Category: Sefa Yürükel

  • The Chessboard of the Seas and the Great Game in the Shadow of Ports: The Anatomy of Global Power Struggle, Geopolitical Ruptures, and International Competition on the Axis of Strategic Chokepoints

    The Chessboard of the Seas and the Great Game in the Shadow of Ports: The Anatomy of Global Power Struggle, Geopolitical Ruptures, and International Competition on the Axis of Strategic Chokepoints

    With the deepening of the globalization process, maritime transport, which forms the backbone of international trade, has gained an indispensable dimension for the economic welfare and national security of states. In an era where the overwhelming majority of global trade volume is conducted via container ships and tankers, ports have transcended their role as mere loading and unloading stations. These areas constitute the most critical links in global supply chains, are regarded as the guarantors of energy supply security, and are positioned as overseas bases for military power projection. Strategic ports that control narrow sea passages such as the Straits of Malacca, Hormuz, Bab-el-Mandeb, and the Suez Canal play a decisive role in reshaping the balance of power in the international system. The geopolitical rivalry of the twenty-first century manifests itself not in classical conflicts over land borders, but as an indirect yet intensely fierce struggle waged over maritime trade routes and the ports at the nodal points of these routes. This new era is a period of great reckoning where the intricacies of international law are shaped in the shadow of powerful navies, and free market discourses are tested by strategic imperatives.

    When the principal actors of this competition are examined, it is evident that the People’s Republic of China, with its economic rise in the Asia-Pacific; the United States of America, striving to maintain global maritime dominance; and the European Union, caught between its commercial interests and the quest for strategic autonomy, are at the center. China’s port investments in the Indian Ocean, Africa, and Europe under the scope of the Belt and Road Initiative are components of a strategic encirclement attempt dubbed the “String of Pearls.” These projects are evaluated as a power projection mechanism concealed behind Beijing’s discourse of peaceful rise. In response, the Washington administration aims to reduce dependency on China-centric logistics networks by fortifying its military bases in the Pacific while establishing alternative supply chains with its allies. Through this maneuver, Washington seeks to neutralize the strategy of logistically encircling China. The European continent, on the other hand, is pursuing a policy of balance between economic pragmatism and national security sensitivities in the face of the increasing visibility of Chinese capital in ports such as Rotterdam, Hamburg, and Piraeus. In addition to these great powers, regional actors such as India, Russia, Türkiye, and Iran are also striving to expand their independent maneuverability in the multipolar world order by investing in ports within their respective geopolitical basins.

    The struggle for maritime dominance, ongoing since the Age of Discovery, has acquired new dimensions today under the influence of technological developments and climate change. The melting of glaciers in the Arctic Ocean has rendered the Northern Sea Route a commercially viable alternative between Asia and Europe, increasing the interest of littoral states—particularly Russia and China—in port infrastructure within this region. Furthermore, the digitalization and smartification of port operations, while enhancing efficiency, also introduce cybersecurity vulnerabilities, placing strategic ports among the potential targets of cyber warfare. The logistical disruptions experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic have concretely demonstrated that even the slightest congestion at ports can create a domino effect on the global economy. In light of all these developments, the issue of control and security of strategic ports has ascended to the top tier of states’ national security agendas.

    The Great Game in the Shadow of Ports

    More than eighty percent of global trade volume is transported via sea routes, rendering oceans and coastlines the most vital arenas of competition in the international system. The uninterrupted functioning of maritime transport constitutes the backbone of supply chains, which are the cornerstone of the modern economy, and the most critical links in this chain are formed by strategic ports. These ports are far more than logistical bases where containers are loaded and unloaded; they are geopolitical assets that directly determine the economic welfare, energy supply security, and military mobility capacity of states. A country’s ability to direct the flow of global trade is directly proportional to its control or influence over these nodal points. Therefore, twenty-first-century international relations are largely shaped by moves played on the maritime chessboard and the great game sustained in the shadow of ports.

    From a historical perspective, it is clearly evident that powers dominating maritime trade routes have played a decisive role in world politics. Although ancient routes like the Silk Road and the Spice Route have been replaced by modern maritime highways, the strategic chokepoints imposed by geography have never lost their significance. Transit points such as the Strait of Malacca, the Strait of Hormuz, the Suez Canal, and the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait continue to exist as clusters of intersection for global energy and commodity transportation. The ports situated around these passages function not merely as commercial stops but also as forward outposts where regional security architecture is constructed. Today, the rivalry among great powers manifests itself as an indirect struggle waged through the financing, operation, and security provision of this critical infrastructure, rather than through direct hot conflict.

    The Asia-Pacific geography, in particular, is the region where port competition is most intense, given its status as the center of gravity for global manufacturing industry and consumer markets. The economic rise of the People’s Republic of China parallels the astronomical increase in the throughput volumes of mega-ports such as Shanghai, Ningbo-Zhoushan, and Shenzhen. While these ports position China at the center of global production networks, they are also concrete indicators of the country’s opening-up strategy. However, China’s primary move in maritime geopolitics lies in its effort to construct an extensive port network extending beyond its own shores into the Indian Ocean and beyond. Projects implemented under the Belt and Road Initiative grant the Beijing administration the opportunity to hold sway over alternative trade corridors, fundamentally shaking the existing maritime power balances.

    When assessing the situation from the perspective of the United States and its allies, it is observed that the absolute maritime dominance sustained since the Second World War is eroding. Although the Washington administration fortifies its presence in the Pacific with naval bases such as Guam, Yokosuka, and Pearl Harbor, it is compelled to develop new strategies against China’s influence campaign conducted through civilian commercial ports. The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, as the busiest entry points for Transpacific trade, expose the American economy’s dependency on the Far East. To reduce this dependency and diversify supply chains, the recent encouragement of infrastructure investments in ports in India, Vietnam, and Mexico represents a notable geopolitical maneuver. Additionally, NATO’s maritime security operations and regional alliances like the QUAD are current reflections of efforts to preserve the liberal maritime order.

    The position of the European continent within this global equation exhibits a dual structure oscillating between traditional commercial power and an increasing perception of geopolitical threat. Ports such as Rotterdam, Antwerp, and Hamburg are the main arteries opening the European Union to global trade and act as the guarantor of the continent’s prosperity. The efficiency and security of these ports directly affect Europe’s competitiveness. However, strategic investments made by Chinese companies in recent years in Southern European ports like Piraeus and Trieste have fueled debates in Brussels regarding national security and strategic autonomy. European decision-makers are simultaneously reliant on these investments to ensure the continuity of free trade while trying to mitigate the political risks posed by the transfer of critical infrastructure to the control of foreign states. This dilemma constitutes the fundamental dynamic of Europe’s new-era port policies.

    The Indian Ocean stands out as one of the most complex and energy-laden geographies of the global power struggle. A significant portion of the world’s seaborne crude oil and liquefied natural gas traverses these waters, rendering the ocean the jugular vein of the global economy. The Gwadar Port constructed by China in Pakistan, the Hambantota port it operates in Sri Lanka, and the Kyaukpyu deep-sea port project in Myanmar under the “String of Pearls” strategy represent the most concrete steps toward establishing control over this vital energy route. In response to this encirclement attempt surrounding its coastline, India is developing Iran’s Chabahar Port and striving to create an alternative corridor opening to West and Central Asia. The modernization of Indian ports such as Mumbai and Mundra constitutes the logistical infrastructure of New Delhi’s claim to be a regional maritime power.

    When it comes to the Middle East, the first thing that comes to mind is not strategic ports per se, but the narrow sea passages they control. Jebel Ali Port, belonging to the United Arab Emirates and located right at the entrance of the Strait of Hormuz, stands out as one of the largest transshipment hubs not only in the Middle East but in the world. This port is a critical center guaranteeing the functioning of global trade despite political instabilities in the Gulf region. In contrast, Iran keeps the threat of closing the Strait of Hormuz as a trump card while fortifying Bandar Abbas Port with its military and commercial capacity, and also attempts to create an alternative to Pakistan’s Gwadar Port through Chabahar in cooperation with India. Saudi Arabia, in line with its Vision 2030 goals, seeks to assume a more central role on the global logistics map by expanding Jeddah Islamic Port and King Abdullah Port on the Red Sea coast. The port competition in this region is also an extension of the Sunni-Shia geopolitical tension.

    The African continent, though long remaining in the background in terms of port competition, has now transformed into one of the most dynamic stages of the new great game. In the east of the continent, Djibouti, at the entrance of the Gulf of Aden, possesses immense geostrategic weight despite its small surface area. Controlling the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait, this point hosts military bases of the United States, China, France, Japan, and even Türkiye, becoming one of the world’s most densely militarized port zones. China’s military presence in Djibouti has made history as the People’s Liberation Army Navy’s first overseas base, symbolizing a turning point in Beijing’s global power projection. At the other end of the continent, Morocco’s Tanger Med Port has become Africa’s largest container port due to its location linking the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, rising to the status of an indispensable trading partner for European companies. The modernization of port infrastructure in Africa will continue to be a primary determinant of the influence struggle among global powers, in addition to stimulating the continent’s internal trade.

    Looking closer at the Americas, different dynamics operate within a geography squeezed between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. The expansion of the Panama Canal has redrawn the routes of global maritime trade and strengthened the connection between East Asia and the East Coast of the United States. In this context, Atlantic coast hubs like the Port of New York and New Jersey and the Port of Savannah have entered an intense race of dredging and infrastructure investment to capture a larger share of transpacific trade. In South America, while Brazil’s Port of Santos maintains its critical role in the continent’s raw material exports, the Chancay Port project in Peru, built with Chinese capital, is one of the most ambitious initiatives aiming to permanently cement Beijing’s footprint on the Pacific coast of South America. This development is viewed as an attempt by a global actor other than the United States to establish influence directly through port control in Latin America a region long living under the shadow of the Monroe Doctrine, thereby unsettling regional security balances.

    The Russian Federation’s port strategy, however, progresses on a different track dictated by geographical constraints. Despite its vast landmass, Moscow, with limited direct access to warm waters, has focused on the Arctic sea route in the north and the Black Sea and Eastern Mediterranean ports in the south to overcome this disadvantage. As a paradox of climate change, the melting of glaciers is opening Russia’s ports on the Siberian coast to global trade, transforming the Northern Sea Route into a shorter alternative between Asia and Europe compared to the Suez Canal. Ports such as Murmansk and the newly built Sabetta are positioned as both export hubs for Russian energy and new bases for its naval power. On the other hand, the concessions held at the Port of Tartus in Syria guarantee the permanent presence of the Russian Navy in the Eastern Mediterranean. Novorossiysk on the Black Sea, as a critical exit point for grain and oil trade, has once again proven its geopolitical importance in the context of the war in Ukraine.

    Türkiye’s position within this vast geopolitical landscape holds a unique character, bridging two continents and controlling two crucial maritime passages. The Turkish Straits (Istanbul and Çanakkale), thanks to the legal regime established by the Montreux Convention, grant Türkiye the authority to regulate maritime traffic between Black Sea littoral states and the Mediterranean. This authority functions as a strategic lever capable of influencing global power balances during regional crises. Ports such as Ambarlı, Mersin, and Izmir Alsancak reflect the country’s commercial vitality, while the energy resources discovered in the Eastern Mediterranean in recent years have exponentially increased the military and logistical significance of ports like Iskenderun and Taşucu. The maritime jurisdiction policy shaped within the framework of the “Blue Homeland” doctrine forms the discursive and operational basis of Türkiye’s regional power struggle waged through ports. The memorandum of understanding signed with Libya has opened a new front regarding port access and maritime security issues in the Eastern Mediterranean.

    Another crucial aspect of global competition is the struggle for dominance over port operations and digital infrastructure. Today, controlling a port physically is as much a strategic priority as owning the operational software, data flow, and terminal operating rights within that port. Global terminal operators such as China’s COSCO Shipping Ports and Dubai-based DP World have established vast intercontinental networks, transforming into soft power instruments that serve the foreign policy objectives of states. The traditional superiority of European and American companies in this field is being eroded by the aggressive growth strategies of Asia-centered firms. The process of digitalizing and making ports smart increases efficiency on one hand but brings cybersecurity risks on the other. The cessation of operations at a major container port due to a cyberattack has the potential to create a domino effect in the global supply chain, causing billions of dollars in economic loss.

    The issue of supply chain security has climbed to the top of national security policies following the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent logistical crises. The zero-inventory economic model created by the just-in-time production philosophy has painfully demonstrated that the slightest congestion at ports can lead to empty shelves and halted factories. This awareness compels states to scrutinize foreign investments in strategic ports with greater suspicion and tighten legislation aimed at protecting critical infrastructure assets. The intervention of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) in port sales or the European Union’s new regulation on foreign subsidies are concrete examples of this trend. States now view a port not merely as a commercial asset but also as a strategic reserve capacity to be utilized in times of crisis.

    Maritime law and international conventions also constitute a significant arena for the power struggle revolving around ports. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) grants coastal states extensive powers over their internal waters and territorial seas while providing the authority to inspect the standards of calling vessels through the Port State Control mechanism. This legal framework bestows significant enforcement power upon port states, particularly concerning environmental pollution and ship safety. Sovereignty disputes in the South China Sea are the scene of a race to create faits accomplis through port construction and the deployment of military installations. The artificial islands created by China in the Spratly Islands and the port infrastructure built upon them fuel debates over maritime jurisdiction and destabilize the regional security architecture. The interpretation and implementation of legal texts are often shaped in the shadow of powerful navies and military forces stationed at ports.

