Showing posts with label Opinion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opinion. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Generation Angry: Why Gen-Z Revolts Are Exploding Across South Asia

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There was a time when revolutions arrived wearing military uniforms, carrying thick ideological manifestos, and speaking in solemn tones about historical destiny. Today revolutions arrive as memes. They are edited on cracked smartphones, uploaded through unstable WiFi connections, and narrated by exhausted graduates sitting in cramped bedrooms beside unpaid electricity bills and framed university degrees that now function mainly as decorative evidence of betrayal.

South Asia is witnessing the rise of a new political species: educated, digitally connected, economically anxious, emotionally exhausted, and deeply sarcastic young citizens who no longer believe the system works for them. They are not marching under grand ideological banners. They prefer hashtags, viral jokes, parody accounts, and reels dripping with mockery. The old revolutionaries quoted Karl Marx. The new ones discuss depression, unemployment, and billionaire weddings. 

Nothing reflects the brilliance of a “thriving democracy” more than producing millions of graduates every year while making secure employment feel like the grand jackpot in a cruel national game show. The great South Asian social contract once sounded simple enough. Study hard. Respect elders. Get a degree. Obtain a respectable job. Support your family. Rise into the middle class. It was the sacred ladder of aspiration sold to millions of households from Delhi to Dhaka, Colombo to Kathmandu. Then the ladder disappeared. Or rather, it still exists for the privileged few whose surnames function like VIP passes at the airport of life. For everyone else, there are motivational speeches on LinkedIn.

India’s recent “Cockroach Janta Party” phenomenon captured this frustration with almost poetic absurdity. The movement emerged after a senior judge compared unemployed and chronically online youth to “cockroaches” and parasites. In previous generations, such an insult may have triggered outrage, angry editorials, or perhaps a panel discussion featuring six men shouting over one another on television.

Gen-Z responded differently. They adopted the insult like a national mascot. Suddenly social media was flooded with AI-generated cockroach avatars, satirical political posters, parody campaign slogans, and darkly hilarious videos celebrating the lives of India’s “lazy, unemployed, emotionally broken youth.” The Cockroach Janta Party, or CJP, became less a political party and more a collective scream disguised as internet comedy.

Naturally, authorities reacted with the wisdom and restraint modern governments are famous for. The CJP handle was banned on X in India because nothing demonstrates democratic confidence quite like being threatened by unemployed meme creators.

Yet, behind the humour lay genuine despair. The CJP’s five-point manifesto became viral precisely because it distilled the frustrations of an entire generation into savage satire.

The first point effectively represented the “overqualified and underpaid” youth of India. This struck a nerve because millions of young Indians now inhabit a bizarre economic twilight zone. They possess degrees, certifications, internships, coaching classes, online courses, and motivational trauma in industrial quantities, yet stable employment remains elusive. Government recruitment exams are repeatedly delayed, paper leaks have become seasonal traditions, and private sector jobs increasingly resemble temporary contracts designed to keep workers permanently insecure.

Entire youth populations now live suspended between endless preparation and endless disappointment. India’s middle class spends small fortunes educating children only to discover that the reward for academic achievement is often another entrance exam, another unpaid internship, or another YouTube video explaining “how to stay motivated during unemployment.”

The second pillar of the manifesto mocked toxic productivity culture. This was perhaps its sharpest satire. Across urban South Asia, young people are bombarded daily with lectures about hustle, grinding, self-improvement, networking, branding, and waking up at 4 AM to “dominate the market.” Billionaires post inspirational quotes about hard work from private jets. Influencers preach discipline while selling productivity courses worth more than a week’s groceries.

Meanwhile ordinary graduates are struggling to secure jobs paying enough to cover rent.

At some point, burnout stopped being a medical condition and became a national identity.

The CJP’s embrace of naps, laziness, and emotional exhaustion was not merely comedy. It was rebellion against an economic culture that treats human beings as malfunctioning machines if they cannot endlessly optimise themselves for a collapsing labour market.

