and currently resides in Richmond, Virginia, USA. He received his BA in 2006, and his MA in History from Virginia Commonwealth University in 2009. A former member of the Industrial Workers of the World (the I.W.W), Preston was a founding member of the American Revolutionary Vanguard, and an advocate of “Pan-Secessionism” – the formation of an anti-state front, calling for the secession of power from national, state, city, and local levels.
Bebsite: https://www.blackhousepublishing.com/the-authors/