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The Death of a Superpower?

SvenSvensonov

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*Before reading the body of this long essay, I would ask that each of you read this. This my analysis of the US position as a superpower in the world and why I believe it will continue to hold this position despite rising challenges, and is not meant to diminish the capabilities of any other nation, though I do make comparisons to others throughout. I apologize if it has any typos or grammatical errors (i'll be correcting them as I notice their existence), it probably does. Anyways, enjoy and feel free to provide feedback, though I may not respond to you I will at least read what you write, though I would ask that you be respectful as I will promptly ignore abusive or angry comments.

The Death of a Superpower?

It’s a question that has been rehashed for many, many years, and in many iterations, but a question that will neither be answered definitively until a fall occurs nor will it abate so long as a superpower exists. The question of superpower-dom is a much a reflection of relativity as it is reality, as others rise the relative strength of a stronger nation falls, even if that nation isn't actually declining. Whether the decline of the US is real or not cannot be answered easily, especially as others grow but may or may not reach the zenith of strength, but it is a question I will attempt to answer based on the four metrics I believe best represent the strength of a nation; Military, economic, political and cultural strength.

Military

The US military, actually three different militaries (more on that in a minute), is still the strongest fighting force on the planet, with an unparalleled global reach. From high-technology, to large numbers and world-beating training and practical experiences, intelligence assets and logistics, no nations even comes close to what the US can offer in the military realm. True, others are rising to the challenge, but they remain regional powers with little prospect of gaining a global reach (though their intentions to do so must also be assessed, but I won’t do so here). You see, for all its raising power, China remains geographically limited by its lack of real friends. China has a lot of business partners, but business links do not a friend make (even during the height of the Cold War, the USSR and US maintained business ties), and surely not a friend that will allow foreign troops on their soil. As a result, it’s limited to regions that it can easily replenish and move logistical support though, and this isn't a large area. On the contrary, the US can count on a number of allies around the world, on every major continent. From Japan, to Ethiopia, to nearly all of Europe, to Columbia and Saudi Arabia, the US has unprecedented support for its military capabilities… and a logistics fleet that makes it possible.

The US also remains the king of high-tech, others grow, but the US usually is first to an idea and first to put it into operational usage. I won’t spend too much time on this though.

The US military is large and the US has the political will and lack of care for the opinions of others that is needed to put it into use. Our military is huge, and three separate militaries… no, really, the US has three militaries. It’s not the US military, its police and armed civilians. It’s the US military, its PMC support (technically armed civilians, but operating on behalf of corporations contracted by the Pentagon), a clever designation that doesn't technically violate the UN convention on mercenaries, and NATO that will back the US up if needed and requested, even if some NATO members are reluctant to support US adventurism around the world.

The military is well funded, with three separate and massive budgets that see it retain its technological edge. The base budget supports the military and procurement, the “black budget” maintains US covert actions and programs, and the R&D budget offers money to US universities to research useful technologies and concepts. Adding to this is the civilian budget for the US intelligence agencies such as the CIA, NSA and NRO, which are not under the command of the Pentagon and have their own budgets.

The US can’t fight the whole world all at once, though this is often claimed, but its global reach is unprecedented and unmatched… and will likely remain so, especially as rising nations continue to lack allies that can support global actions.

Political

If a carrot fails to entice and a stick fails to threaten, turn your efforts towards persuasion through back-channel, international or shameful, but unseen politics. In a world of regional blocs, all striving to usurp power from the US in favor of their own regional strongman, one nation, for better or worse (and often seen in the latter light) can influence events through political means on a global scale. The US is the disputed, but reigning and yet to be dethroned king of politics.

US politics are a strength… from our perspective as surely others would disagree with their government being replaced by anarchistic chaos. We can rally nations to squash a threat, punish rouge actors, fight climate change, shake the foundation of global institutions, protect our neighbors or demolish them. We bully, we beat, we persuade, we pamper, we dominate, we mentor, we build other nations… all in the name of US political power

But who says political strength is always a benefit? The US can influence global events, this is undisputed, but whether thought is put into the action is often a forgone conclusion that the US didn't actually think through the progression of consequences prior to making a decision. Perhaps this is a benefit too… at least it allows our military some practice, our political strength to continue by facilitating alliance building to defeat a threat we fostered where no threat formerly existed, and it allows us to be seen as trying to solve the problem (and simultaneously as the problem), rather than sitting on the sidelines. It’s disingenuous, it’s devious, it’s dangerous, US foreign politics often are, but can any other nation truly influence global events in the same way?

