
The Chris Hedges Report What Is the World’s Future in the ‘New World Order?’ (W/ John Mearsheimer) | The Chris Hedges Report
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Feb 5, 2026 John Mearsheimer, leading international relations scholar and author, outlines the shift from U.S. unipolarity to a multipolar world. He discusses unilateralism and threats to alliances, the strategic rivalry with China in East Asia, NATO and European security anxieties, and how erratic leadership raises risks of escalation.
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Unilateralism Threatens The Postwar Order
- John Mearsheimer argues Trump is a unilateralist who seeks to destroy multilateral institutions and international law.
- Trump prefers using U.S. economic and military might unilaterally rather than working with allies or institutions.
Multipolarity Makes The Order Fragile
- Mearsheimer says the world shifted from unipolarity to multipolarity and that change would alter the international order.
- He adds Trump makes that transition far more disorderly by undermining alliances and institutions.
Engagement Helped Create A Competitor
- The U.S. fostered China's economic rise through engagement and WTO membership, which helped produce China's current great-power status.
- That growth transformed China from partner to strategic competitor by about 2017.