The third point of the manifesto leaned heavily into secularism and socialism, though in the chaotic, meme-soaked language of internet culture. Beneath the jokes was a serious accusation: that identity politics and communal polarisation have become convenient distractions from unemployment, inequality, and institutional decay.

After all, nothing unites ruling elites more efficiently than ensuring angry young citizens remain busy fighting one another instead of questioning why housing, healthcare, and stable jobs increasingly resemble luxury goods.

This frustration is not unique to India. Across South Asia, young people are watching political dynasties behave like hereditary monarchies while lecturing citizens about democracy and sacrifice. Governments routinely invoke nationalism while graduates quietly line up outside embassies seeking opportunities abroad.

The fourth point of the CJP manifesto celebrated memes and internet humour as political weapons. Critics dismissed this as unserious. They missed the point entirely.

Humour has become the survival language of a generation trapped between anxiety and helplessness. Gen-Z uses irony because speaking sincerely about the future often feels unbearable. Memes allow them to process humiliation collectively. Sarcasm becomes emotional armour.

And importantly, humour terrifies authority. A government can arrest activists. It can censor newspapers. It can intimidate opposition leaders. But it struggles against ridicule because ridicule destroys the aura of power itself. Once leaders become memes, they stop appearing invincible.

This is why modern protests increasingly resemble digital carnivals. Demonstrations are now choreographed for virality. Protest signs reference anime, Bollywood, gaming culture, and internet slang. Livestreams transform political resistance into participatory performance art. Entire movements communicate through sarcasm faster than traditional institutions can respond.

The fifth and perhaps most devastating aspect of the manifesto was its embrace of hopelessness itself. Instead of pretending optimism, the movement openly acknowledged emotional exhaustion, economic despair, and psychological burnout.

That honesty resonated because millions of young people across South Asia feel cheated. They were raised during the era of globalisation and digital optimism. They were told that education would unlock prosperity. Parents sacrificed savings, property, jewellery, and retirement security to fund degrees. Coaching centres expanded like religious institutions. Success stories filled television screens.

Then reality arrived carrying unpaid bills. Today large sections of educated youth inhabit what economists call the “expectation trap.” Expectations rose dramatically while opportunities failed to keep pace. The result is a volatile cocktail of resentment and humiliation.

Social media intensifies this crisis mercilessly. Previous generations suffered privately. Today inequality is algorithmically delivered every few seconds. Young graduates preparing for competitive exams encounter endless images of billionaire weddings, celebrity children launching instant careers, influencers purchasing luxury cars, and politicians’ offspring entering public life through dynastic shortcuts.

The message becomes impossible to ignore: merit matters selectively. This rage has erupted across the region. In Sri Lanka’s 2022 Aragalaya movement, young protesters became the face of resistance during catastrophic economic collapse. Fuel shortages paralysed daily life. Food prices soared. Blackouts became routine. Citizens queued for essentials while political elites appeared insulated from suffering.

Eventually protesters stormed the presidential residence itself. Images of ordinary Sri Lankans swimming in the president’s pool became globally iconic because they symbolised something deeper than protest. It was a temporary inversion of class hierarchy. Citizens briefly occupied spaces previously reserved for elites.

The spectacle was humorous, theatrical, and deeply political all at once.

In Bangladesh, the 2024 student-led quota protests began over government job reservations but rapidly expanded into broader anger against authoritarianism, unemployment, and inequality. Once again young people proved remarkably effective at mobilising outrage and destabilising entrenched systems.

Yet the aftermath revealed the deeper problem haunting many Gen-Z uprisings: destroying legitimacy is easier than building institutions.

Nepal experienced similar turmoil in 2025. Years of corruption, stagnation, and youth migration had already hollowed out public confidence. Entire villages depended heavily on remittances because domestic opportunities remained painfully limited. When authorities reportedly attempted to suppress the viral “NepoBaby” trend online, the backlash exploded into protests and unrest.