    The new geopolitical conjuncture created by climate change has unexpectedly placed the Arctic region on the agenda regarding port strategies. The melting of permanent ice in the Arctic Ocean is making the shortest sea route between Asia and Europe accessible to commercial vessels for a large part of the year. Littoral countries such as Russia, Canada, Norway, and Denmark (Greenland) are engaged in fierce competition for control of this new route. China’s self-identification as a “Near-Arctic State” and its interest in port projects in Iceland and Greenland herald that this region will be the coldest front of the future great game. While the inadequacy of port infrastructure in the Arctic is a primary threat to navigational safety and environmental security in the region, the country that makes the investments to fill this void will gain a decisive advantage in the future flow of global trade.

    Checkmate Strategies on the Chessboard: Asymmetric Competition and the Constricting Power of Straits

    The dimension of the global power struggle waged through ports and narrow waterways redefines classical concepts in war literature such as “deterrence” and “anti-access/area denial” (A2/AD). In this game, parties avoid the destructive cost of direct hot conflict while attempting to gain strategic superiority by placing each other under economic and logistical pressure. Particularly, the port network woven by the People’s Republic of China in the Indian Ocean is a modern, civilian-appearing manifestation of the “sea control” doctrine envisioned by classical naval power theorist Alfred Thayer Mahan. While Beijing builds its navy into one of the world’s largest fleets, it derives its primary strategic depth from the encirclement line formed by the commercial ports it constructs. This situation constitutes an “existential challenge” for the Washington administration, as the maritime dominance that is the fundamental pillar of US global power is being eroded by a rival’s control over logistical chokepoints.

    The most prominent fault line of this asymmetric competition is based on breaking the dependency on the Strait of Malacca. Known for China as the “Malacca Dilemma,” this strategic bottleneck is the Achilles’ heel of Beijing’s energy supply security. The China-Myanmar Pipeline developed to eliminate this vulnerability, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor extending to Gwadar Port, and persistent diplomatic initiatives regarding the Kra Canal project in Thailand do not merely aim to shorten commercial routes; they also target the creation of an alternative geopolitical ring that would restrict the freedom of movement of the US Navy in the Indian Ocean. In response, the US, along with Japan and Australia, attempts to break this encirclement by conducting “Freedom of Navigation Operations” (FONOPs) in the South China Sea and strengthening the port infrastructure of the Philippines and Vietnam. This struggle is not a game of pieces capturing each other on the maritime chessboard, but a game of pawns and rooks constricting each other’s maneuvering space.

    Another dimension of the power struggle is the process of “legal conquest” conducted through port operation concessions. Long-term lease and operating rights acquired by Chinese companies in developing countries create a situation tantamount to a partial transfer of sovereignty. The transfer of Hambantota Port to China for 99 years in exchange for debt is one of the most striking examples of this situation. Such agreements have the potential to instantly overturn the global balance of power by allowing Beijing to close these ports to commercial vessels in a crisis or provide logistical support to People’s Liberation Army Navy ships. The response of Western states to this situation has been to develop the “Debt Trap Diplomacy” narrative to influence international public opinion and to offer alternative financing models (such as the US-led Build Back Better World – B3W initiative). However, in this race, where Beijing holds a clear lead in terms of capital accumulation and bureaucratic speed, the course of the power struggle depends largely on the success of China’s economic diplomacy.

    Control over the straits represents the squares where the riskiest and most decisive moves of this chess game are made. The security risks created by Iran in the Strait of Hormuz and by the Houthis in Yemen at the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait have transformed into “hybrid warfare” instruments that directly threaten global energy markets. By leveraging direct or indirect relationships with these actors, great powers can exert pressure on the economic lifelines of their rivals. This shifts the concept of maritime security away from classical naval engagements toward a domain managed through proxy forces and asymmetric threats. This great game played in the shadow of ports is no longer solely about who handles more containers, but about who holds the trump cards capable of halting global trade in a crisis.

    Fault Lines in the Maritime Geopolitics of the New Century

    The shift of the global economy’s center of gravity from the Atlantic to the Asia-Pacific has elevated the importance of maritime trade routes and, consequently, strategic ports to an unprecedented level in history. The rivalry among great powers now manifests itself as a struggle for port control and logistical supremacy over sea lanes of communication, rather than conflicts along land borders. The tension between China’s economic expansionism and the United States’ efforts to maintain military maritime dominance has transformed the world’s oceans into an arena of competition. In this rivalry, the multifaceted policies pursued by regional actors such as the European Union, Russia, India, and Türkiye are driving the system toward a multipolar and unpredictable structure.

    The evolution of strategic ports from purely economic assets to integral components of national security has fundamentally altered states’ risk perception regarding these areas. In the future, investments in port infrastructure will be shaped not only by commercial feasibility calculations but also by geopolitical risk analyses and definitions of national interest. While digitalization and automation processes enhance the physical capacity of ports, they will simultaneously increase their vulnerability to cyberattacks. International companies and states seeking to reduce the concentration risk in supply chains will accelerate the search for alternative port routes closer to new production bases; this will further fuel interest in port projects in Africa and Latin America.

    Natural or man-made narrow passages such as straits and canals are poised to remain the epicenters of global geopolitical crises in the coming decades. Discussions surrounding the planned Kra Canal project in Thailand, as part of the search for alternatives to the Strait of Malacca, or the Nicaragua Canal debates, demonstrate that geography is not destiny and can be reshaped through major engineering endeavors. However, the realization of such mega-projects requires not only capital accumulation but also political will and military protection capacity. Every move made on the maritime chessboard triggers counter-moves, and the rules of the game are being rewritten by the players themselves.

    In an era where the effectiveness of international law and multilateral institutions is being questioned, the possibility that competition over ports could spiral out of control and escalate into hot conflicts is a risk that should not be ignored. A potential harassment incident involving a commercial vessel in the South China Sea, or a controlled escalation in the Strait of Hormuz, harbors the fragility to instantly collapse global energy markets. Therefore, it appears as a vital imperative for states to shape their policies towards ports and sea routes not merely with a competitive logic but also with a shared sense of responsibility for preserving global stability. The winner of the great game played in the shadow of ports will be the actor best able to maintain this delicate balance and best manage geopolitical ruptures.

    In this fluid geopolitical environment where balances are constantly shifting, while ports continue to exist as fixed points, the powers that command them may change hands. Just as the fate of Mediterranean ports passed from Venice to Genoa and then to the Ottomans in history, the struggle for dominance over Asian and African ports today will determine the new hierarchy of global power. On the maritime chessboard, it is not pawns but rooks and queens that are being played directly; each move affects the flow direction of millions of containers, the security of energy transmission lines, and ultimately the welfare level of billions of people. Therefore, understanding strategic ports will continue to be one of the most fundamental keys to navigating the complex labyrinth of twenty-first-century international relations.

    Conclusion

    The changing dynamics of global maritime geopolitics have elevated the weight of strategic ports within the international system to a level rarely seen in history. The shift of the center of gravity of economic production and consumption from the West to the East, particularly towards the Asia-Pacific basin, has turned the maritime trade routes in this region and the port cities that dominate them into the hottest points of contact in global competition. Across this vast geography extending from Shanghai to Singapore, from Gwadar to Djibouti, from Rotterdam to Los Angeles, ports are not merely numerical data points in container statistics but also concrete indicators of states’ long-term strategic visions and power projection capabilities. A state’s voice within the global supply chain appears directly proportional to the geographic spread and technological proficiency of the port infrastructure it owns or controls.

    When evaluating the competition among great powers, a deepening strategic wedge is evident between China’s state-backed port investment model and the United States’ security umbrella model based on naval superiority. Through the financing and operational support provided to port projects in developing countries under the Belt and Road Initiative, China has managed to secure permanent logistical bases in the Indian Ocean and the Eastern Mediterranean, despite criticisms of debt trap diplomacy. In response to this expansionist policy, the United States seeks to consolidate the security of sea lanes through new-generation regional alliances such as QUAD and AUKUS and to develop joint port infrastructure projects with its allies. On the European Union front, a clear dilemma exists between the openness to Chinese investment dictated by the free market economy and the strategic concern over the alienation of critical infrastructure.

    In the coming period, the acceleration of climate change seems poised to carry the issue of strategic ports to a new dimension. The regular opening of the Arctic sea route to commercial navigation will increase the importance of Russia’s ports along the Siberian coast, while rising sea levels threaten the existence of low-lying island states and critical port cities in delta regions. This environmental pressure will necessitate massive investments aimed at increasing the resilience of port infrastructure. Simultaneously, the cyber risks introduced by digitalization will require that cyber defense systems become an integral part of port management alongside physical security measures. All these developments compel states to address port policies not merely as a commercial and logistical matter but as a multidimensional national security issue.

    Ultimately, the winners of this great game played on the chessboard of the seas will be those actors who can combine geographic advantage with technological innovation and diplomatic skill; more importantly, those capable of logistically and politically blocking their opponent’s next move. The international competition waged in the shadow of ports will, for the foreseeable future, continue as a silent war conducted in the realms of infrastructure investments, operating concessions, and digital dominance rather than through hot conflicts. In this context, understanding the geopolitics of strategic ports will continue to offer an indispensable intellectual foundation for any researcher or decision-maker seeking to analyze the complex power balances of the twenty-first century.

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    Sefa Yürükel

    Danish ethnographer and social anthropologist (MA)
    Aarhus University, 1997
    Independent Researcher
    Fields of Research: International Politics, Public International Law, Geopolitics, Sociology, Psychology, Cultural Studies, Systems and Structures

  • Witnessing History: The New World Order Shaped by Iran’s Axis of Resistance and the End of the American-Israeli Era

    Witnessing History: The New World Order Shaped by Iran’s Axis of Resistance and the End of the American-Israeli Era

    The Axis of Resistance and the Historical Rupture

    Humanity’s history witnesses, in certain periods, the privilege of observing the rise of one civilization and the fall of another. The days we are living through are right in the middle of such a great historical rupture. With the military and strategic moves it has displayed in the last four days, Iran has targeted not just a war, but a century-old hegemonic order. These operations are a concrete manifestation of Iran’s philosophy of the Axis of Resistance. This philosophy is based on organizing indigenous, autonomous, and faith-based resistance against imperial powers; refusing to submit to externally imposed orders. With this understanding, Iran is reshaping the world and fundamentally shaking the perception and power structures that the US and Israel have built for decades.

    Iran Shaping the World Through Resistance

    Iran’s strategic vision extends far beyond its geographical borders. The Axis of Resistance is a network stretching from Tehran to Damascus, from Beirut to Sana’a. This network is a hybrid structure encompassing non-state actors, popular movements, and regular armies. Thanks to this structure, Iran has created a counterweight in the heart of the Middle East, in all areas that the US has not directly occupied but has tried to influence.

    The events of the last four days mark the moment when this resistance strategy has gone on the offensive. By targeting American bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, Iran is essentially giving this message: “You will no longer determine your borders; the logic of resistance will re-establish the balance of power.” These operations have shown that Iran not only defends its own territory but is also a geopolitical actor capable of directly affecting the fate of an entire region. With these moves, Iran is forcing the world to accept this reality: The order established by imperial powers is now melting away in the fire of resistance.

    The Perception Art of US-Israeli Media Power and Iran’s Disruption of This Art

    Since the last quarter of the 20th century, the US and Israel have developed an unparalleled capacity for perception management through global media. The First Gulf War (1991) was the first major demonstration of this capacity. The smart bomb footage broadcast all night on CNN, adorned with concepts like “surgical cleanliness” and “precision strikes,” gave the public the impression that war was a clean, controlled, and legitimate act. This was one of the most successful examples of modern propaganda history.

    However, Iran has collapsed this perception machine. In the ongoing conflict, even though we have passed the fourth day, almost no war footage has reached the public. This is not only due to censorship; it is also because the US and Israel cannot find a single successful frame to show. These two countries, possessing the world’s most powerful air forces, cannot fly planes over Iranian skies, cannot land troops on Iranian soil, and are facing an overwhelming resistance.

    Media outlets cannot present “uninterrupted victory footage” as they did in Iraq, Afghanistan, or Libya. Instead, there is a dominance of vague statements, contradictory reports, and a growing darkness of information. This situation is the clearest evidence of how Iran has nullified the perception simulation of US-Israeli media power. Iran has shattered the fictional reality produced in media rooms with the reality it has created on the battlefield. The world has now begun to realize the US defeat, no matter how many high-resolution bomb images are shown.

    Iran is Writing History – Strategic Depth and the Time Game

    Writing history is not just about winning wars; it is also about changing the spirit of an era. In the last four days, Iran has achieved the following: First, it has rendered unusable the world’s most expensive military facilities (bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia). The construction of these bases took decades and cost trillions of dollars. Today, these bases are being looted, burned, and abandoned. This is not just a material loss but also a psychological defeat.

    Second, Iran has changed the meaning of time. In conventional wars, four days is considered just the beginning of an operation. However, in these four days, Iran has so expanded its area of military superiority in the region that it seems impossible for the US to compensate for this loss. Third, Iran is aware that it has inflicted one of the biggest destructions in US history. Pearl Harbor was an attack and happened in a single day. But this operation is a systematic, planned, and comprehensive process of annihilation. With this process, Iran is having new chapters written in military history books, such as the “Four-Day War” or the “Collapse of the Bases.”

    Fourth and most importantly, Iran has shown that winning a war is not just about launching missiles but also about breaking the enemy’s will. Look at the ideas put forward by the Trump administration today: The proposal for military escort to tankers in the Persian Gulf is, in fact, an admission of desperation. No one wants to enter the range of thousands of Iranian missiles. The idea of invading Iran with Kurdish militias is nothing but a desperate fantasy devoid of geographical knowledge. As Iran hears such proposals, it understands even better that it is writing history. Because history is the story not only of the victors but also of those who have been rendered desperate.