While a mess, US foreign politics are actually quite logical. The US has no foreign policy… you might be asking yourself where the logic is in this, but there is some. No two events are the same, even if they appear to have the same symptoms the causes differ. This is where the US lack of foreign policy becomes a benefit. It allows the US to tailor its behaviors to fit the situation's unique qualities, not be bound to some ethereal notions (such as the persuit of democracy... we all know the US doesn't actually care about democracy) that see it commit actions out of feeling and not practicality. True, the US does a bit of this too, its foreign policy of supporting Israel, largely without blinking or thought, is a testament that the US can actually form a concrete policy if needed, but leaving yourself adaptable is even more advantageous. Seen as a mess, is our lack of foreign policy actually an issue… or a benefit?

Russia is the most prominent of US political rivals, we often stick our noses into each other business, but considering we consider each other’s business our own from a policy perspective, this can’t actually be considered an unwanted consequence, just a natural occurrence between two angry neighbors (going north that is). But, there is a difference between us. True, we both influence events, often to the detriment of a nation and its surrounding region, but one is a global and the other a regional power. Even as Russia continues to make the attempt at rekindling its geopolitical strength, suppressed by growing Chinese clout (though China remains largely an economic-political power, as many nations want Chinese money, but not political influence, such as European nations in a financial malaise) in Central Asia and an angry Europe, it remains unable to punch outside of its small and growing smaller sphere of influence.

The US remains and will remain the sole power able to influence global events, especially as challengers to US power either reject the notion of interfering in global events, or lack the political reputation and respect to do so. In some regions our influence will and is falling, take Russia’s ECO initiative, but there is no where that a lack of political influence can’t be rectified by an old-fashioned revolution. For good or bad, and most commonly viewed as bad, the US remains the alpha nation in global politics.

Economic

Perhaps in this metric alone is the US influence on global affairs diminishing in favor of China, mostly, but other regional nations too, such as Brazil who grows regional respect as its economy prospers (though recently it’s been doing anything but prospering, often going in reverse). That isn’t to say the US has ceded its place in the world as a global economic power, it still is as no nation has yet reached the all aspect economic strength, even though China will likely overtake the US in nominal GDP within a relatively short time. No, it still has work to do to catch the US in all aspects. Economics involve much, much more than the amount of money that shows up in your coffers each year, and though growth is impressive, how you use and generate it is equally important.

The US is a diverse economic power. While others are making the transition to a consumer driven economy, a shift the will take time to implement and even longer to shift traditional “save-first” habits, the US combines a healthy mix of consumerism, manufacturing, world-renowned consolatory services, business investment and technology. It’s currently an all-aspect economic power and continues to strengthen as its recovery builds momentum. Where once you would question high-growth in the US, now it’s not uncommon for growth to be revised up on quarterly reports… revised up by .5% or more from the initial report.

U.S. manufacturing output surges in November| Reuters

The US is also rich in natural resources, so too are its competitors, but the US is doing a bit of reversing its importing trends, especially the importing of oil and natural gas, at a time when others even more deeply invest themselves in energy imports. We are weaning ourselves away from “black gold”. Not only does this allow the US to run a budget surplus with oil exporting nations, a benefit from an economic perspective, but it reduces the need and justification for the US to interfere in regions that would rather see it fall off a cliff and into obscurity. A reduction in oil, even if the US, as is often wrongly attributed, never really relied on the Middle-east in the first place (the US relied on itself, Canada and Mexico) allows it to justify not being in the Middle-East… and this is something that benefits the world.

Don’t believe me? let Bloomberg explain the lessening of the US’ oil addiction

Bloomberg Graphics - Business, Financial & Economic News, Stock Quotes

Cultural

Contradictory to common thought, with the US military seen as the strong-arm of US power with its political clout a close second, its cultural strength is the true metric by which the US should be measured. From global brands, to music and artistic inclinations and even the much maligned, but often demanded governmental system, the US has more cultural prowess the any other nation.