Governments across the region keep making the same catastrophic mistake. They assume digitally connected youth can simply be lectured, censored, insulted, or ignored into obedience. This is comparable to attempting to extinguish a forest fire with motivational podcasts.

The deeper issue is that Gen-Z no longer trusts institutions. Political parties are dynastic. Bureaucracies are corrupt. Media organisations are compromised. Meritocracy resembles mythology narrated during graduation ceremonies.

As trust collapses, politics mutates into spectacle. This explains why modern youth movements often appear chaotic, ironic, and leaderless. Many young activists distrust hierarchy itself because they associate formal leadership with hypocrisy and betrayal. Instead, movements emerge horizontally through networks, hashtags, creators, influencers, and viral moments.

This structure gives them tremendous speed and flexibility. But it also creates weaknesses. Online outrage burns intensely yet briefly. Viral movements can mobilise millions overnight but struggle to maintain coherence once the emotional surge fades.

History offers sobering parallels. The Arab Spring unleashed extraordinary energy but often failed to produce stable democratic transitions. “Occupy Wall Street” movement transformed global conversations about inequality but struggled organisationally. The 1968 student revolts across Europe and the Americas reshaped culture profoundly while achieving mixed political outcomes.

Gen-Z movements face the same paradox. They are brilliant at exposing hypocrisy but unprepared for the tedious, frustrating realities of governance, negotiation, institution-building, and compromise. Unfortunately governance requires more than memes. But dismissing these uprisings as childish tantrums would be dangerous. Beneath the humour lies a structural crisis.

South Asia possesses enormous youth populations entering economies unable to generate sufficient stable employment. Urban aspirations are rising faster than living standards. Housing costs are climbing. Job security is shrinking. Climate anxieties loom in the background. Artificial intelligence threatens future employment further. Meanwhile elite wealth is displayed with unprecedented vulgarity online. The Ambani wedding is an example of this crassness. In earlier eras inequality could hide behind palace walls. Today it arrives through Instagram stories.

The psychological consequences are immense. Millions of young people feel permanently evaluated yet perpetually excluded. They are told to compete endlessly in fundamentally rigged systems.

When institutions lose moral credibility, ridicule becomes inevitable. That is why the Cockroach Janta Party resonated so widely. It captured the emotional atmosphere of modern youth politics: exhausted but angry, cynical but creative, despairing yet darkly funny. The cockroach itself became a perfect metaphor. Cockroaches survive hostile environments. They adapt. They endure neglect. They multiply invisibly beneath polished surfaces. Elites may find them unpleasant, but exterminating them entirely proves impossible.

One suspects this symbolism was not entirely accidental. South Asia’s ruling classes now face a generation they neither fully understand nor fully control. These young citizens are digitally connected, culturally fluent, politically unpredictable, and increasingly immune to traditional authority. They can transform an insult into a movement within hours. They can weaponise humour faster than governments can draft press releases. A single arrogant remark from a judge, politician, billionaire, or television anchor can now trigger nationwide backlash.

The old political order still behaves as though citizens passively consume authority. Gen-Z treats authority as content to be reviewed, mocked, remixed, and memefied.

That changes everything.

Whether these movements ultimately produce meaningful reform remains uncertain. Some may fade into internet nostalgia. Others may evolve into genuine political forces. Many will likely oscillate between outrage and exhaustion. But one reality is unmistakable: the social contract across much of South Asia is fraying badly. The youth are not angry because they hate their countries. They are angry because they suspect their countries have no serious place for them, thanks to the type of people who have become rulers.

And so history enters a strange new phase. Revolutions no longer begin only in jungles, factories, or university halls. Sometimes they begin with a sarcastic reel posted at 2 AM by an unemployed graduate eating instant noodles while doom-scrolling through videos of billionaire weddings.