    The End of the American-Israeli Era

    In the process extending from the end of the Cold War to September 11, 2001, and from there to 2023, the world experienced a period called the American century. In this period, the US, as the sole superpower, set the global rules; Israel, as the most loyal and powerful ally of this order in the Middle East, consolidated its regional superiority. Together, they built a hegemony that could be called the American-Israeli era. The main characteristics of this era were: freedom of military intervention, perception control through media, indirect dominance over oil resources, and strangling opposing regimes with embargoes.

    Iran has ended this era. How? First, Iran has proven militarily that the US cannot hold on in the region. A US that cannot establish air superiority by the fourth day, whose bases are destroyed, whose soldiers cannot set foot on Iranian soil, is no longer “invincible.” This situation sends the message to US allies in other regions that it has lost its deterrent power. Second, Iran has eliminated Israel’s deep deterrence capability. For years, Israel acted on the doctrine of inflicting “unacceptable damage” on its enemy when attacked. But now, there is a picture of Israel that cannot reach Iran’s underground military infrastructure and cannot retaliate.

    Third, Iran has also become the winner of the economic war. Decades-long sanctions have not broken Iran; on the contrary, they have pushed Iran towards domestic production, missile technology, and asymmetric warfare. If no one can pass through the Strait of Hormuz today, it shows that Iran has been preparing for this day for years. Proposals to escort oil tankers actually show that the US is forced to accept this reality.

    The American-Israeli era is over. Because an era ends only when the fear that sustains it disappears. Iran has destroyed that fear. Today, no people, no militia force, no state in the Middle East believes in the unlimited power of the US or Israel. Iran has razed this belief to the ground. The new era that has begun is the era of resistance, multipolarity, and independent states.

    Conclusion: The US Will Never Return to West Asia

    When all these operations and strategic ruptures are over, this reality will remain: The United States will never return to West Asia (the Middle East) again. This will not only be a military defeat but also a historical farewell. Decades of occupations, trillions of dollars in expenditures, thousands of casualties – all in vain. Iran has given birth to the sun of a new morning in this geography. The name of this morning is independence and resistance. And this morning is the first page of the history that Iran is writing.

    References

    1. Abrahamian, E. (2018). A History of Modern Iran. Cambridge University Press.
    2. Cordesman, A. H. (2019). The Gulf Military Balance: The Conventional and Asymmetric Dimensions. Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
    3. Khalaji, M. (2021). The Axis of Resistance: Iran’s Network in the Middle East. Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
    4. International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). (2023). The Military Balance 2023. Routledge.
    5. Said, E. W. (1997). Covering Islam: How the Media and the Experts Determine How We See the Rest of the World. Vintage Books.
    6. U.S. Department of Defense. (2022). Annual Report on Military Power of Iran. Office of the Secretary of Defense.
    7. Fathi, N. (2020, January). Iran’s Military Doctrine: Offensive Defense. The Atlantic.
    8. Bacevich, A. J. (2016). America’s War for the Greater Middle East. Random House.
    9. Parsi, T. (2017). Losing an Enemy: Obama, Iran, and the Triumph of Diplomacy. Yale University Press.
    10. Mamdani, M. (2004). Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: America, the Cold War, and the Roots of Terror. Pantheon Books.

    Sefa Yürükel

    Danish ethnographer and social anthropologist (MA)
    Aarhus University, 1997
    Independent Researcher
    Fields of Research: International Politics, Public International Law, Geopolitics, Sociology, Psychology, Cultural Studies, Systems and Structures

  • Iran’s Comprehensive Operation Against U.S. Bases and Regional Repercussions

    Iran’s Comprehensive Operation Against U.S. Bases and Regional Repercussions

    The military developments of recent days are of a nature that will fundamentally shake the balance of power in the Middle East. In a manner surprising to observers, Iran has launched a comprehensive, large-scale, and determined operation against U.S. bases. The scale of these operations reveals a military reality for which the world was unprepared.

    Scope of the Operation and Strategic Impacts

    In just four days, Iran has succeeded in significantly expanding its area of military superiority in the region. As a result of the operations, some of the world’s most valuable and expensive military bases, assets, and equipment have been destroyed. U.S. bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia rank among the largest military facilities globally. The construction of these facilities took decades and cost trillions of dollars. Thus, we are faced with a picture where a large portion of military expenditures made over thirty years has been rendered futile.

    The dimensions of the observed destruction are quite striking. Radar systems worth hundreds of millions of dollars have been instantly destroyed. A large part of the military bases has been abandoned, burned, looted, and rendered unusable. At this point, an important historical comparison must be made: As far as is known, the United States has not experienced destruction on this scale in its history, except for the attack on Pearl Harbor. However, even the attack of that era cannot be compared to the scope and intensity of the operations Iran is carrying out today. No enemy in a conventional war has inflicted destruction on U.S. military forces on the scale that Iran is currently applying.

    Information Flow and Censorship

    The severity of the military situation is so advanced that censorship mechanisms are preventing almost all new information about this war from reaching the public. What should be noted is that the amount of information obtained about the conflict is decreasing day by day. Yet, thirty-five years ago, during the First Gulf War, we watched countless images and video streams from Iraq. Back then, even when smart bombs and camera technologies were still new, new footage could be broadcast every night. Now, almost no video recordings are accessible.

    One of the most important indicators of this information restriction is the uncertainty regarding air superiority. There is no indication that the USA, considered the world’s largest military power and the country with the largest air force, has established air superiority over Iran even by the fourth day of the war. No images have emerged of American planes flying over Tehran or any part of Iran. Moreover, American soldiers setting foot on Iranian soil is unimaginable under current conditions.

    Desperate Proposals of the Trump Administration

    To understand how desperate this war has become, it is enough to look at the proposals coming from the Trump administration as early as the fourth day. Unbelievable ideas are being put forward, such as providing military escort to oil tankers leaving the Persian Gulf. The meaning of this proposal is quite clear: It seeks to send American ships into a region directly within the range of thousands of Iranian missiles. Yet, currently, no ships can transit through the Strait of Hormuz. The Iranians have been preparing for decades to close this strategic waterway.

    Another proposal is the idea of arming Kurdish militias to invade Iran. When evaluating this proposal, one must consider Iran’s size and geographical realities. Looking at the map of Iran, it is clearly visible how vast an area the country covers. Thinking that a militia force of ten thousand people could invade Iran is unrealistic even for a force of fifty thousand or even a hundred thousand people. Iran’s geographical depth and population size render such an invasion attempt impossible from the start. Iran has the capacity to strategically neutralize even a force of this size.

    Course of the War and Final Outcome

    It is now possible to say that the US and Israel have already lost this war. Of course, both countries possess powerful bombs and the capacity to destroy buildings. It is theoretically possible to kill millions of civilians in their homes. However, this does not mean winning the war. Military victory is not only about destructive capacity but also about the ability to achieve strategic objectives and break the enemy’s resistance.

    Iran’s military infrastructure and weapons are deployed all across the country and deep underground. Due to the nature of this configuration, neither the Americans nor especially the Israelis have any chance of reaching these targets. This situation puts the US and its allies in an extremely difficult position. There is almost no possibility for them to end the military operation they have started.

    Long-Term Regional Effects

    Once all these developments are over, it is predicted that the United States will never return to West Asia again. The American presence in the Middle East will permanently end. This situation will bring about a radical change in regional power balances and signal the beginning of a new geopolitical era.

    References

    1. Cordesman, A. H. (2019). The Gulf Military Balance: The Conventional and Asymmetric Dimensions. Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
    2. International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). (2023). The Military Balance 2023. Routledge.
    3. Pollack, K. M. (2004). The Persian Puzzle: The Conflict Between Iran and America. Random House.
    4. U.S. Department of Defense. (2022). Annual Report on Military Power of Iran. Office of the Secretary of Defense.
    5. RAND Corporation. (2020). The Future of U.S. Bases in the Middle East. RAND Research Report.
    6. Fathi, N. (2020, January). Iran’s Military Doctrine: Offensive Defense. The Atlantic.
    7. Byman, D. (2021). Iran’s Security Policy in the Post-Revolutionary Era. Brookings Institution Press.

    Sefa Yürükel

    Danish ethnographer and social anthropologist (MA)
    Aarhus University, 1997
    Independent Researcher
    Fields of Research: International Politics, Public International Law, Geopolitics, Sociology, Psychology, Cultural Studies, Systems and Structures

  • The Geopolitical Importance of Dams, Hydroelectric Power Plants, and Transboundary Waters on a Global Scale

    The Geopolitical Importance of Dams, Hydroelectric Power Plants, and Transboundary Waters on a Global Scale

    Water resources have become one of the fundamental determinants of energy production, food security, industrial development, and regional stability in the 21st century. Large-scale dams and hydroelectric power plants (HEPPs), in particular, are not merely technical infrastructure projects but also strategic instruments that reinforce the sovereign rights, economic independence, and military deterrence of states. These structures, built in transboundary river basins, provide the upstream country with hydrological superiority while creating a perception of existential threat for downstream countries.

    Freshwater Strategy and the Dynamics of the New Century

    Only 2.5 percent of global freshwater resources are usable, and a large portion of these reserves are concentrated in river basins that cross the borders of more than one country. Nearly half of the world’s population is directly dependent on these waterways shared by two or more states. Efforts to transition from fossil fuel-based energy systems inherited from the Industrial Revolution to renewable energy have placed regions with high hydroelectric potential at the center of international capital and geopolitical competition. Particularly the high-altitude glacial regions of Asia, Africa’s Great Rift Valley, and South America’s Amazon Basin, with their immense hydraulic potential, are integral to the energy security calculations of states. However, the control of this potential through dams leads to decreased agricultural productivity in downstream countries, the destruction of river ecosystems, and unpredictable water flow regimes. This paradoxical situation transforms dams from mere concrete structures into instruments of sovereignty floating in the gray areas of international law.

    Irregular precipitation patterns and prolonged droughts triggered by climate change have made the water storage and flood control functions of dams even more critical. The asymmetric relationship between upstream countries, which want to release water through turbines to meet energy needs, and downstream countries, which depend on the river’s natural flow for agricultural irrigation and drinking water, is deepening. This asymmetry reveals a new definition of power that manifests as the “capacity to regulate water flow,” beyond classical military force. A state’s ability to determine the volume and timing of water leaving its border serves as a tangible tool of pressure in diplomatic negotiations with its neighbor. Therefore, large dam projects are among the top priorities not only of economic development plans but also of national security strategies.

    From a historical perspective, the control of water has been directly linked to the rise and fall of civilizations since Mesopotamia and Ancient Egypt. Today, this relationship is embodied in massive concrete arches and kilometers-long tunnels. Projects ranging from China’s Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze, Turkey’s Southeastern Anatolia Project, Africa’s Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), to Tajikistan’s Rogun Dam are reshaping not only their immediate geographies but also global trade and security balances. The involvement of global actors such as the China Eximbank, the World Bank, or the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development in the financing of these projects makes water geopolitics a multi-layered field of competition. In this context, the body of each dam should be read as a front line where the interests of different states clash.

    Although the international legal system has adopted the principles of “equitable and reasonable utilization” and the “obligation not to cause significant harm” regarding the use of transboundary waters, the absence of a binding global treaty creates a serious governance gap. The Convention on the Law of the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses, adopted under the auspices of the United Nations, has not found an effective area of application because it has not been signed by many key countries. This legal uncertainty particularly pits the absolute sovereignty claims of upstream riparian states against the acquired rights of downstream riparian states. In the world’s most critical basins such as the Nile, Tigris-Euphrates, Mekong, and Indus, actual hydraulic control capacity stands out as the real currency, rather than legal texts. Therefore, every cubic meter of water flowing into the riverbed is also a drop of power poured onto the fluid ground of international politics.

    Consequently, when drawing the geopolitical map of the 21st century, riverbeds and dam reservoirs appear as decisive elements just as much as mountain ranges and straits. The following sections of this study analyze this silent power struggle undertaken by states caught between energy needs and water security through concrete projects specific to different continents and regions. Each basin to be examined is the embodiment of the tension between the boundless nature of water and the rigid sovereignty concepts of states. As waters rise or fall, the tension between countries shows a similar oscillation, a situation that permanently establishes the concept of dam diplomacy in the international relations literature.

    The Hydropolitical Axes of the Asian Continent

    The Asian continent is referred to as the “World’s Water Tower” because it hosts the highest mountain ranges in the world, the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau. This geographical feature elevates China to a unique position in Asia’s hydropolitical hierarchy by making it the upstream controller of more than ten major rivers. China’s massive dam investments, particularly on the Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra), Mekong (Lancang), and Yellow Rivers, create chronic water security concerns for downstream countries such as India, Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Bangladesh. The hydroelectric cascades planned and under construction on the Brahmaputra River directly threaten agricultural production in India’s northeastern states and its water needs, especially during dry periods. Similarly, the Jinghong, Nuozhadu, and Xiaowan dams on the Mekong River disrupt the river’s natural flood cycle, severely impacting the fishing economy of Cambodia’s Tonle Sap Lake and the agricultural productivity of Vietnam’s Mekong Delta. This situation fuels debates on the weaponization of water in Asia and complicates diplomatic cohesion within ASEAN.