Let’s examine some aspects of US cultural strength:

Brand strength. US brands have built a reputation as being high-priced, but high-quality and packed full of tech that is only later replicated by others. Around the world people queue to purchase the next iPhone, with the possible exception of nations under US embargoes or trade restrictions, such as Myanmar and Cambodia (which see Chinese products gain prominence as a result of the lack of competitive items). US companies have built a reputation of excellence and quality. From military suppliers such as Raytheon, cited as the world’s leader in rocketry and military electronics, to the much maligned, but widely-used Facebook, the US is a brand Phenom, across the globe and in all corners.

But brand strength doesn't happen in a vacuum, it is the end result of another aspect the US has; innovation. While not considered the most innovative nation according to the Global Innovation Index, the US still has a monopoly on putting innovative ideas into practice and upping their amplitude to the point of global saturation. Not the first of its kind, certainly more iteration then innovation, but Facebook is a great example of US innovative strength. Whereas Myspace and several others came before, it was Facebook, now a template followed with success by other iterations that turned the concept of social media into a global force. US scientific contributions, brand and technology inventions, it has been the US that has lead the world through its progressions.

Global Innovation Report 2014 | The Global Innovation Index

Arts, the US has them and then some, though this can be seen as a lesser quality of US cultural strength as it’s often diffused by regional cultures and interests. From cinema to video games, live-acting on Broadway to musical sensations, the US artistic scene has been a bridge between nations. However, as stated this is a lesser quality of US cultural strength as it can be easily diffused or used as a springboard for more successful regional cultural phenomenon’s such as K-pop or J-Pop in East Asia, which often overshadows US arts.

Culture is its own political ambassador, even in the darkest recesses of the globe. From Venezuela to Russia and China, the US cultural clout not only exposes nations and people to the US style of innovation and thought, but they can influence global politics in ways not seem though diplomacy. The yearn for US style economic policies, personal freedoms and abilities to choose one’s own government has toppled many others, though the black hand of US diplomatic strength may be the force that finally coalesces yearnings into actions and revolutions. Still, no revolution happens without first a belief that life can be better with a different system… and the US is the undisputed king in this respect.

Whether you know it or not, you are influenced by US culture, even those most virulently opposed to the US are bound to hatred through recognition of US strength. Even if you try, you cannot avoid US cultural domination. But is US cultural strength declining as others grow? No, not at all and for the reason that even as others grow, they too are captivated and influenced by US technology, science, music and power. China is making strides, often seen as the US rival or next great power, but its cultural influence is limited to its surrounding region… the US will remain the undisputed cultural power.

The death of the US has been foretold since it was formally founded. First our former colonial masters, then the Germans, the Soviets, casual onlookers, yet no prophesy has come to pass. The US is resurgent in one metric, the undisputed king in three others. Sure, others make progress, erode parts of US power, but our influence is far from challenged on a global scale. Like it or not, we are here to stay. As was once famously uttered, “The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.”

@Nihonjin1051 @Chinese-Dragon @LeveragedBuyout (I apologize for bringing you into this, I acknowledge your interest in disengaging from PDF and will refrain from tagging you as best I can)
 
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I think it'll start with cultural. As the non Hispanic white population in the US dwindles over time, education and economy goes down. The last to go will probably be military. F-22s take a while to rust.
 
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The Death of a Superpower?

I am not sure if any credible source (research group or think tank etc) has predicted this. China will certainly take over the US as the largest economy but nonetheless United States will continue to be an economic, military and a cultural giant. Combine that with the natural alliance US has with Western Europe, the US is not going anywhere. World will go towards multi-polar power regime but that doesn't mean a decay of power for the US.
 
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@SvenSvensonov Interesting analysis of the situation, thank you for writing it. I appreciate your segmenting of the question into the military, economic, political, and cultural elements, and agree that those are useful axes along which to think about the position of the US. It's a very broad topic, so I'll need some time to think about how best to respond. I find it hard to disagree with your points, and yet my sense is that even if the US has not yet been eclipsed, our scope for influence has been diminished back to the level of the Cold War; and with the rise of certain emerging markets, our influence will continue to decline.