The ruling classes laugh at these young people at their own peril. After all, every political order eventually discovers the same uncomfortable truth: mocking desperate youth is entertaining only until the memes start marching in the streets.



Abhijeet Dipke, Gen Z protests, Youth uprising India, Cockroach Janta Party, India unemployment crisis, Gen Z political movements, Nepal youth protests, Sri Lanka Aragalaya, Bangladesh student protests, Youth unemployment India, Social media activism, Anti nepotism protests, Gen Z rebellion, Indian politics 2026, Meme politics India, Digital revolution youth, South Asia protests, Political satire India, Economic inequality youth, Youth anger politics, Viral political movements, Modi, Trump, Obama

Friday, May 22, 2026

The Oslo Blunder: Unseemly, Undignified and Avoidable

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“Freest Press in the world!” Did this phrase pierce through the rhino-hides of our Godi media and stir up their collective conscience? Now, why am I quoting this phrase. Because it was part of the question shot off by Helle Lying, a young almost unknown Norwegian journalist. It was aimed at the Prime Minister of India at Oslo asking why he was not taking questions from the assemble press persons. 

The episode in Oslo was not merely an uncomfortable press interaction. It was a revealing moment that exposed the deep contradictions, insecurities, and rhetorical habits that increasingly define the public diplomacy of India’s Ministry of External Affairs under the present Indian government. What unfolded between Norwegian journalist Helle Lyng and Indian diplomat Sibi George was less a confident defense of India’s democratic credentials and more an exercise in evasion disguised as patriotism.

The most striking feature of the exchange was not the hostility of the questions. Democracies are supposed to withstand hostile questions. The real story was the visible discomfort of a government machinery that has become accustomed to adulation at home and increasingly defensive abroad.

Lyng’s questions were blunt, but they were neither irrational nor unprecedented. She asked why democratic countries should trust India while concerns about press freedom, treatment of minorities, and civil liberties continue to mount. These are not fringe accusations whispered in ideological corners. They are concerns raised repeatedly by international watchdogs, foreign legislatures, journalists, scholars, and even many Indians themselves. A mature diplomatic establishment could have responded with specificity, data, acknowledgment of challenges, and evidence of institutional resilience. Instead, the MEA chose the familiar route of wounded nationalism and rhetorical inflation.

Sibi George’s response rested on several predictable pillars. India has a Constitution. India has elections. Women have rights. Courts exist. India is large and complex. Critics rely on NGOs. Therefore, criticism of India is either ignorant, selective, or malicious.

The problem is that none of these arguments actually answered the question.

Invoking the Constitution while sidestepping allegations of its erosion is a classic bureaucratic manoeuvre. North Korea also has a constitution. Russia conducts elections. Turkeye has courts. The mere existence of democratic institutions is not proof that those institutions are functioning freely, independently, or without intimidation. The real question is whether constitutional guarantees are being upheld in spirit rather than merely displayed as ceremonial artefacts.

George’s claim that the “best example of human rights” is the right to vote was particularly revealing. Voting alone does not exhaust the meaning of democracy. A democracy is not simply a five-yearly ritual of pressing buttons on electronic machines. Democracy also requires a free press, dissent without fear, independent institutions, protection of minorities, and the ability to criticise the government without risking harassment, sedition charges, tax raids, arrests, or digital mobs. No, not just digital mobs but mob-lynching, bulldozing homes to rubble without any legal or constitutional sanction. By reducing democracy to elections alone, the MEA inadvertently echoed the logic of many illiberal regimes around the world that maintain electoral processes while hollowing out democratic culture.

Even more troubling was the tone of moral self-congratulation. George appeared less interested in addressing concerns than in asserting civilizational innocence. The argument that India is “one-sixth of humanity but not one-sixth of the world’s problems” sounded impressive rhetorically but functioned largely as statistical smoke. Human rights concerns are not invalidated by population size. If anything, the scale of India makes institutional accountability even more important.