    India, on the one hand, strengthens its own water infrastructure against China’s upstream control, while on the other hand, it utilizes a similar upstream advantage against Bangladesh and Pakistan. The Farakka Barrage on the Ganges River has been a source of tension in bilateral relations for decades, acting as a factor deepening Bangladesh’s water crisis during the dry season. Furthermore, while the Indus Waters Treaty between India and Pakistan is shown as one of the world’s most successful transboundary water-sharing mechanisms, the Kishanganga and Ratle hydroelectric projects built by India under the treaty’s provisions raise serious security concerns in Pakistan. Pakistan argues that these dams could cause strategic harm by altering the timing of water storage and has taken the matter to the World Bank for arbitration. This delicate balance in South Asia has become even more fragile with the increased melting rate of Himalayan glaciers due to climate change. Glacial lake outburst floods and subsequent water scarcity will further highlight the security and strategic role of dams in the region.

    In the geography of Central Asia and the Turkic Republics, water sharing is one of the most complex problems inherited by the region from the Soviet Union. The Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers form a chronic line of tension between upstream Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan and downstream Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan. The Toktogul Dam in Kyrgyzstan and the massive Rogun Dam project in Tajikistan mean energy production during the winter months for these countries, while for Uzbekistan, they carry the risk of withholding irrigation water vital for its cotton agriculture during the summer months. Especially if Tajikistan completes the Rogun Dam, the absolute hydraulic control it would establish over the Vakhsh River would have the capacity to paralyze Uzbekistan’s agricultural economy. This situation has led to diplomatic crises that have at times brought the two countries to the brink of war. In contrast, the Karakum Canal, which gives life to Turkmenistan’s Karakum Desert, and the Kok-Aral Dam, built by Kazakhstan to stabilize the Syr Darya’s flow, demonstrate how sensitive and fragile the ground on which regional countries operate in water management is.

    The Russian Federation, with its vast network of rivers and enormous hydroelectric capacity, is a central actor in the energy and water geopolitics of Eurasia. The chain of dams established on the Volga, Yenisei, Lena, and Angara rivers forms the backbone of Russia’s domestic energy supply security. The cascade system on the Angara River (Irkutsk, Bratsk, Ust-Ilimsk, and Boguchany Dams) constitutes one of the world’s largest hydroelectric production centers, providing cheap and uninterrupted energy to heavy industrial facilities in Siberia. Russia’s most critical project in the context of transboundary waters is the hydroelectric power plants planned on the Selenga River and its tributaries near the Mongolian border. Since the Selenga River is the main artery feeding Lake Baikal, these projects pose irreversible threats to the Baikal ecosystem, which is on the UNESCO World Heritage List. At the same time, the pollution and water level issues of the Ural (Zhayyq) River, shared by Russia and Kazakhstan, continue to remain high on the diplomatic agenda between the two countries.

    In Southeast Asia, besides the Mekong River, the Myitsone Dam project in Myanmar is another significant case where China’s regional water hegemony is debated. This giant dam, planned to be built on the Irrawaddy River by Chinese companies, faced major opposition in Myanmar’s domestic politics and was suspended due to national security and environmental concerns. This is a striking example of how infrastructure projects financed by China under the “Belt and Road” initiative can encounter social and geopolitical resistance in host countries. On the other hand, dams like Xayaburi and Don Sahong, rapidly built by Laos on Mekong tributaries in line with its goal of becoming the “Battery of Asia,” while not altering the river’s main flow, cause cumulative environmental destruction on a basin scale by blocking fish migration routes and preventing sediment flow. These examples clearly reveal the multidimensional and multi-actor nature of hydropolitical competition in Asia.

    Africa’s Rising Water Strategies and the Nile Basin Crisis

    The African continent is the landmass with the highest hydroelectric potential but the lowest rate of utilizing this potential. This situation turns the continent into a hydropolitical battleground for international investors and regional powers. The most symbolic and tense line of this struggle is undoubtedly the Nile River Basin. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), built by Ethiopia on the Blue Nile, is Africa’s largest hydroelectric power plant and is perceived as an existential threat by Egypt. As a country that meets almost all of its water needs from the Nile, Egypt is in a deep diplomatic and military impasse with Ethiopia regarding the dam’s filling process and operational regime. Egyptian officials frequently emphasize that if GERD reduces water flow, agricultural lands will become barren and the food security of millions will be jeopardized. While the Cairo administration attempts to create international pressure by keeping the issue constantly on the agenda at the Arab League and the African Union, Ethiopia defends the dam within the framework of national sovereignty and the right to development.

    Sudan, another critical actor in the Nile Basin, initially opposed GERD alongside Egypt but later changed its position with the expectation that the dam would reduce flood risks north of Khartoum and provide cheap electricity. However, Sudan’s own Roseires and Sennar dams on the Blue Nile and the Merowe Dam on the main Nile stem are cornerstones of the country’s energy and irrigation infrastructure. GERD’s full operation will directly affect the operational regime of these dams. Moving south on the continent, the Kariba Dam on the Zambezi River stands out as a massive structure shared between Zambia and Zimbabwe, while the Cahora Bassa Dam on the same river near the Mozambican border is also critical for regional energy supply. Notably, the dramatic drop in water levels at the Kariba Dam due to climate change emerges as a factor deepening Southern Africa’s energy crisis.

    In West Africa, the Akosombo Dam on the Volta River, besides being a symbol of Ghana’s energy independence, has reshaped the region’s microclimate and fishing economy by creating Lake Volta, one of the world’s largest artificial lakes. The Manantali Dam on the Senegal River, jointly operated by Mali, Mauritania, and Senegal, is considered a relatively successful model of cooperation in transboundary water management. In contrast, the Kainji and Jebba dams built by Nigeria in the Niger River Basin compete with the irrigation projects of upstream Mali and Niger. Nigeria’s rapidly increasing energy demand, as Africa’s most populous country, is pushing it towards massive new hydroelectric projects like Mambilla, creating new areas of tension with neighboring Cameroon over the water resources feeding Lake Chad.

    The Congo River Basin, despite being Africa’s largest hydrological reservoir, is utilized far below its potential due to political instability and lack of infrastructure. The Inga Dams in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, especially the planned Grand Inga Project, theoretically have the capacity to meet the electricity needs of the entire African continent. However, realizing this colossal project requires tens of billions of dollars in financing and a continent-wide interconnected electricity grid. South Africa’s intense interest in this project reflects its desire to establish regional energy hegemony, while the project’s struggles with corruption and governance issues show that the biggest obstacle to hydropolitical visions in Africa is political. Lastly, the Gilgel Gibe III Dam on the Omo River, which feeds Lake Turkana in East Africa, offers a dramatic example of how Ethiopia’s internal development drive transforms ecosystems and the habitats of indigenous tribes on the Kenyan border.

    Since water structures in Africa often affect ethnic and tribal habitats that do not align with colonial-era borders, the issue is not only a matter of interstate competition but also a phenomenon that triggers internal conflict dynamics. The drought created by climate change in the Sahel belt turns the struggle for access to water points into a bloody competition between pastoralist communities and settled farmers. In this context, every new dam project in Africa must be evaluated not just as technical progress but as a political choice that widens the gap between those with access to water and those without. The lack of a binding agreement on the sharing of Nile waters has the potential to ignite one of the biggest security crises that could occur in the Horn of Africa in the future.

    Water Management and Continental Competition in the Americas

    The American continent, in addition to being one of the world leaders in hydroelectric energy production, hosts both successful examples of cooperation and serious conflict potentials in transboundary water management. In North America, the Colorado and Rio Grande (Rio Bravo) rivers, shared between the US and Mexico, constitute one of the most complex diplomatic issues between the two countries. The Hoover Dam and Glen Canyon Dam built on the Colorado River meet the water and energy needs of giant metropolises in the US Southwest, such as Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Phoenix, and San Diego. However, the intensive use of the river’s water within US territory and evaporation losses cause the river to be reduced to almost a trickle when it reaches Mexico. This situation leads to the desertification of agricultural lands in northern Mexico, while the implementation of the 1944 Water Treaty signed between the two countries remains a constant source of tension. Particularly, mega-droughts linked to climate change have chronicled the water crisis in the basin by reducing the Colorado River’s flow to record low levels.

    In South America, the Itaipu Dam, established on the Paraná River between Brazil and Paraguay, is recognized as one of the world’s most successful transboundary hydroelectric projects, with its joint management model. With the enormous amount of energy it produces, Itaipu meets almost all of Paraguay’s electricity needs and a significant portion of Brazil’s. However, this cooperation model occasionally witnesses diplomatic friction regarding the pricing of the energy produced and Paraguay’s right to sell its excess energy to third countries. Further down the same river line, the Yacyretá Dam on the border between Argentina and Paraguay is operated under a similar partnership. Brazil’s hydroelectric push in the Amazon Basin proceeds on much more controversial ground. The Belo Monte Dam on the Xingu River and the Santo Antônio and Jirau dams on the Madeira River, built in the heart of the Amazon rainforest, are the focus of criticism regarding environmental destruction and the forced displacement of indigenous peoples. These projects are caught between Brazil’s desire to secure its energy supply as a regional superpower and pressure from the global environmental movement.

    Canada, with its rich freshwater reserves and massive hydroelectric capacity, is the silent hydropolitical giant of North America. The James Bay Project (La Grande Complex) in Québec and the Churchill Falls Dam in Labrador form the backbone of Canada’s clean energy exports. Particularly, the sale of energy produced by the Churchill Falls Dam to the New England states of the US via Québec has been the subject of a decades-long legal and political struggle between the two provinces. Newfoundland and Labrador are forced to sell energy to Québec at a very low price according to the 1969 contract, while Québec markets this energy to the US at a high profit. This is a striking lesson showing that control over the electricity generated by a dam does not always equate to economic prosperity for the party that built it. Canada also pursues a strict protectionist policy regarding the commercial bottling and transfer of water to arid regions in the Great Lakes basin shared with the US, treating water as a national security issue.

    In Central America and the Caribbean, the operation of the Panama Canal is the most concrete example of how global trade is intertwined with hydropolitics. Millions of liters of freshwater are lost to the ocean with each ship transit, and this water is provided by the artificial Gatún Lake and Alajuela Dam. Droughts in Panama directly limit the number and tonnage of ships that can transit the canal, creating shockwaves in global supply chains. In the same region, underlying the border dispute between Guatemala and Belize are the water rights of the Belize River and Sarstoon River. In the Andean region of South America, water resources and glaciers shared between Chile and Argentina, vital especially for copper mining, constitute the hydrological dimension of border disputes between the two countries. While dams in the Americas rank at the top globally in terms of size and energy produced, the social inequalities and ecosystem destruction caused by these structures make them the hottest arenas for the global debate on equitable water management.

    Integrated Water Management and Competitive Dynamics in Europe and Australia

    The European continent stands out as the world’s most institutionalized region with the strongest legal framework regarding transboundary water management. The European Union’s Water Framework Directive mandates an integrated approach to the management of rivers among member states and adopts the principle of managing river basins according to natural water catchments rather than administrative boundaries. The Danube River, flowing through more than ten countries before emptying into the Black Sea, serves as Europe’s hydropolitical laboratory. The Iron Gate (Đerdap) Dam, the most important hydro-technical structure on the Danube, is jointly operated by Serbia and Romania and makes a significant contribution to the energy systems of both countries. However, it is possible to encounter situations even in Europe where water is used as a strategic tool. Hungary’s decades-long legal battle with Slovakia over the Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros Dam System has shown how water can lead to a sovereignty conflict even between two NATO and EU member states. This case, brought before the International Court of Justice in The Hague, is considered a turning point in the development of international water law.

    While the Rhine and Rhône rivers, originating in the Alps, form an intensive industrial and logistical waterway network between Switzerland, France, Germany, and the Netherlands, the dams on these rivers serve more for flow regulation and flood control than energy production. Switzerland’s high-altitude pumped-storage HEPPs in the Alps (such as Linth-Limmern, Nant de Drance) act as giant batteries for the stability of the European interconnected grid. In Scandinavia, Norway and Sweden stand out with their hydropower-based energy systems, while the joint dam operation on the Pasvik River, forming the border between Russia and Norway, is one of the rare functioning cooperation mechanisms between two different political blocs. On the Iberian Peninsula, dams on the Douro, Tagus (Tajo), and Guadiana rivers connecting Spain and Portugal are regulated by the 1998 Albufeira Convention. The severe drought in Spain caused by climate change exerts significant political pressure on the Madrid government regarding the amount of water required to be released to Portugal, showing that water nationalism can rise even within the EU.

    The Australian continent, being the driest inhabited continent on Earth, has unique experience in water management. The Murray-Darling Basin in the continent’s southeast hosts 40 percent of the country’s agricultural production, and the management of the basin is a constant political struggle between the federal government and the states. The most important structures on the basin, the Hume Dam and Dartmouth Dam, are critically important for ensuring the equitable distribution of water among the states. Australia’s most ambitious project in hydroelectricity is the Snowy Mountains Scheme. This colossal engineering marvel diverts meltwater from the snowy mountains through tunnels and dams to inland agricultural areas, while also generating significant amounts of energy. The second phase of the project, Snowy 2.0, involves the construction of a giant pumped-storage HEPP to facilitate the integration of renewable energy sources into the grid.

    Turkey, due to its geographical location, holds upstream control of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, the most critical water basins in the Middle East. Giant dams such as Atatürk, Keban, Karakaya, Ilısu, and Birecik, built under the Southeastern Anatolia Project (GAP), are vital for Turkey’s energy supply security and regional development goals. However, these projects are constantly criticized by downstream Syria and Iraq on the grounds that they reduce water flow and degrade water quality. Particularly with the completion of the Ilısu Dam, Turkish control over the Tigris River has been consolidated, increasing Iraq’s concerns about the drying up of the Mesopotamian marshes and the reduction in the amount of freshwater reaching the Persian Gulf. Turkey defines the Euphrates waters as “transboundary water” rather than “boundary-forming water” and emphasizes its absolute sovereign right. In contrast, the Deriner, Borçka, and Muratlı dams built on the Çoruh River, shared with Georgia at Turkey’s northeastern border, have not faced any serious objection from downstream Georgia and have even been welcomed for providing flood control. This shows that different dynamics are at play in Turkey’s water diplomacy depending on the identity of the neighbor and the level of interdependence.

