Newman discusses Trump's neo-royalist world order and weaponised interdependence

American political scientist Abraham Newman explains in an interview the 'age of weaponised interdependence,' where modern global networks are highly centralised and used by states to coerce adversaries. He and co-author Henry Farrell argue that this centralisation creates a vulnerable structure, not a flat world. Newman stresses that markets now involve not just efficiency but also vulnerability.

In the South China Morning Post's 'Open Questions' column, Georgetown University professor Abraham Newman discusses Donald Trump's 'neo-royalist world order' and 'weaponised interdependence'.

Newman explains that many view globalisation as a decentralised process creating numerous actors, ending great power conflicts and putting firms in control of a dispersed world. But he and co-author Henry Farrell argue in their book Underground Empire that this is the wrong image.

"If you think about these networks, whether it’s finance, communication or production, they’re highly centralised in the international economy," Newman says. "Take the iPhone. It’s made either by a chip from TSMC or Samsung. If you make a global financial transaction, it goes through a handful of banks. And the phone itself is dependent on either Apple or Google for the operating system. That kind of centralisation is not a flat world. It’s a centralised one."

States exploit this centralisation for coercion, by monitoring and surveilling adversaries or cutting them out of key networks. Newman describes this as the shift from neo-liberal high globalisation to a world where markets are about not just efficiency but also vulnerability.

The interview touches on keywords like China, Russia, Australia, Japan, highlighting how interdependence is strategically used in great power rivalry. Newman's views draw from his collaboration with Farrell, emphasising central nodes in global networks such as the Swift system and Ant Financial as geopolitical tools.

The interview was published on February 23, 2026, offering insights into current international relations dynamics.

Artikel Terkait

Donald Trump at podium gesturing toward map of Europe with military and economic burden symbols, illustrating call for allies to step up in National Security Strategy.
Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

Komentar selaras Trump mendesak Eropa tanggung lebih banyak beban keamanan dan ekonomi Barat

Dilaporkan oleh AI Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI Fakta terverifikasi

Sebuah komentar yang diterbitkan oleh The Daily Wire berargumen bahwa Strategi Keamanan Nasional baru Presiden Donald Trump, bersama dengan prioritas kebijakan pertahanan AS, mendesak sekutu Eropa menjadi mitra yang lebih dinamis secara ekonomi dan mampu secara militer daripada ketergantungan jangka panjang pada Washington.

Perdana Menteri Kanada Mark Carney menyampaikan pidato tajam yang menyoroti pecahnya tatanan dunia, di mana kekuatan besar sedang menjadikan hubungan ekonomi sebagai senjata. Ia mendesak kekuatan menengah seperti Kanada untuk mendiversifikasi kemitraan di luar sistem yang dipimpin Amerika yang tidak dapat diandalkan. Pidato tersebut secara implisit menargetkan tindakan AS baru-baru ini di bawah Presiden Donald Trump.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

A Yomiuri Shimbun editorial on January 1, 2026, stresses that amid ongoing global conflicts, Japan must transition from beneficiary to shaper of the international order. It calls for bolstering intellectual strength, economic and technological power, and communicative abilities to lead in forming a new order for peace and stability.

The US-China race for hi-tech resources intensifies across the Global South, pressuring swing nations in the middle to strike a balance. The Venezuela crisis has laid bare the limits of China's economic-centric diplomacy in competing with the US, serving as a stark reminder that spheres of influence continue to shape global politics in this new era of great power rivalry.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

For the first time since 1967, serious strategists in Tokyo's security establishment are openly discussing whether Japan should reconsider its Three Non-Nuclear Principles. This shift remains largely unknown on the streets of Shibuya or in Kyoto's university lectures. The author terms this disconnect Japan's 'security autism,' a fragmented perception that hinders coherent responses to existential threats in liberal democracies.

Setelah reaksi awal campuran dari pemimpin sayap kanan ekstrem Eropa terhadap penggerebekan pasukan khusus AS yang menangkap Presiden Venezuela Nicolás Maduro pada 3 Januari 2026, pemimpin arus utama di KTT Paris tentang Ukraina menghindari menantang kebijakan agresif Presiden Donald Trump—termasuk ancaman baru untuk menganeksasi Greenland. Para ahli memperingatkan bahwa keengganan ini di tengah ketergantungan NATO memperkuat tindakan imperialis oleh AS, Rusia, dan China.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Singapore's former foreign minister George Yeo discusses superpower tensions, including Taiwan as a 'ticking time bomb,' US-China rivalry, and the potential cracking of the US dollar in his latest interview. He also covers Trump, the recent China-Japan dust-up, and competition between Hong Kong and Singapore.

 

 

 

Situs web ini menggunakan cookie

Kami menggunakan cookie untuk analisis guna meningkatkan situs kami. Baca kebijakan privasi kami untuk informasi lebih lanjut.
Tolak