The dismissal of critics as “ignorant NGOs” was another weak point. Governments everywhere attack NGOs when scrutiny becomes inconvenient. Yet many of the concerns raised about India today do not emerge only from NGOs. They are reflected in global press freedom rankings, reports by legal scholars, testimony from former civil servants, statements by opposition leaders, court observations, and the lived experiences of journalists and activists inside India. Simply branding all criticism as foreign ignorance may excite domestic nationalist audiences, but internationally it projects fragility rather than confidence.

The most damaging aspect of the episode, however, was the contrast between style and substance. The MEA increasingly performs diplomacy like televised political combat. Officials often speak not to persuade skeptical foreign audiences but to generate viral clips for domestic consumption. The objective appears to be producing moments of nationalist applause rather than nuanced engagement. George’s answers may have played well among supporters who equate criticism of the government with criticism of India itself. But diplomacy is not a primetime shouting match. Foreign journalists are not party spokespersons waiting to be intimidated into silence.

In fact, the very defensiveness of the response strengthened the journalist’s point. Confident democracies do not panic when confronted by uncomfortable questions. They answer calmly, precisely, and transparently. When every criticism is framed as anti-national bias, governments begin to resemble insecure regimes rather than self-assured democracies.

The Indian government’s broader communication strategy also loomed over the exchange. Lyng’s question about why the Prime Minister of India rarely takes unscripted press questions was particularly important because it touched a nerve that the government has never convincingly addressed. The Indian Prime Minister remains one of the most media-controlled major leaders in the democratic world. His press interactions are heavily choreographed, interviews are often friendly and pre-screened, and genuinely adversarial questioning is exceedingly rare. This creates an image problem internationally because democratic legitimacy today is judged not only by electoral victories but also by openness to scrutiny.

The irony is that India possesses enormous democratic strengths that could have been articulated intelligently. India truly does have an independent judiciary in many respects. It has vibrant elections, noisy public discourse, active regional politics, and a politically aware citizenry. The country remains far more pluralistic than many of its critics acknowledge. A sophisticated diplomatic defense would have acknowledged imperfections while emphasising institutional resilience and ongoing democratic contestation.

Instead, the MEA adopted a posture that suggested any criticism itself was illegitimate.

This approach is increasingly counterproductive. India today seeks global leadership. It wants a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council. It presents itself as the voice of the Global South and as a democratic alternative to authoritarian China. Such ambitions inevitably invite scrutiny. A rising power cannot demand international influence while simultaneously reacting to criticism with outrage and deflection.

There was also an unmistakable asymmetry in the encounter. The journalist asked direct questions. The diplomat responded with abstractions. She asked about violations. He spoke about voting. She asked about trust. He spoke about India’s size. She asked about accountability. He spoke about constitutional ideals. The conversation often felt like two people operating in parallel universes.

The incident also reflected a deeper transformation within sections of India’s governing establishment. Over the last decade, criticism from foreign media has increasingly been portrayed as evidence of colonial arrogance, anti-India prejudice, or Western hypocrisy. While selective Western outrage certainly exists and should be challenged, the constant weaponisation of postcolonial grievance has become a convenient substitute for introspection. Not every uncomfortable question is imperialism. Sometimes criticism is simply criticism.

In the end, the Oslo episode did not damage India because a Norwegian journalist asked tough questions. Democracies survive questioning all the time. The damage came from the impression that India’s diplomatic machinery now struggles to distinguish between defending the nation and defending the ruling establishment.

A truly confident India would not fear scrutiny from foreign journalists. It would welcome scrutiny as proof that it still belongs to the democratic tradition it proudly claims to represent.


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Sunday, May 17, 2026

The Thucydides Trap: Can the World Escape History’s Deadliest Pattern?

