
The Foreign Affairs Interview Has the United States Gone Rogue?
48 snips
May 15, 2025 Michael Beckley, an associate professor of political science at Tufts University and an analyst of American grand strategy, discusses the evolution of U.S. foreign policy in a rapidly changing world. He argues that America has become a 'rogue superpower,' acting aggressively without clear internationalist or isolationist aims. Beckley highlights the risks of unilateralism, especially in relations with China and allies. He emphasizes the need for a new global order based on shared democratic values, and the importance of rebuilding trust and collaboration in international alliances.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Paradox of American Power
- Despite domestic dysfunction, America retains massive latent global power through economic size, alliances, and military capabilities.
- This paradox of strength amid dysfunction leads to many foreign policy contradictions, like "hollow internationalism."
Domestic Basis for Hollow Internationalism
- U.S. geographic and social openness generates diverse interests, polarization, and makes coherent foreign policy difficult.
- This leads to "hollow internationalism" where demands are made, but resources to back them are lacking.
Foreign Aid Cuts Weaken Influence
- Cutting foreign aid and diplomatic tools weakens U.S. global influence and increases reliance on costly military action.
- Despite potential U.S. decline, other countries face even greater risks if the international order erodes.