Anyway, a thought-provoking post deserves a considered response, so please give me some time to ponder the question.
 
. . .
until the bones are decayed
That won't be the best scene in the world.

*Before reading the body of this long essay, I would ask that each of you read this. This my analysis of the US position as a superpower in the world and why I believe it will continue to hold this position despite rising challenges, and is not meant to diminish the capabilities of any other nation, though I do make comparisons to others throughout. I apologize if it has any typos or grammatical errors (i'll be correcting them as I notice their existence), it probably does. Anyways, enjoy and feel free to provide feedback, though I may not respond to you I will at least read what you write, though I would ask that you be respectful as I will promptly ignore abusive or angry comments.

The Death of a Superpower?

It’s a question that has been rehashed for many, many years, and in many iterations, but a question that will neither be answered definitively until a fall occurs nor will it abate so long as a superpower exists. The question of superpower-dom is a much a reflection of relativity as it is reality, as others rise the relative strength of a stronger nation falls, even if that nation isn't actually declining. Whether the decline of the US is real or not cannot be answered easily, especially as others grow but may or may not reach the zenith of strength, but it is a question I will attempt to answer based on the four metrics I believe best represent the strength of a nation; Military, economic, political and cultural strength.

Military

The US military, actually three different militaries (more on that in a minute), is still strongest fighting force on the planet, with an unparalleled global reach. From high-technology, to large numbers and world-beating training and practical experiences, intelligence assets and logistics, no nations even comes close to what the US can offer in the military realm. True, others are rising to the challenge, but they remain regional powers with little prospect of gaining a global reach (though their intentions to do so must also be assessed, but I won’t do so here). You see, for all its raising power, China remains geographically limited by its lack of real friends. China has a lot of business partners, but business links do not a friend make (even during the height of the Cold War, the USSR and US maintained business ties), and surely not a friend that will allow foreign troops on their soil. As a result, it’s limited to regions that it can easily replenish and move logistical support though, and this isn't a large area. On the contrary, the US can count on a number of allies around the world, on every major continent. From Japan, to Ethiopia, to nearly all of Europe, to Columbia and Saudi Arabia, the US has unprecedented support for its military capabilities… and a logistics fleet that makes it possible.

The US also remains the king of high-tech, others grow, but the US usually is first to an idea and first to put it into operational usage. I won’t spend too much time on this though.

The US military is large and the US has the political will and lack of care for the opinions of others that is needed to put it into use. Our military is huge, and three separate militaries… no, really, the US has three militaries. It’s not the US military, its police and armed civilians. It’s the US military, its PMC support (technically armed civilians, but operating on behalf of corporations contracted by the Pentagon), a clever designation that doesn't technically violate the UN convention on mercenaries, and NATO that will back the US up if needed and requested, even if some NATO members are reluctant to support US adventurism around the world.

The military is well funded, with three separate and massive budgets that see it retain its technological edge. The base budget supports the military and procurement, the “black budget” maintains US covert actions and programs, and the R&D budget offers money to US universities to research useful technologies and concepts. Adding to this is the civilian budget for the US intelligence agencies such as the CIA, NSA and NRO, which are not under the command of the Pentagon and have their own budgets.

The US can’t fight the whole world all at once, though this is often claimed, but its global reach is unprecedented and unmatched… and will likely remain so, especially as rising nations continue to lack allies that can support global actions.

Political

If a carrot fails to entice and a stick fails to threaten, turn your efforts towards persuasion through back-channel, international or shameful, but unseen politics. In a world of regional blocs, all striving to usurp power from the US in favor of their own regional strongman, one nation, for better or worse (and often seen in the latter light) can influence events through political means on a global scale. The US is the disputed, but reigning and yet to be dethroned king of politics.