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While addressing the American Presidential visitors in Beijing on May 14 2026, Chinese President Xi Jinping invoked one of the most unsettling ideas in international relations. Referring to the famous “Thucydides Trap,” Xi warned that if China and the United States mishandled sensitive issues, especially Taiwan, the two powers could drift toward a catastrophic confrontation.

The symbolism was striking. The rising China’s leader was using a concept made famous by an American scholar to caution the sitting American president against strategic overreaction. Despite the diplomatic smiles and trade negotiations a  deep anxiety was clear. The world’s two largest powers are heading toward the same deadly pattern that has repeatedly dragged civilisations into ruin. 

This time the planet will be destroyed.

The Origins of the Thucydides Trap

The phrase originates from the ancient Greek historian Thucydides, whose account of the Peloponnesian War remains one of the foundational texts of political realism. Writing about the conflict between Athens and Sparta in the fifth century BCE, Thucydides famously observed, and I quote:

> “It was the rise of Athens and the fear that this instilled in Sparta that made war inevitable.”

These words capture a recurring historical phenomenon. When a new power grows in wealth, military capability, and influence, it seeks recognition and space. The dominant state fears decline and loss of status. Suspicion deepens. Alliances harden. Small crises become existential tests. Eventually, war can emerge not because either side truly desires it, but because both become trapped in escalating insecurity.

Political scientist Graham Allison revived this concept in his 2017 book Destined for War. He studied sixteen historical cases over the previous five centuries in which a rising power challenged an existing hegemon. In twelve of those cases, the rivalry ended in war. History suggests that structural rivalry between rising and ruling powers often becomes extremely dangerous. Yet Allison also emphasised that war is not predetermined. Four cases avoided major conflict, proving that wise leadership, strategic restraint, and institutional adaptation can sometimes overcome structural tensions.

The history of great-power rivalry offers repeated warnings about how fear, ambition, and mistrust can push nations toward catastrophe. The classic example is the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. After defeating Persia, Athens became a wealthy naval empire with a flourishing economy and influential democratic culture, while Sparta remained a conservative military power rooted in land dominance. As Athenian influence expanded across the Greek world, Sparta viewed it as a threat to its security and prestige. Mutual suspicion deepened, alliances hardened, and diplomatic efforts failed because both sides interpreted compromise as weakness. The resulting war lasted nearly three decades, devastating Greece, exhausting both powers, and leaving the region vulnerable to later conquest by Macedon. The lesson was clear: even highly advanced civilisations can destroy themselves through paranoia and competitive pride.

A similar pattern emerged before World War I. Following unification under Otto von Bismarck, Germany rapidly industrialised and became a major economic and military force. Under Kaiser Wilhelm II, Germany expanded its navy to challenge British maritime supremacy. Britain, long accustomed to global dominance, saw Germany as a strategic threat rather than merely a competitor. Alliance systems intensified the rivalry, with Germany aligned with Austria-Hungary while Britain moved closer to France and Russia. Nationalism and rigid military planning made Europe dangerously unstable. When Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated in 1914, a regional crisis spiralled into world war because the major powers were already primed for confrontation. The war caused unprecedented destruction and paved the way for even greater horrors later.

The 1930s provided another warning through the rise of Nazi Germany. Under Adolf Hitler, Germany rejected the postwar order, rapidly rearmed, and pursued territorial expansion. Britain and France initially pursued appeasement, hoping concessions would preserve peace, but this only emboldened Hitler further. The lesson was that excessive accommodation can sometimes encourage aggression rather than prevent it.

The Cold War, however, demonstrated that rivalry does not always end in direct war. Despite intense hostility, the United States and the Soviet Union avoided direct military conflict largely because nuclear weapons made total war suicidal. Communication channels, arms-control agreements, and deterrence helped manage tensions. Similarly, Britain’s peaceful accommodation of America’s rise in the late nineteenth century showed that strategic adjustment and shared interests can sometimes prevent conflict during major power transitions.