    On the eastern periphery of Europe and in the Caucasus, water resources are intertwined with frozen conflicts and ethnic tensions. The Kura and Aras rivers harbor a complex water-sharing problem among Turkey, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Iran. While the Mingachevir Dam, Azerbaijan’s largest water reservoir, is critical for the country’s energy and irrigation system, joint Iran-Azerbaijan dams on the Aras River stand out as examples of cooperation. In contrast, Armenia’s efforts to maintain the water level of Lake Sevan and its plans on tributaries feeding the Aras River are evaluated in the context of its geopolitical rivalry with Azerbaijan. All these examples demonstrate that the relatively stable cooperation model on the European continent gives way to classic power politics at the other end of the continent. In the case of Australia, the commodification of water and the transformation of water rights into a tradable commodity present an interesting case study of a capitalist approach to the global water crisis.

    The Intersection of Economic, Military, Political, and Legal Dimensions

    The economic dimension of dams and hydroelectric power plants is not limited to construction costs and energy generation revenues; these structures have multiplier effects impacting all sectors of the national economy. On one hand, particularly for developing countries, they contribute to closing the current account deficit by reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels and provide cheap energy input for domestic industry. For example, for a country like Tajikistan, the completion of the Rogun Dam not only promises to end power outages but also a strategic economic transformation by enabling energy exports to Afghanistan and Pakistan, generating foreign currency revenue. On the other hand, large dam projects often require heavy external borrowing, making the host country vulnerable to the economic influence of the financing country or institution. The “debt trap diplomacy” debates frequently raised in connection with hydroelectric projects financed under China’s “Belt and Road” initiative reveal how dams are intertwined with macroeconomic sovereignty. Moreover, agricultural lands and settlements submerged under reservoir areas, resettlement costs, and the economic value of lost biodiversity are hidden costs that are not always accurately calculated in project feasibility studies.

    On the political level, transboundary waters have gone beyond being a “soft power” instrument for states and have become a symbol of national sovereignty itself. The authority of an upstream country to open and close dam gates functions as a lever that can influence the domestic politics of a downstream country. The role water played in Turkey-Syria relations before the Syrian civil war, or the floods caused in Uzbekistan by Kyrgyzstan’s release of water from the Toktogul Dam for winter energy production, are concrete reflections of this asymmetric relationship. This situation pushes downstream countries to form diplomatic coalitions against upstream countries or to mobilize international public opinion. Egypt’s intense diplomacy against the GERD in Ethiopia ranges from the Arab League to the African Union, even extending at times to the discussion of military options. On the other hand, water crises sometimes necessitate cooperation. The Indus Waters Treaty is one of the rare legal texts that has managed to keep two hostile countries, India and Pakistan, at the negotiating table over water sharing, even during times of war.

    The military and security dimension places dams at the center of conventional and hybrid warfare doctrines. Targeting a large dam during wartime can lead to a humanitarian catastrophe and infrastructure destruction on a scale similar to that of a nuclear weapon downstream. Therefore, large dams are considered “critical infrastructure” in national security strategies and are protected by air defense systems. The destruction of the Kakhovka Dam on the Dnieper River during the war in Ukraine tragically demonstrated to the world how such structures can be used as weapons. The blowing up of the dam flooded a vast area, complicating military operations, rendering agricultural lands unusable, and jeopardizing the cooling water security of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. This event proved that dams are no longer just energy production facilities but also multi-layered strategic nodes directly affecting environmental and nuclear security. Additionally, control over water resources can become a show of force and a means of financing for terrorist organizations and non-state actors.

    The legal dimension, in the absence of a global authority, is largely shaped within the limited framework of bilateral or multilateral treaties. While the International Court of Justice’s decision on the Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros Project or the Permanent Court of Arbitration’s rulings on the Indus Waters contribute to the jurisprudence of water law, the implementation of these decisions remains entirely dependent on the good will of states. The UN Watercourses Convention took nearly twenty years to enter into force, and key upstream countries like China and Turkey are not parties to it. This legal vacuum strengthens the concept of “hydrological hegemony,” allowing upstream riparian states to create faits accomplis and increase their bargaining power. Particularly, the obligation of prior notification and the principle of not causing harm remain on paper in the absence of political will. Therefore, to prevent future water wars, there is a need for a new generation of “smart agreements” that include not only water sharing but also dam operational regimes, data sharing, and joint monitoring mechanisms.

    Consequently, the desire for economic development, the passion for political sovereignty, military security concerns, and legal gaps create a force field that clashes in river basins around the world. Managing this field requires the simultaneous efforts not only of water engineers or diplomats but also of economists, security experts, and legal scholars. Building a dam may mean energy independence for one nation, while it can be coded as an existential threat for its neighbor. Overcoming this paradox depends on the existence of political will to move water away from a zero-sum competitive arena to a platform of cooperation based on mutual benefit. Otherwise, as global climate change further destabilizes the water cycle, riverbanks are destined to become the world’s hottest geopolitical fault lines.

    Conclusion: The Future of Hydropolitical Competition in the 21st Century

    Dams and transboundary rivers have ceased to be pawns on the geopolitical chessboard of the 21st century and have risen to the position of queens directly threatening the king’s safety. The silent struggle for control of water, spanning a vast geography from China’s Tibetan Plateau to Africa’s Great Rift Valley, from the Central Asian steppes to South America’s tropical forests, will be one of the main elements shaping the international agenda in the coming decades. All the cases examined demonstrate how the desire to control water, despite its fluid nature, hardens states’ rigid definitions of national interest. On one hand, the demand for water is exponentially increasing under the pressure of population growth and urbanization, while on the other hand, climate change makes the amount and timing of supply unpredictable. This equation turns water not only into a development tool but also into the most fundamental matter of survival.

    In this framework, it is a serious question whether the “hydrological nationalism” policies pursued by states are sustainable. An approach of absolute sovereignty prioritizing national interest under all circumstances may yield short-term gains but harbors risks of irreversible environmental destruction and political instability for all basin countries in the long run. The desiccation of the Aral Sea, the disappearance of the Mesopotamian marshes, or the salinization of the Mekong Delta demonstrate the heavy ecological and human cost of water management not based on cooperation. In the world of the future, a country’s strength will be measured not only by the number of dams it possesses but also by the quality of the fair and transparent data-sharing mechanisms it can establish with its neighbors while operating these dams.

    The critical role played by hydroelectric power plants in the energy transition places these structures at the center of the ideological conflict between environmental movements and pro-development governments. On one side, HEPPs are praised as a clean energy source compared to fossil fuels; on the other, they are criticized as projects that fragment river ecosystems and displace millions of people. This dilemma directly affects the investment decisions of international financial institutions and the energy import preferences of consumer countries, especially in ecologically sensitive regions like the Amazon Basin and the Himalayas. Therefore, dam diplomacy is conducted not only between riparian countries but also within a multidimensional network of interaction among global financial centers, non-governmental organizations, and multinational construction companies.

    Strengthening the legal and institutional infrastructure stands out as the most effective method for preventing potential water conflicts. Regional organizations like the African Union’s Nile Basin Initiative or the Mekong River Commission in Asia, though flawed, provide a minimal ground for dialogue. However, the success of these platforms depends on the willingness of the most powerful upstream countries in the basin (such as China, Turkey, India) to engage with these mechanisms. In the future, it is also foreseen that water management will become intertwined with cybersecurity. A cyberattack on the digital control systems of dam gates and water distribution networks could have consequences no less devastating than a classical military offensive. This situation makes hydropolitical security an integral part of national cybersecurity strategies.

    In the context of the global power struggle, water resources may act as a magnet reshaping alliance systems in the coming period. Water-scarce countries may seek strategic partnerships with water-rich countries; this could bring “water import” agreements and even intercontinental water transfer projects onto the agenda. Ultimately, in the shadow of the world’s largest dams, the fate of nations will be determined by the flexibility of diplomacy and the depth of foresight, rather than the durability of concrete. It should not be forgotten that the greatest dam humanity can build against the destructive power of water is a wall of trust rising on the foundation of mutual understanding and equitable sharing. Otherwise, history will once again witness rivers that unite riparian peoples transform into chasms that divide states.

    Bibliography

    · UN Water. (Various Years). The United Nations World Water Development Report. UNESCO, Paris.
    · World Bank Group. Water Resources Management Sector Reports. Washington, D.C.
    · International Hydropower Association (IHA). Hydropower Status Report. London.
    · UNESCO International Hydrological Programme (IHP). Transboundary Waters: Sharing Benefits, Sharing Responsibilities. Paris.
    · Wolf, A. T., Yoffe, S. B., & Giordano, M. International Waters: Identifying Basins at Risk. Water Policy.
    · Gleick, P. H. The World’s Water Volume 9: The Biennial Report on Freshwater Resources. Island Press.
    · Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). AQUASTAT Main Database.
    · Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). Environment of Peace: Security in a New Era of Risk.
    · Asian Development Bank (ADB). Asian Water Development Outlook.
    · Zeitoun, M. & Warner, J. Hydro-Hegemony: A Framework for Analysis of Transboundary Water Conflicts. Water Policy.
    · Turkish State Hydraulic Works (DSİ). GAP Action Plan and Annual Activity Reports.
    · Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The World Factbook – Freshwater Withdrawal.
    · European Union Commission. Water Framework Directive (2000/60/EC) Implementation Reports.
    · Nile Basin Initiative (NBI). State of the River Nile Basin Report.
    · McCully, P. Silenced Rivers: The Ecology and Politics of Large Dams. Zed Books.

    Sefa Yürükel

    Danish ethnographer and social anthropologist (MA)
    Aarhus University, 1997
    Independent Researcher
    Fields of Research: International Politics, Public International Law, Geopolitics, Sociology, Psychology, Cultural Studies, Systems and Structures

  • On the Brink of Global Chaos: New Alliances, Military Transformation, and the Normalization of War

    On the Brink of Global Chaos: New Alliances, Military Transformation, and the Normalization of War

    The third decade of the 21st century is witnessing the most complex security dilemma of the post-Cold War era in international relations. The only remnants of the optimistic “end of history” discourses of the 1990s are the resurgence of great power competition, the spread of regional wars, and the normalization of war as an instrument of foreign policy. While armament expenditures are reaching record levels all over the world, especially in developed and developing countries, militarist discourses are not limited to authoritarian regimes but are also gaining legitimacy in established democracies. This situation not only transforms military balances but also the collective memory of societies regarding peace.

    However, the current picture indicates a situation far more complex than the mere resurgence of traditional power blocs. Unlike the rigid polarization of the Cold War, today’s actors are both intertwining and breaking apart just as rapidly. While NATO members’ strategies diverge on internal disagreements, there is a deep rift between the US and Europe in terms of strategic depth; Iran is transforming its military deterrence into a diplomatic victory, while Gulf states are experiencing the bewilderment of being unable to form a united front. This article will analyze this state of “liquid chaos” in the global security architecture through six fundamental dimensions.

    1. New Dynamics of the Global Arms Race

    1.1. Record Increases in Defense Budgets of Developed Countries

    1.1.1. The US defense budget, set at $886 billion for fiscal year 2024, has surpassed even the peak periods of the Cold War. A significant portion of this budget is allocated to strategic priorities such as the development of hypersonic missiles, the expansion of space forces, and the modernization of the nuclear triad. However, the size of this budget reflects not so much the actual military power of the US, but rather the extent of its current engagements and logistical fatigue. The Pentagon is trying to maintain deterrence simultaneously in Europe, the Middle East, and the Asia-Pacific, which brings with it the risk of strategic overstretch.

    1.1.2. NATO member European countries have largely achieved the target of raising defense spending to 2% of GDP, committed at the 2014 Wales Summit. While Poland is progressing towards raising this ratio to 4%, Germany is restructuring its Bundeswehr using a €100 billion special fund. However, these increases serve as an “insurance policy” against the possibility of a partial US withdrawal from Europe. Europe’s rearmament stems not merely from responding to US demands, but from the necessity of self-sufficiency in case Washington pivots to Asia.

    1.1.3. China, for its part, spends well above its officially announced defense budget of $293 billion, with unofficial estimates suggesting the figure is nearly double that. China’s island-building activities in the Indo-Pacific, hypersonic weapons tests, and cyber capabilities play a decisive role in its competition with the US. However, China’s real strategic success lies in reducing its rivals’ room for maneuver through economic dependency while increasing its military capacity. This represents a form of hybrid competition, different from the traditional arms race.

    1.2. Regional Arms Races in Developing Countries

    1.2.1. India is steadily increasing its defense spending due to border disputes with both Pakistan and China. The purchase of S-400 air defense systems from Russia, defense agreements with the US, and the procurement of Rafale fighter jets from France show that India is pursuing a multi-faceted armament strategy. However, India’s real success is its ability to maintain relations with all parties without fully engaging with any major power. This “multi-alignment” strategy offers the most serious alternative to the bloc logic of the Cold War era.

    1.2.2. In the Middle East, Gulf countries like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have raised defense spending to record levels against the Iranian threat. However, faced with the military successes of Iran’s axis of resistance and waning US engagement, these countries have long lost the will to form a united front. The inadequacy of the US-UK intervention against the Houthis’ operations in the Red Sea has turned the Gulf monarchies towards a “muddling through” diplomacy with Iran. This shows that the Arab world is being rendered passive against Iran.