US politics are a strength… from our perspective as surely others would disagree with their government being replaced by anarchistic chaos. We can rally nations to squash a threat, punish rouge actors, fight climate change, shake the foundation of global institutions, protect our neighbors or demolish them. We bully, we beat, we persuade, we pamper, we dominate, we mentor, we build other nations… all in the name of US political power

But who says political strength is always a benefit? The US can influence global events, this is undisputed, but whether thought is put into the action is often a forgone conclusion that the US didn't actually think through the progression of consequences prior to making a decision. Perhaps this is a benefit too… at least it allows our military some practice, our political strength to continue by facilitating alliance building to defeat a threat we fostered where no threat formerly existed, and it allows us to be seen as trying to solve the problem (and simultaneously as the problem), rather than sitting on the sidelines. It’s disingenuous, it’s devious, it’s dangerous, US foreign politics often are, but can any other nation truly influence global event in the same way?

While a mess, US foreign politics are actually quite logical. The US has no foreign policy… you might be asking yourself where the logic is in this, but there is some. No two events are the same, even if they appear to have the same symptoms the causes differ. This is where the US lack of foreign policy becomes a benefit. It allows the US to tailor its behaviors to fit the situation's unique qualities, not be bound to some ethereal notions (such as the persuit of democracy... we all know the US doesn't actually care about democracy) that see it commit actions out of feeling and not practicality. True, the US does a bit of this too, its foreign policy of supporting Israel, largely without blinking or thought, is a testament that the US can actually form a concrete policy if needed, but leaving yourself adaptable is even more advantageous. Seen as a mess, is our lack of foreign policy actually an issue… or a benefit?

Russia is the most prominent of US political rivals, we often stick our noises into each other business, but considering we consider each other’s business our own from a policy perspective, this can’t actually be considered an unwanted consequence, just a natural occurrence between two angry neighbors (going north that is). But, there is a difference between us. True, we both influence events, often to the detriment of a nation and its surrounding region, but one is a global and the other a regional power. Even as Russia continues to make the attempt at rekindling its geopolitical strength, suppressed by growing Chinese clout (though China remains largely an economic-political power, as many nations want Chinese money, but not political influence, such as European nations in a financial malaise) in Central Asia and an angry Europe, it remains unable to punch outside of its small and growing smaller sphere of influence.

The US remains and will remain the sole power able to influence global events, especially as challengers to US power either reject the notion of interfering in global events, or lack the political reputation and respect to do so. In some regions our influence will and is falling, take Russia’s ECO initiative, but there is not where that a lack of political influence can’t be rectified by an old-fashioned revolution. For good or bad, and most commonly viewed as bad, the US remains the alpha nation in global politics.

Economic

Perhaps in this metric alone is the US influence on global affairs diminishing in favor of China, mostly, but other regional nations too, such as Brazil who grows regional respect as its economy prospers (though recently it’s been doing anything but prospering, often going in reverse). That isn’t to say the US has ceded its place in the world as a global economic power, it still is as no nation has yet reached the all aspect economic strength, even though China will likely overtake the US in nominal GDP within a relatively short time. No, it still has work to do to catch the US in all aspects. Economics involve much, much more than the amount of money that shows up in your coffers each year, and though growth is impressive, how you use and generate it is equally important.

The US is a diverse economic power. While others are making the transition to a consumer driven economy, a shift the will take time to implement and even longer to shift traditional “save-first” habits, the US combines a healthy mix of consumerism, manufacturing, world-renowned consolatory services, business investment and technology. It’s currently an all-aspect economic power and continues to strengthen as its recovery builds momentum. Where once you would question high-growth in the US, now it’s not uncommon for growth to be revised up on quarterly reports… revised up by .5% or more from the initial report.

U.S. manufacturing output surges in November| Reuters

The US is also rich in natural resources, so too are its competitors, but the US is doing a bit of reversing its importing trends, especially the importing of oil and natural gas, at a time when other even more deeply invest themselves in oil imports. We are weaning ourselves away from “black gold”. Not only does this allow the US to run a budget surplus with oil exporting nations, a benefit from an economic perspective, but it reduces the need and justification for the US to interfere in regions that would rather see it fall off a cliff and into obscurity. A reduction in oil, even if the US, as is often wrongly attributed, never really relied on the Middle-east in the first place (the US relied on itself, Canada and Mexico) allows it to justify not being in the Middle-East… and this is something that benefits the world.