China’s Rise and America’s Anxiety

The rivalry between the United States and China has become the defining geopolitical contest of the twenty-first century. Deng Xiaoping’s economic reforms in the late 1970s caused China’s historic transformation, lifting hundreds of millions out of poverty and emerging as a global manufacturing and technological powerhouse in artificial intelligence, telecommunications, electric vehicles, quantum computing, and hypersonic weapons. China has significantly expanded its military strength, developing the world’s largest navy by hull count alongside advanced missile, cyber, and space capabilities. Beijing views this rise as the restoration of China’s historical status after the “Century of Humiliation,” while the United States sees China as a challenger to the post-1945 international order. American concerns include China’s militarisation of the South China Sea, growing pressure on Taiwan, economic coercion against smaller states, cyber espionage, intellectual property theft, and attempts to reshape international institutions and global norms in ways that could weaken Western influence. Consequently, Washington has imposed semiconductor export controls, strengthened Indo-Pacific alliances such as AUKUS and the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, and intensified military cooperation across Asia. Both sides claim defensive intentions, but interpret the other’s actions as aggressive, creating the classic security dilemma associated with the Thucydides Trap.

Taiwan remains the most dangerous flashpoint. China considers the island an inseparable part of its territory and has vowed eventual reunification, while the United States maintains “strategic ambiguity” by recognising Beijing diplomatically but supporting Taiwan’s self-defence. A crisis could emerge through blockade, accidental military collision, misinterpreted exercises, or political developments in Taiwan, with nationalism and mistrust rapidly escalating tensions. Because Taiwan is central to global semiconductor production and trade, any conflict there would have catastrophic worldwide economic consequences.

Why Today Is Different From 1914

Despite these dangers, several powerful factors reduce the probability of total world war compared to earlier eras.

First, the existence of nuclear weapons fundamentally changes strategic calculations. Leaders today understand that direct war between nuclear superpowers could end civilisation itself. This does not eliminate conflict, but it raises caution dramatically.

Second, the U.S. and China remain deeply economically interconnected despite increasing decoupling efforts. Supply chains, trade networks, financial systems, and consumer markets bind them together in ways unprecedented among historical rivals. A large-scale war would devastate not only both countries but the entire global economy.

Third, modern rivalry increasingly occurs below the threshold of open war. Cyberattacks, sanctions, propaganda, espionage, disinformation, proxy struggles, and technological competition provide alternatives to direct military confrontation. This creates dangerous instability but also allows pressure release without immediate escalation into world war.

Unlike 1914, today’s powers possess extensive diplomatic channels, military hotlines, intelligence monitoring systems, and real-time communication technologies. Even bitter rivals now maintain crisis-management mechanisms because both understand the stakes.

And finally, modern leaders are acutely aware of history’s catastrophic lessons. The memory of two world wars and the Cold War influences strategic thinking across capitals. The Thucydides Trap itself functions partly as a warning mechanism. By identifying the danger, policymakers may become more cautious about falling into it.

The Role of Russia and Emerging Blocs

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia has increasingly positioned itself against the U.S.-led order. Conflicts in Georgia, Crimea, and Ukraine demonstrated Moscow’s willingness to use force to revise post-Cold War arrangements.

Russia’s growing partnership with China has intensified Western concerns about an emerging authoritarian bloc. However, the China-Russia relationship is not an equal alliance. China’s economy vastly outweighs Russia’s. Moscow often acts more as a disruptive military power than as a genuine economic peer to the West.

Still, simultaneous crises involving Europe and the Indo-Pacific could stretch American resources and increase global instability.

A Taiwan crisis occurring alongside conflict in Eastern Europe would create a dangerous international environment.

Is Xi Jinping Sincere About Avoiding Conflict?

Xi’s invocation of the Thucydides Trap serves multiple purposes.

Diplomatically, it allows China to portray itself as the rational actor seeking peaceful coexistence. Strategically, it pressures the United States to accommodate Chinese “core interests,” especially Taiwan. At the same time, China continues rapid military modernisation and increasingly assertive regional behaviour.