    1.2.3. Turkey has made significant progress in the last decade with the goal of independence in its defense industry. Having become one of the world leaders in UAVs and UCAVs, Turkey is also drawing attention with its national combat aircraft KAAN and its first aircraft carrier projects. However, this breakthrough by Turkey is also part of a strategy of being a “flying state” within NATO. While remaining in the Western alliance, Ankara positions itself as an independent actor through steps like the purchase of S-400 systems from Russia, which deepens discord within the alliance.

    1.3. Disruptive Technologies and Military Transformation

    1.3.1. AI-powered warfare systems are no longer just a matter of science fiction; they have begun to be used on real battlefields. Autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles can make target recognition and engagement decisions without human intervention, bringing along ethical and legal debates. However, the biggest risk is that these systems make human intervention nearly impossible in cases of false alarms. A faulty threat assessment by an algorithm could trigger automatic retaliation.

    1.3.2. Hypersonic weapons (Mach 5 and above) render existing missile defense systems almost useless. Systems like Russia’s Kinzhal and Avangard, China’s Dongfeng-17, and the US’s AGM-183 ARRW have the potential to radically change strategic balances. The short reaction time of these weapons makes controlling escalation almost impossible during a crisis. By giving decision-makers only minutes, these systems dangerously test humanity’s confidence in its own composure.

    1.3.3. Cyber warfare and the weaponization of space have completely redefined the boundaries of conflict. Cyberattacks that paralyze a country’s energy grid, financial system, or communication infrastructure can now be carried out without a traditional declaration of war. However, the biggest problem of cyber deterrence is the attribution crisis. Determining which state an attack originated from is technically difficult; an action by a “hacktivist” group could be interpreted as a direct state attack and trigger disproportionate retaliation.

    1. The US-Israel Axis and Iran’s Resistance Strategy

    2.1. Evolution of the US-Israel Threat Perception

    2.1.1. The US and Israel’s threat perception regarding Iran has undergone a significant transformation in the last two decades. Initially focused solely on the nuclear program, this perception has gradually come to encompass Iran’s influence over regional proxy forces (Hezbollah, Hashd al-Shaabi, Houthis), its ballistic missile program, and its cyber capabilities. However, this expansion is an acknowledgment that the threat has truly become multi-dimensional, rather than a containment strategy. The US no longer sees Iran through a single file, but as an “empire of proxy wars.”

    2.1.2. Cyberattacks (Stuxnet worm), covert actions (assassinations of nuclear scientists), and sabotage of nuclear facilities carried out over the last decade are considered parts of a low-intensity war. These actions aimed to slow Iran’s nuclear progress while avoiding a direct declaration of war. However, they have also increased pressure among Iranian political elites towards acquiring nuclear weapons for deterrence. Each sabotage has brought Iran one step closer to the nuclear threshold.

    2.1.3. The possibility of a large-scale Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities is constantly on the agenda. However, US administrations have historically been unsupportive of such unilateral operations. The mutual direct attacks in April 2024 marked a new phase in this balance. Iran’s first direct attack from its own territory on Israel, in response to Israel’s strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus, has changed the rules of the long-standing “shadow war.” Direct engagement is no longer a theoretical scenario but a factual reality.

    2.2. Iran’s Victory: Military Deterrence and Diplomatic Success

    2.2.1. Iran has developed a unique asymmetric warfare doctrine against the military and economic superiority it faces. Key elements of this doctrine include a vast ballistic missile inventory, a network of regional proxy forces, cyberattack capacity, and the threat to close the Strait of Hormuz. However, Iran’s real strategic success is turning this military deterrence into a diplomatic victory. Tehran has effectively forced the international community to accept its 10-point nuclear ethics and security memorandum. Many items previously defined as “red lines” by the West are no longer even subjects of negotiation.

    2.2.2. This diplomatic success is a “Forced Victory” for Iran. Although sanctions continue, Iran has largely broken the pressure of the “military option” on its nuclear file. The West has begun pragmatically normalizing Iran’s effective behavior as a threshold nuclear power. The goal is no longer to stop Iran’s nuclear program but to manage it. This has given Iran immense prestige and permanently altered regional balances.

    2.2.3. The encirclement Iran has created through its regional allies is carefully managed. Hezbollah’s over 150,000 rockets in Lebanon, the Hashd al-Shaabi forces in Iraq, and the Houthi attacks in the Red Sea threaten Israeli and US interests on different fronts. This multi-front structure makes it impossible for Israel to eliminate all threats with a single major operation. Each front functions as an independent layer of deterrence.

    2.3. Regional and Global Repercussions: The Fragmented Arab Front

    2.3.1. Iran’s increasing military cooperation with Russia (use of Shahed-136 drones in Ukraine, joint military exercises) and the 25-year strategic agreement with China serve as a balancing mechanism against the US’s tendency to withdraw from the region. This rapprochement reduces the impact of Western sanctions while also opening a new maneuvering space for Iran internationally. Russia and China have become Iran’s geopolitical insurance.

    2.3.2. Although the normalization process of Arab countries like Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Egypt with Israel (Abraham Accords) initially seemed to accelerate the formation of an anti-Iran front, this front quickly disintegrated. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt have long lost the political will and military coordination needed to form a united front against Iran. The military successes of Iran’s resistance axis and the waning US engagement have turned these countries from active actors into passive observers. Egypt’s economic crisis has completely paralyzed its capacity to act as a regional power.

    2.3.3. The recent war in Gaza (post-Al-Aqsa Flood operation) has inflicted irreparable wounds on the alliance system of the US and its allies. The unconditional US support for Israel has exhausted all of America’s soft power vis-à-vis the Global South. Protests beginning on its own university campuses and streets have led to a decline in the advocacy of the “Jewish lobby” in US domestic politics and the questioning of pro-Israel policies. This is a breaking point in US foreign policy. Likewise, the discord between the US and Europe has not remained at a diplomatic level but has turned into direct political struggles. The tension between “pro-Israel advocacy” and “the rights of the Palestinian people” on European streets and in parliaments has divided governments and strained the Transatlantic alliance’s strategic coherence in the Middle East.

    1. The Russia-Ukraine War: A Symbol of Global Rupture

    3.1. The War Reshaping the International System

    3.1.1. The full-scale invasion that began in February 2022 has opened deep and permanent rifts in the international system unseen since the end of the Cold War. The unprecedented military, financial, and intelligence support provided to Ukraine by the Western alliance in the first year of the war led to NATO’s tactical revival, leaving behind the days when it was declared “brain dead.” However, this revival conceals a deep strategic incompatibility. While the US organizes Europe against Russia through NATO, it has shifted its own strategic priority to the Asia-Pacific. Europe, on the other hand, faces the necessity of building its own defense against a scenario of a partial US withdrawal from the alliance during a future presidential term.

    3.1.2. The war has laid bare the dysfunctionality of the UN Security Council. The fact that one of the permanent members is effectively a belligerent has confirmed the collapse of the collective security system. More importantly, the war has deeply affected the Global South. Rising food prices, the energy crisis, and disruptions in fertilizer supply have made many countries in Africa and Asia direct victims of the war. These countries have pursued a pragmatic balancing policy by refusing to join Western sanctions against Russia, which has weakened the West’s rhetoric on the “democracy-authoritarianism” axis.

    3.1.3. The necessity for neutral countries to redefine their positions has been one of the most important consequences of the war. While Finland and Sweden’s decision to join NATO meant abandoning centuries-old neutrality policies, Switzerland’s increase in defense spending and closer military cooperation with the EU suggests that the concept of “non-alignment” has lost its validity. However, even the NATO membership of these countries reflects a search for “US insurance” rather than full integration into the alliance. These countries are pursuing a multi-layered security strategy by also increasing their own defense capabilities under the NATO umbrella.

    3.2. New Dimensions of Hybrid Warfare

    3.2.1. The Russia-Ukraine war exhibits a hybrid character where traditional and modern warfare tools are used together. Drones (Bayraktar, Orlan, Shahed) and cyberattacks share the same stage as artillery units and tanks. This situation transforms the nature of war, expanding the battlefield horizontally and vertically. However, the most notable development is the Iranian-made Shahed drones becoming a decisive tool in the war. This is of great importance in demonstrating Iran’s progress in military technology and the depth of its strategic cooperation with Russia.

    3.2.2. Economic sanctions have become one of the most effective weapons of war. The comprehensive sanctions imposed on Russia (freezing central bank assets, removal from SWIFT, energy embargo) constitute an unprecedented economic pressure mechanism in history. However, the failure of these sanctions to have the expected devastating effect has raised serious questions about their effectiveness. Russia has managed to limit the impact of sanctions by redirecting its energy exports to Asia and transitioning to a war economy. This has shown that sanctions alone cannot end a war; on the contrary, they can create a reverse effect by boosting the defense industry in the target country.

    3.2.3. Information warfare and disinformation are among the factors determining the course of the war. Both Russia, Ukraine, and the West are conducting intense information operations to shape public opinion in their favor. However, the most important consequence of this information war has been the complete fragmentation of reality. Different camps believe in completely different narratives, making it almost impossible to find common ground on reality. This will remain as a deep wound that will make it difficult for societies to reconcile even after the war ends.

    3.3. Revival of Defense Industries

    3.3.1. The prolonged war has led to a revival of defense industries in both Russia and Western countries. Russia has tripled its artillery ammunition production while also accelerating tank production. Western observers acknowledge that the Russian defense industry, with its transition to a war economy, has performed beyond expectations. This is interpreted as meaning that, instead of collapsing Russia’s military capacity as targeted by the sanctions, they have actually strengthened it. Russia has effectively entered a process of “industrialization on a war footing.”

    3.3.2. European Union countries have increased joint defense spending and strengthened the European Defence Fund. Germany’s €100 billion special fund, Poland’s target of raising defense spending to 4% of GDP, and the Nordic countries’ integration into NATO signal a significant leap in Europe’s military capacity. The US has set a target of increasing 155mm artillery shell production from 14,000 to 100,000 per month. However, the most important consequence of this production boom is that, even in a scenario where the war ends, reducing production capacity back to peacetime levels is economically and politically almost impossible.

    3.3.3. Defense industries have become sectors employing hundreds of thousands of people with powerful lobbies. This situation risks consigning the concept of “peace dividend” to history and condemning the world to a permanent semi-war economy. The employment and economic growth created by the defense industry now make calculating the cost of peace difficult and strengthen war lobbies. This is the most concrete economic indicator of the normalization of war.

    1. New Alliance Quests and Military Structuring

    4.1. NATO’s Dilemma: Revival or Strategic Divergence?

    4.1.1. Although NATO appears to have tactically strengthened with the Ukraine war, the biggest divergence since the Cold War is occurring strategically between the US and Europe. The US’s focus on the Asia-Pacific and pressures that Europe should be primarily responsible for its own defense have initiated a new era within NATO where “US guarantee is being questioned.” European allies must now seriously consider the possibility of a partial US withdrawal from the alliance during the next presidential term in Washington.

    4.1.2. With the accession of Finland and Sweden, reaching 32 members, NATO has experienced its biggest enlargement since the Cold War. However, this enlargement reflects the extent of the Russian threat rather than the strength of the alliance. While new members have brought military capacity and strategic depth to NATO, they have also extended the alliance’s defense line and increased its logistical burden. NATO’s eastern flank has become a vast front stretching from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea.

    4.1.3. Therefore, NATO has ceased to be a single bloc and has evolved into a structure that “has to unite very quickly but has the potential to disintegrate just as fast.” The alliance, which shows solidarity in times of crisis, experiences deep disharmony regarding strategic priorities. While Europe focuses on the war on its own continent, the US’s eyes are on Asia. This disharmony raises serious questions about the future of the alliance.

    4.2. Multi-layered and Flexible Alliances

    4.2.1. The current security environment forces states to establish flexible and multi-layered alliances that go beyond traditional alliance relationships. Structures like AUKUS (Australia, UK, US) involving narrow but deep cooperation, broader but looser platforms like the QUAD (India, Japan, US, Australia), and regional organizations like the SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation) show the emergence of multiple and partially overlapping security networks simultaneously. Unlike the rigid bloc logic of the Cold War, these structures offer states a wider maneuvering space.

    4.2.2. The most important feature of these structures is that the same states can come together on different platforms for different interests. For example, while India cooperates with the US within the QUAD, it is also a member of the SCO and purchases S-400 systems from Russia. This “multi-alignment” strategy provides flexibility to states but also creates uncertainty about which alliance will be valid in times of crisis. Which side India will take in a crisis will depend on the concrete situation and its interests.

    4.2.3. This uncertainty also complicates traditional deterrence calculations. A state’s ally does not necessarily mean it will stand by it under all circumstances. Alliances are no longer absolute but conditional. This situation makes crisis management difficult and makes the effort of parties to read each other’s intentions even more important. A wrong signal can lead to overestimating or underestimating an ally’s support.

    4.3. Japan’s Historic Transformation

    4.3.1. Japan is implementing its most comprehensive security reforms since World War II. The National Security Strategy announced in December 2022 represents a historic break in the country’s interpretation of the pacifist Article 9 of its Constitution. The new strategy gives Japan the capability to “strike enemy bases,” which effectively means preemptive strike authority. This change has brought the long-standing “normal country” debates in the country to a concrete conclusion.