Don’t believe me? let Bloomberg explain the lessening of the US’ oil addiction

Bloomberg Graphics - Business, Financial & Economic News, Stock Quotes

Cultural

Contradictory to common thought, with the US military seen as the strong-arm of US power with its political clout a close second, its cultural strength is the true metric by which the US should be measured. From global brands, to music and artistic inclinations and even the much maligned, but often demanded governmental system, the US has more cultural prowess the any other nation.

Let’s examine some aspects of US cultural strength:

Brand strength. US brands have built a reputation as being high-priced, but high-quality and packed full of tech that is only later replicated by others. Around the world people queue to purchase the next iPhone, with the possible exception of nations under US embargoes or trade restrictions, such as Myanmar and Cambodia (which see Chinese products gain prominence as a result of the lack of competitive items). US companies have built a reputation of excellence and quality. From military suppliers such as Raytheon, cited as the world’s leader in rocketry and military electronics, to the much maligned, but widely-used Facebook, the US is a brand Phenom, cross the globe in all corners.

But brand strength doesn't happen in a vacuum, it is the end result of another aspect the US has; innovation. While not considered the most innovative nation according to the Global Innovation Index, the US still has a monopoly on putting innovative ideas into practice and upping their amplitude to the point of global saturation. Not the first of its kind, certainly more iteration then innovation, but Facebook is a great example of US innovative strength. Whereas Myspace and several others came before, it was Facebook, now a template followed with success by other iterations that turned the concept of social media into a global force. US scientific contributions, brand and technology inventions, it has been the US that has lead the world through its progressions.

Global Innovation Report 2014 | The Global Innovation Index

Arts, the US has them and then some, though this can be seen as a lesser quality of US cultural strength as it’s often diffused by regional cultures and interests. From cinema to video games, live-acting on Broadway to musical sensations, the US artistic scene has been a bridge between nations. However, as stated this is a lesser quality of US cultural strength as it can be easily diffused or used as a springboard for more successful regional cultural phenomenon’s such as K-pop or J-Pop in East Asia, which often overshadows US arts.

Culture is its own political ambassador, even in the darkest recesses of the globe. From Venezuela to Russia and China, the US cultural clout not only exposes nations and people to the US style of innovation and thought, but they can influence global politics in ways not seem though diplomacy. The yearn for US style economic policies, personal freedoms and abilities to choose one’s own government has toppled many others, though the black hand of US diplomatic strength may be the force that final coalesces yearnings into actions and revolutions. Still, no revolution happens without first a belief that life can be better with a different system… and the US is the undisputed king in this respect.

Whether you know it or not, you are influenced by US culture, even those most virulently opposed to the US are bound to hatred through recognition of US strength. Even if you try, you cannot avoid US cultural domination. But is US cultural strength declining as others grow? No, not at all and for the reason that even as others grow, they too are captivated and influenced by US technology, science, music and power. China is making strides, often seen as the US rival or next great power, but its cultural influence is limited to its surrounding region… the US will remain the undisputed cultural power.

The death of the US has been foretold since it was formally founded. First our former colonial masters, then the Germans, the Soviets, casual onlookers, yet no prophesy has come to pass. The US is resurgent in one metric, the undisputed king in three others. Sure, others make progress, erode parts of US power, but our influence is far from challenged on a global scale. Like it or not, we are here to stay. As was once famously uttered, “The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.”

@Nihonjin1051 @Chinese-Dragon @LeveragedBuyout (I apologize for bringing you into this, I acknowledge your interest in disengaging from PDF and will refrain from tagging you as best I can)
With the things happened and happening in Syria, Libya, Egypt, Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine, and even in Taiwan and Hong Kong, people cannot continue believing that your democracy and freedom can bring them better life. Ideology is not everything. Since people don't trust you anymore, it will become more and more difficult to lead the world as a superpower.
This is not the democracy we want, it's democrazy.
 