This apparent contradiction reflects geopolitical reality. Nations often seek peace while simultaneously preparing for confrontation.

There is genuine reason to believe China prefers avoiding major war. A catastrophic conflict would threaten economic stability, domestic legitimacy, and long-term development goals.

Yet China also seeks greater influence and strategic space. The challenge is that defensive measures by one side often appear offensive to the other.

The same dynamic shapes American behaviour. Washington views alliance strengthening as deterrence; Beijing often sees encirclement.

Thus both nations may sincerely desire stability while still drifting toward confrontation through mutual suspicion.

Trump, Unpredictability, and Strategic Risk

Americans introduce an additional layer of complexity.

Instead of emphasising ideological framing and institutional diplomacy, the current administration approaches foreign policy transactionally. It treats  tariffs, alliances, and negotiations as bargaining tools rather than fixed strategic commitments.

Supporters argue that unpredictability can deter adversaries and create negotiating leverage. Critics fear that erratic signalling increases the risk of miscalculation.

In a high-stakes crisis, ambiguity can become dangerous.

If Beijing misreads American intentions, or Washington misreads Chinese red lines, the consequences could escalate rapidly.

Can Humanity Escape the Trap?

History suggests that escaping the Thucydides Trap requires extraordinary strategic discipline, political maturity, and long-term thinking from rival powers. Stable coexistence depends on maintaining credible deterrence, since weakness can invite aggression while excessive militarisation can intensify fear and insecurity in the opposing side. Clear communication is equally essential because ambiguity, though sometimes useful as a deterrent, can become dangerously destabilising during moments of crisis and lead to catastrophic misunderstandings. The United States may also need to recognise that the era of uncontested post-Cold War dominance is gradually fading, while China must understand that attempts at coercive regional domination are likely to trigger balancing coalitions and stronger resistance from neighbouring states and Western alliances. 

Economic stabilisation remains another important factor, as complete decoupling could deepen hostility by removing mutual dependencies that currently act as restraints, whereas limited interdependence may still help preserve stability. At the same time, crisis-management mechanisms such as military hotlines, diplomatic summits, strategic dialogues, and arms-control frameworks remain crucial even amid intense rivalry. Perhaps most importantly, leaders on all sides must resist the pressures of hyper-nationalism, public outrage, propaganda, and social-media-driven emotionalism, all of which can trap governments into escalatory positions from which compromise becomes politically difficult. Avoiding conflict may depend less on military strength alone and more on whether leaders possess the wisdom and restraint to prioritise long-term stability over short-term nationalist gains.

Conclusion: The Choice Before the World

The Thucydides Trap is not a prophecy. It is a warning that fear, pride, and rivalry have repeatedly destroyed great civilisations. Athens and Sparta ruined classical Greece. European nationalism shattered an entire continent in 1914. Ideological extremism plunged the world into catastrophe in 1939.

Today’s rivalry between the United States and China contains many familiar structural tensions: a rising power demanding recognition, an established power resisting decline, military competition, technological rivalry, alliance politics, and mutual suspicion.

Yet the modern world also possesses safeguards previous generations lacked, like nuclear deterrence, economic interdependence, instantaneous communication, and historical awareness.

Whether those safeguards prove sufficient depends ultimately on leadership.

Can modern civilisation transcend the ancient logic that trapped Athens and Sparta?

History offers no guarantees.

But when great powers stop seeing coexistence as possible, the path to disaster can become frighteningly short.

In the nuclear age, humanity may not survive another Peloponnesian War.


Thucydides Trap, US China rivalry, Xi Jinping, Donald Trump, China vs America, Taiwan crisis, US China war, Graham Allison, Peloponnesian War, geopolitics 2026, World War 3, China Taiwan conflict, US China relations, global power shift, international relations analysis


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