    4.3.2. The target of raising the defense budget to 2% of GDP by 2027 will make Japan the world’s third-largest defense spender. This budget increase includes the purchase of up to 400 Tomahawk cruise missiles, extending the range of domestically developed Type 12 surface-to-surface missiles to over 1,000 km, and the deployment of two AEGIS sea-based ballistic missile defense systems. Japan has also accelerated its own hypersonic missile program, aiming to deploy these missiles in the 2030s.

    4.3.3. The main driving force behind this transformation is China’s increasing military power and North Korea’s nuclear threat. Japan is also deepening its alliance with the US and establishing new security partnerships with Australia, India, the UK, and the Philippines. However, this transformation is being closely watched, especially by its neighbors China and Korea, and risks triggering a new arms spiral in the region. In a region where historical wounds have not yet healed, Japan’s rearmament further deepens the security dilemma.

    1. Dangerous Escalation and the Normalization of War

    5.1. Legitimization of War Discourse

    5.1.1. The most important dimension of dangerous escalation is that war is no longer seen as an exception or a state of failure, but as a normal instrument of international politics. Concepts such as “war option,” “military solution,” “preemptive strike,” and “forced intervention” are being used more comfortably in the discourse of political leaders, leading to a desensitization in public opinion regarding the destructiveness of war. The word “war” has ceased to be a political taboo and has become part of routine political debates.

    5.1.2. The media’s role in this process is significant. 24-hour news cycles, war simulations by retired generals as “experts,” strategic analyses, and discussions of possible scenarios turn war into an abstract and technical issue. The real cost of war – dead children, destroyed cities, refugee crises – gets lost in this technical language, desensitizing the audience. On television screens, war is presented as if it were a video game. The Gaza war, in particular, is the most striking example of this desensitization; tens of thousands of civilian deaths have become a mundane statistic.

    5.1.3. Another dimension of the normalization of war manifests itself in education systems. In some countries, civil defense drills have become mandatory in schools, teaching young people how to behave in case of war. While this prepares societies for a possible war, it also reinforces the perception that war is a “normal” life event. Societies that have read about war only in history books for generations are now experiencing war preparations as part of daily life.

    5.2. Decline of Peace Movements and the Silence of Civil Society

    5.2.1. Peace movements and civil society organizations are experiencing a serious decline in the face of this normalization. Similar to the anti-nuclear movements that brought millions to the streets in Europe during the Cold War, the mass peace demonstrations of the 1980s are almost non-existent today. There are many reasons for this: The fragmented structure of the media and the pressure of digital platforms have weakened the organizational capacity of social movements. While digital activism enables fast and widespread mobilization, it also remains limited to “clicktivism,” replacing street actions.

    5.2.2. More worryingly, in some countries, pro-peace discourse is stigmatized as “anti-patriotic,” “naive,” or even “treasonous.” In the context of the Ukraine war, those calling for “negotiations for peace” are sometimes accused of serving Russia. In the Gaza war, those calling for a ceasefire are accused of “anti-Semitism.” This polarizing environment narrows the space for moderate voices, creating a debate ground where only radical positions (total war or total surrender) remain.

    5.2.3. Peace activists are seen as “unrealistic idealists,” which further narrows the social base of the movement. Current problems like economic crises, inflation, and income inequality push peace activism to the background. People struggling to make ends meet find it difficult to find motivation to participate in anti-war actions. This silence indicates that one of the most important mechanisms with the potential to stop escalation has become dysfunctional.

    5.3. New Forms of Deterrence and the Risk of Inadvertent Escalation

    5.3.1. The concept of deterrence has moved far away from the Cold War paradigm of “Mutually Assured Destruction” (MAD). Traditional population-destroying deterrence has been replaced by regional, technological, and hybrid deterrence models. Cyber deterrence (threat of retaliation for a cyberattack), space-based deterrence (capability to target satellite systems), and AI-powered deterrence (automatic response systems) are the main elements of these new models. However, these new forms make the threshold of escalation extremely uncertain.

    5.3.2. AI-powered early warning systems and autonomous weapons platforms can make decisions at speeds that make human intervention nearly impossible. A false threat assessment by an algorithm could trigger automatic retaliation. A human decision similar to the one made by Soviet officer Stanislav Petrov in 1983, which saved the world from nuclear war, has become a luxury that now needs to be made in much shorter timeframes. The “black box” nature of AI systems makes it nearly impossible to understand which actor triggered what during an escalation.

    5.3.3. The biggest risk of these new forms of deterrence is “accidental escalation” or “false alarm” situations. Determining which state a cyberattack originated from is technically difficult; an attack by a “hacktivist” group acting on behalf of a state could be interpreted as a direct state attack and trigger disproportionate retaliation. Similarly, it may be impossible to distinguish whether an intervention against a satellite in space is a test or an act of war. In this environment of uncertainty, even the smallest incident can spiral out of control and turn into a major conflict.

    1. Military Preparations in Scandinavia, Germany, and Japan

    6.1. Integration of Nordic Countries into NATO

    6.1.1. Finland, immediately after joining NATO in April 2023, increased its defense budget by 30%. The country is strengthening its military presence along the 1,300 km border with Russia, building border fences, and hosting NATO’s Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF). Finland’s “total defence” concept refers to a system where all citizens are prepared for military or civil defence duties. Under this system, regular civil-military cooperation exercises are conducted, and shelters are being renovated in every corner of the country.

    6.1.2. Sweden, after officially becoming a NATO member in March 2024, decided to militarize the island of Gotland. This strategic island in the middle of the Baltic Sea is of great importance due to its proximity to Russia’s Kaliningrad exclave. Sweden has also renewed its submarine defense systems and increased naval patrols in the Baltic Sea. Having reinstated conscription in 2017, Sweden now enlists approximately 8,000 young people annually, along with voluntary reserves, as of 2024. Civil defence plans have been renewed, and the capacity of shelters to be used in crises has exceeded 3 million people.

    6.1.3. Norway and Denmark, although longer-standing NATO members, have significantly increased their defense spending recently. Norway has expanded its hosted NATO exercises (Trident Juncture, Cold Response) and strengthened its military presence in the Arctic. Denmark has set a target to double its defense budget by 2033, has granted the US base access, and has sent F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine. The coordination of these four Nordic countries within NATO shows that a new “Nordic Defense Alliance” is effectively being formed. However, even if this alliance remains a subgroup of NATO, it also functions as a solidarity mechanism against a potential US withdrawal.

    6.2. Germany’s “Zeitenwende” Policy

    6.2.1. Chancellor Scholz’s declaration of “Zeitenwende” (Historic Turning Point) in February 2022 initiated Germany’s most comprehensive military reform since World War II. At the center of this policy is a €100 billion special defense fund and the modernization of the Bundeswehr. This fund aims to renew the long-neglected military inventory, strengthen logistical infrastructure, and ensure full compliance with NATO standards. However, the most important dimension of this transformation is that Germany is abandoning its “transformative diplomacy” model and moving towards a more classical power politics.

    6.2.2. One of the most concrete steps taken within the scope of “Zeitenwende” is the reorganization of the military command structure. A new “Space Command” and a “Cyber and Information Space Command” have been established within the Bundeswehr. Germany has decided to purchase F-35 fighter jets (for the nuclear sharing mission against the Russian threat) and is modernizing its existing Eurofighter and Tornado fleets. Furthermore, Germany, which sent a warship to the Indo-Pacific region for the first time, signed a military cooperation agreement with Japan, thus showing that it has abandoned its traditional Europe-centric security policy. Berlin is ceasing to be a civilian power and is progressing towards becoming a military actor.

    6.2.3. Significant changes are also taking place in Germany’s military personnel policy. The Bundeswehr, which is overhauling the voluntary military service system, aims to increase the number of soldiers to 203,000 by 2031. To close the military personnel gap, the age limit has been raised, and legal regulations have been initiated to allow foreign nationals (EU citizens) to join the German army. Furthermore, the “civil service” model is being debated again, and pilot applications for a return to compulsory military service have been launched in some federal states. These changes imply a questioning of the peaceful identity Germany built after the war.

    6.3. Japan’s Military Normalization

    6.3.1. With the National Security Strategy announced in December 2022, Japan has created a historic break in its pacifist security policy that has continued since World War II. The new strategy gives Japan the “capability to strike enemy bases,” which effectively means preemptive strike authority. This change is a radical transformation in the interpretation of the pacifist Article 9 of the Constitution and has brought the long-standing “normal country” debates in the country to a concrete conclusion. Japan now aims to be not only defensive but also offensive when necessary.

    6.3.2. The target of raising the defense budget to 2% of GDP by 2027 will make Japan the world’s third-largest defense spender. The most concrete reflections of this budget increase include the purchase of up to 400 Tomahawk cruise missiles from the US, extending the range of domestically developed Type 12 surface-to-surface missiles to over 1,000 km, and the deployment of two AEGIS sea-based ballistic missile defense systems. Additionally, Japan has accelerated its own hypersonic missile program, aiming to deploy these missiles in the 2030s. Japan is gradually turning into a missile state.

    6.3.3. The main driving force behind this military transformation is China’s increasing military power and North Korea’s nuclear threat. Japan is also deepening its alliance with the US and establishing new security partnerships with Australia, India, the UK, and the Philippines. Taking a more active role within the QUAD and AUKUS+ mechanisms, Japan is positioning itself at the center of the regional security architecture. However, this transformation is being closely watched, especially by its neighbors China and Korea, and risks triggering a new arms spiral in the region. In a region where historical wounds have not yet healed, Japan’s rearmament further deepens the security dilemma. China uses Japan’s steps as a pretext to increase its own military budget, thus a vicious cycle reproduces itself.

    Conclusion

    The global system is experiencing the most complex and unpredictable security dilemma since the end of the Cold War. Increasing armament expenditures, the risk of regional conflicts spreading, the normalization of great power competition, and the rapid military structuring of previously neutral countries point to a world order where peace has been replaced by a state of constant alert. However, this picture reflects a situation far more complex than the mere resurgence of traditional power blocs. Unlike the rigid polarization of the Cold War, today’s actors are both intertwining and breaking apart just as rapidly.

    While the pressure of the US-Israel axis on Iran and the resistance strategies developed against it keep the Middle East as a potential volcano, the Russia-Ukraine war has fundamentally shaken the entire security architecture in Europe. However, the most important result of these two crisis lines is the rising strategic prestige of Iran and the questioning of US regional deterrence. Iran has turned its military deterrence into a diplomatic victory, effectively invalidating the West’s “military option” rhetoric. Arab countries, on the other hand, cannot form a united front against Iran and are regressing to the position of passive observers.

    The state of the Transatlantic alliance constitutes the most paradoxical dimension of this picture. Although NATO appears tactically united with the Ukraine war, the biggest divergence since the Cold War is occurring strategically between the US and Europe. The US’s focus on the Asia-Pacific and pressures that Europe should be responsible for its own defense have initiated a new era within NATO where “US guarantee is being questioned.” The recent war in Gaza has deepened this divergence, and the unconditional US support for Israel has exhausted all of America’s soft power vis-à-vis the Global South, while carrying the discord between Europe and the US to the streets and parliaments.

    The most striking result of the dangerous escalation is that the war option is being multiplied on one hand while being narrowed in specific contexts on the other. States avoid direct major war but normalize conflict through hybrid, asymmetric, and proxy wars. This situation necessitates the revision of classical deterrence theories, rethinking the civil-military distinction, and urgently strengthening global governance mechanisms. Particularly, false alarms caused by cyber space and artificial intelligence could be a sufficient spark for an unintentional war. A mistake by an algorithm could determine the fate of humanity.

    While the network structures created by new alliance quests increase security cooperation, they also lead to a greater perception of threat in excluded actors. However, the most important feature of these alliances is that they are conditional and temporary. Actors like India, by being part of multiple alliances simultaneously, expand their maneuvering space, which creates uncertainty about which alliance will be valid in times of crisis. Alliances are no longer absolute but conditional. This situation complicates crisis management and makes the effort of parties to read each other’s intentions even more important.

    As seen in the examples of Scandinavia, Germany, and Japan, the acceleration of military preparations even by countries previously known for their peaceful and limited defense understanding shows how widespread the perception of threat has become. The preferences of these countries are too profound to be explained solely by regional concerns; each assumes that the international system no longer rests on reliable rules and that there is a possibility of being attacked at any moment. This assumption risks becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy, because the arming of one country is perceived as a threat by its neighbors and initiates a chain reaction.

    On the other hand, focusing only on the military and geopolitical dimensions of this picture may cause the integrity of the problem to be missed. The ongoing transformation is also a deep social and psychological transformation. Generations that grew up in a world where peace was “normal” are now forced to learn to live in an atmosphere where war preparations have become part of daily life. Shelter drills, recruitment campaigns, and the way war scenarios are handled in the media erode societies’ psychological resistance to war, thus making it easier for political leaders to deploy military options. This psychological transformation is perhaps the most dangerous, because it shifts the perception of war from a disaster to a normal policy tool.

    The decline of civil society in peace activism is one of the gloomiest dimensions of this picture. Similar to the anti-nuclear movements that brought millions to the streets in Europe during the Cold War, mass peace demonstrations are almost non-existent today. Reasons for this include the fragmented structure of the media, digital activism substituting for action, economic crises changing priorities, and anti-war discourse being stigmatized as “anti-patriotic.” This silence indicates that one of the most important mechanisms with the potential to stop escalation has become dysfunctional. The weakening of peace movements allows pro-war voices to be heard more easily and military solutions to be legitimized more readily.