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A better way to put this would be the death of singular super powers. The USSR challenged America militarily but not economically, now China is challenging them economically and trying so militarily.
US politics are a strength…
That is somewhat confusing seeing the current situation with your senate and its total bipolar views on nearly everything but aid to Israel.
But yes with the recent shale oil being introduced it is a matter of time before the US regains a lot of what it has lost economically and reduces that huge debt which is eating up the nation.
But America is facing a real large problem in regards to racism, refusal to increase the minimum wage and capitalist views being more important then the health of its own people not to mention the highest number of jailed people in the world.
In regards to foreign policy America has lost all respect in many countries with regards to its dealing with Israel with most of Europe and Asia disagreeing with their policy. Also the recent CIA torture report has made America look like a hypocritical nation, with presidential pardons being able to let people go for people who deserve the death penalty or life in prison without parole.
The only country that can take away the United States super power status is America itself and it seems they are doing their best to reach there.
 
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A better way to put this would be the death of singular super powers. The USSR challenged America militarily but not economically, now China is challenging them economically and trying so militarily.

That is somewhat confusing seeing the current situation with your senate and its total bipolar views on nearly everything but aid to Israel.
But yes with the recent shale oil being introduced it is a matter of time before the US regains a lot of what it has lost economically and reduces that huge debt which is eating up the nation.
But America is facing a real large problem in regards to racism, refusal to increase the minimum wage and capitalist views being more important then the health of its own people not to mention the highest number of jailed people in the world.
In regards to foreign policy America has lost all respect in many countries with regards to its dealing with Israel with most of Europe and Asia disagreeing with their policy. Also the recent CIA torture report has made America look like a hypocritical nation, with presidential pardons being able to let people go for people who deserve the death penalty or life in prison without parole.
The only country that can take away the United States super power status is America itself and it seems they are doing their best to reach there.
Challenging is not our aim.

A better way to put this would be the death of singular super powers. The USSR challenged America militarily but not economically, now China is challenging them economically and trying so militarily.

That is somewhat confusing seeing the current situation with your senate and its total bipolar views on nearly everything but aid to Israel.
But yes with the recent shale oil being introduced it is a matter of time before the US regains a lot of what it has lost economically and reduces that huge debt which is eating up the nation.
But America is facing a real large problem in regards to racism, refusal to increase the minimum wage and capitalist views being more important then the health of its own people not to mention the highest number of jailed people in the world.
In regards to foreign policy America has lost all respect in many countries with regards to its dealing with Israel with most of Europe and Asia disagreeing with their policy. Also the recent CIA torture report has made America look like a hypocritical nation, with presidential pardons being able to let people go for people who deserve the death penalty or life in prison without parole.
The only country that can take away the United States super power status is America itself and it seems they are doing their best to reach there.
With a gun in your hand, your racial problem is no longer a problem. With stealth fighter and aircraft carrier, foreign policy and diplomatic policy is nothing.
 
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Challenging is not our aim.
I never said it was. The aim is to grow and as there is always one number one the challenge is extended without meaning to.

With a gun in your hand, your racial problem is no longer a problem. With stealth fighter and aircraft carrier, foreign policy and diplomatic policy is nothing.
I do not get u i was talking about America eating itself up inside
 
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China's official policy is "永遠不稱霸" (Never seek hegemony).

So America can relax, we are not trying to take their role as the global hegemon. All we want is more strategic breathing room in our own region.
 
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I never said it was. The aim is to grow and as there is always one number one the challenge is extended without meaning to.


I do not get u i was talking about America eating itself up inside
I don't think racial discrimination will matter too much. If you know the theory of chairman Mao you got to understand. Walking in the street, yelling"black lives matter" just doesn't help. With armed forces and numerous credits, these protestors are actually nothing in the eye of Wall Street.

USSR now Russia will be a military super power but economically it is difficult which is why they can not be a super power in my eyes.
With its poor population I cannot regard it as a military superpower, just nuclear superpower.
 
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The death of the US has been foretold since it was formally founded. First our former colonial masters, then the Germans, the Soviets, casual onlookers, yet no prophesy has come to pass. The US is resurgent in one metric, the undisputed king in three others. Sure, others make progress, erode parts of US power, but our influence is far from challenged on a global scale. Like it or not, we are here to stay. As was once famously uttered, “The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.”

I agree with your summary, the US is currently unsurpassed most metrics of national power.

That's why America is the sole superpower, and has no "peers".

Even if China eventually becomes a "near-peer" power to America (several decades from now), our policy is to never seek regional or global hegemony. Thus, America will remain without challengers for this role, since that is not our goal.
 
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