    Despite all these negativities, it may be too early to abandon optimism entirely. Historical experience is full of examples where even in the deepest moments of polarization, diplomacy channels were kept open, crisis communication mechanisms were operated, and the worst scenarios were avoided. The re-establishment of direct military communication lines between the US and China, the continuation of indirect talks between Iran and the US, and the survival, albeit dysfunctional, of platforms like the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) are hopeful signs. However, it is becoming increasingly difficult for these mechanisms to keep pace with the speed of escalation. Diplomacy lags behind military preparations, which increases the role of chance in times of crisis.

    Ultimately, in the mid-2020s, the world stands at a crossroads. On one hand, a worsening scenario where current escalation spirals out of control and regional wars spread; on the other, a scenario where actors curb escalation and build a new security architecture. Which scenario will materialize depends largely on the steps taken in the next few years. These steps include re-introducing measures to limit the arms race, strengthening ceasefire mechanisms in conflict zones, and most importantly, questioning the legitimacy of war as a policy tool. Reform of international law and the UN system is also an indispensable part of this process.

    In conclusion, the current situation has invalidated the classical distinctions between peace, deterrence, and war, creating one of the most dangerous periods in international relations. There is no trace of unipolarity; a state of ‘liquid chaos’ prevails where actors both intertwine and break apart, and where a new front can open at any moment. In an atmosphere of uncertainty where any crisis could spiral out of control, even the most rational actors can make miscalculations. Therefore, in a world where military preparations are accelerating, the way to maintain peace, paradoxically, lies in strengthening diplomacy at the same pace. Otherwise, humanity will be left alone on the brink of a new great war, risking the repetition of past mistakes. At this critical moment in history, the greatest responsibility falls on the leaders of great powers and the conscience of global public opinion.

    References

    · SIPRI. (2020). SIPRI Yearbook 2020: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security. Oxford University Press.
    · NATO. (2021). NATO 2030: United for a New Era. Brussels: NATO Public Diplomacy Division.
    · International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). (2022). Armed Conflict Survey 2022. London: IISS.
    · Mearsheimer, J. J. (2022). “The Causes and Consequences of the Ukraine War”. Foreign Affairs, 101(4), 28-43.
    · Japan Ministry of Defense. (2022). National Security Strategy of Japan. Tokyo: MOD.
    · Bundeswehr. (2023). Zeitenwende: Die Verteidigungspolitischen Richtlinien. Berlin: Bundesministerium der Verteidigung.
    · SIPRI. (2023). Trends in International Arms Transfers, 2022. Stockholm: SIPRI Fact Sheet.
    · Finnish Government. (2023). Finland’s Accession to NATO: Government Report. Helsinki: Prime Minister’s Office.
    · The White House. (2023). Interim National Security Strategic Guidance. Washington D.C.: The White House.
    · Congressional Research Service (CRS). (2024). Iran’s Nuclear Program: Status and U.S. Policy. CRS Report R43333.
    · International Crisis Group (ICG). (2024). The New Face of Deterrence in the Middle East. Brussels: ICG Middle East Report No. 245.
    · Stockholm University. (2024). Conscription and Total Defence in the Nordic Countries. Stockholm: Stockholm University Press.
    · UNIDIR. (2024). Emerging Military Technologies and Strategic Stability. Geneva: UN Institute for Disarmament Research.
    · Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). (2024). The Gaza War and the Future of the Transatlantic Alliance. New York: CFR Special Report No. 98.

    Sefa Yürükel

    Danish ethnographer and social anthropologist (MA)
    Aarhus University, 1997
    Independent Researcher
    Fields of Research: International Politics, Public International Law, Geopolitics, Sociology, Psychology, Cultural Studies, Systems and Structures

  • The Geopolitical Anatomy of Global Maritime Trade: Canals, Straits, and the Struggle for Sovereignty on the Polar Route

    The Geopolitical Anatomy of Global Maritime Trade: Canals, Straits, and the Struggle for Sovereignty on the Polar Route

    The world economy is a vast circulatory system shaped around the compulsory transit corridors imposed by geography. In an era where approximately eighty percent of international trade volume is transported by sea and a large portion of global energy supply depends on tanker traffic, certain waterways have transcended being mere geographical formations. These corridors provide the controlling states not only with economic rent but also with disproportionate bargaining power and strategic depth in global politics. From the Strait of Malacca and the Suez Canal, which form the backbone of trade between Asia and Europe, to Gibraltar, the gateway to the Mediterranean; from the Turkish Straits, the lifeline of the Black Sea, to Bab el-Mandeb, the southern lock of the Red Sea, and the Northern Sea Route, a new arena of competition emerging from the climate crisis—these corridors are at the center of naval deployments, legal disputes, and proxy wars among great powers.

    The Capillary of the Indo-Pacific and the Malacca Dilemma

    The Strait of Malacca, the most critical artery of the Southeast Asian maritime geography, constitutes the most economical route between the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea. This waterway, riparian to Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore, is the backbone of the supply chain between Northeast Asian economies and the Middle East and Africa. A significant portion of the crude oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) transported globally transits through this narrow passage. The section converging at the Phillips Channel off Singapore witnesses the world’s densest maritime traffic, with over one hundred thousand vessels passing annually.

    The geopolitical tension in this region largely revolves around the existential anxiety of the People’s Republic of China regarding its energy supply security. The fact that the overwhelming majority of China’s energy imports come through the Strait of Malacca is defined as a vulnerability by the Beijing administration, a situation that has entered the strategy literature as the “Malacca Dilemma.” In a potential military conflict or regional instability scenario, the capacity of the US Navy or the Indian Navy to disrupt this transit directly shapes China’s foreign policy and infrastructure investments. To reduce this dependence, China has activated oil and gas pipelines extending from the Kyaukpyu Port in Myanmar to Yunnan province and keeps the idea of opening the Kra Canal in southern Thailand alive as a strategic option. Simultaneously, the US logistical presence in Singapore and India’s military fortification of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands serve as strategic watch posts overlooking the western and eastern entrances of Malacca.

    Artificial Bridges Between the US, Europe, and Asia: The Suez and Panama Canals

    The Suez and Panama Canals, two massive engineering projects built by human hands, are interventions that have altered the course of global shipping. The Suez Canal, located in Egyptian territory, connects the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, shortening the Asia-Europe sea route by approximately seven thousand kilometers compared to the Cape of Good Hope at Africa’s southern tip. About twelve percent of global container traffic and a significant portion of daily oil shipments flow through this route. The strategic importance of the canal is not limited to the billions of dollars in foreign exchange revenue it provides to the Egyptian economy; it is also a vital area of interest for powers like Russia, China, and India, which lack Mediterranean coastlines. Particularly, the fact that Bab el-Mandeb Strait at the canal’s southern entrance is vulnerable to asymmetric threats stemming from the civil war in Yemen reveals the reality that Suez’s security actually begins thousands of miles beyond Egypt’s borders.

    The Panama Canal assumes a similar strategic function in the Western Hemisphere. Cutting through the narrowest land strip of Central America to connect the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean, this waterway is indispensable, especially for trade between the US East Coast ports and Asia, and for commodity exports from South America’s western coasts. After the US fully transferred sovereignty rights of the canal to Panama in 1999, the geopolitical vacuum formed in the region has been filled by China’s port investments and infrastructure projects under its Belt and Road Initiative. Port operating concessions held by Chinese companies around the canal fuel debates in Washington about “Chinese influence in the backyard.” Additionally, the decline in the canal’s operational capacity due to irregularities in the rainfall regime feeding Lake Gatun in Panama is accelerating the search for alternative routes, such as the Tehuantepec Isthmus Railway in Mexico or the proposed canal projects in Nicaragua.

    The Fierce Sentinel of Energy Supply: The Strait of Hormuz

    The Strait of Hormuz, connecting the Persian Gulf to the Indian Ocean, holds an unparalleled position for the stability of global energy markets. This corridor, lying between Iran and Oman and narrowing to about thirty-three kilometers at its most constricted point, hosts approximately one-third of globally seaborne crude oil and a significant portion of LNG trade. The geopolitics of the strait are largely shaped by the regional rivalry between the Islamic Republic of Iran and Western powers and Sunni Arab monarchies. When sanction pressures over Iran’s nuclear program increase, the first deterrent instrument the Tehran administration resorts to is the threat of disrupting strait traffic. Fast attack craft belonging to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, coastal batteries, and mining capability demonstrate that the strait can be destabilized to create a serious risk premium, even if not physically closed. The permanent presence of the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain and additional military deployments to the region are the military reflection of this narrow waterway’s dominance over global inflation and recession dynamics.

    The Southern Lock of the Red Sea: The Bab el-Mandeb Strait and Yemeni Geopolitics

    The Bab el-Mandeb Strait, located between the southwestern tip of the Arabian Peninsula (Yemen) and Djibouti and Eritrea in the Horn of Africa, is a strategic maritime passage connecting the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden and onwards to the Indian Ocean. This narrow waterway, meaning “Gate of Tears” in Arabic, derives its name from the historical difficulty of navigation and the turbulent political climate of the region. Approximately twenty-nine kilometers wide at its narrowest point, the strait is divided into two channels by Perim Island. As Bab el-Mandeb is a mandatory route for all vessels transiting the Suez Canal, it is the southern complementary element of the Mediterranean-Indian Ocean connection, and its strategic value is directly linked to the Suez Canal.

    Commercially, Bab el-Mandeb provides passage for approximately six to eight percent of globally seaborne oil and a significant portion of container traffic between Europe and Asia. It is the sole gateway to the Suez Canal, especially for oil tankers traveling from the Persian Gulf to Europe and North America. Furthermore, China’s investments in the Horn of Africa and its first overseas military base established in Djibouti prove how vital Bab el-Mandeb’s security is for Beijing. If the strait closes, tankers and container ships are forced to circumnavigate the Cape of Good Hope at Africa’s southern tip, exponentially increasing freight costs and adding weeks to delivery times.

    The power struggle at Bab el-Mandeb is largely shaped under the shadow of the civil war in Yemen that has continued since 2014 and the regional proxy rivalry. The Iranian-backed Houthis’ control over Yemen’s northwestern coastline and the capital, Sana’a, has created an asymmetric risk directly threatening the strait’s security. Ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, naval mines, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), and unmanned surface vessels (USVs) in the Houthis’ possession pose a constant threat to commercial and naval vessels passing through the strait. The dramatic increase in Houthi attacks on commercial vessels in the Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb following the Gaza War that began in October 2023 has exposed the systemic risk the strait poses to global trade. As a result of these attacks, many major shipping companies suspended the Red Sea route, diverting their vessels to the Cape of Good Hope, leading to serious disruptions in global supply chains and sharp increases in freight prices.

    In response to this threat, the US-led “Operation Prosperity Guardian” and the European Union’s “Operation Aspides” are multinational naval task forces aimed at preserving freedom of navigation in Bab el-Mandeb and the Red Sea. The Arab Coalition, led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, also attempts to contribute to the strait’s security through its military presence in Yemen. On the African side, military bases belonging to the US, France, Japan, Italy, and China stationed in Djibouti have made Bab el-Mandeb one of the waterways with the highest number of foreign military bases in the world. China’s military presence in Djibouti, as part of its strategy to protect sea lines of communication in the Indian Ocean, also encompasses Bab el-Mandeb, increasing Beijing’s strategic footprint in the region. All these dynamics show that Bab el-Mandeb is not merely a maritime passage but also an intersection point of power projection in the Middle East, the Horn of Africa, and the Indian Ocean.

    The Western Lock of the Mediterranean: The Strait of Gibraltar

    The Strait of Gibraltar, located at the southwestern tip of the European continent between Spain and Morocco and only fourteen kilometers wide at its narrowest point, is the sole natural passage connecting the Mediterranean Sea to the Atlantic Ocean. Its geostrategic importance stems from the fact that the maritime traffic of all states bordering or obliged to use the Mediterranean is bottlenecked at this narrow passage. It is the gateway to the global oceans for commercial vessels arriving from Asia via the Suez Canal and for warships of Russia’s Black Sea fleet.

    The power struggle at Gibraltar is historically shaped around sovereignty rights over the Rock of Gibraltar, a British Overseas Territory. This small peninsula, whose return Spain continually demands, is not only a matter of prestige for the United Kingdom but also serves as a forward outpost controlling the entrance to the Mediterranean for NATO. In the post-Brexit era, negotiations between Spain and the United Kingdom regarding Gibraltar’s status have brought uncertainties about the strait’s legal status back to the agenda. Furthermore, Morocco transforming the Tanger-Med Port on the strait’s southern coast into Africa’s largest container transshipment hub, and China’s investment interest in this port, have made Gibraltar a keystone not only for Europe but also for China’s Mediterranean strategy.

    The Montreux Regime and the Unique Status of the Turkish Straits

    The Turkish Straits System, comprising the Istanbul Strait (Bosphorus), the Sea of Marmara, and the Çanakkale Strait (Dardanelles), is the sole route by which states bordering the Black Sea can access the open seas due to its geographical location. The most fundamental aspect distinguishing these straits from other strategic waterways is that their transit regime is regulated not by customary international law or a general convention, but exclusively by the 1936 Montreux Convention Regarding the Regime of the Straits. This convention grants the Republic of Turkey full sovereignty over the straits and imposes significant restrictions on the passage of warships in terms of tonnage, class, and duration of stay in the Black Sea.

    From a commercial perspective, the Istanbul Strait is one of the world’s most risky and narrowest natural waterways, with approximately forty thousand vessels passing through annually. It plays a critical role in delivering oil and grain extracted from the Caspian Basin, primarily Russia and Kazakhstan, to world markets. Geopolitically, the Montreux Convention is the most significant legal barrier preventing the Black Sea from becoming a “NATO lake.” The restrictions on the passage of warships of non-riparian states particularly ensure the Russian Federation’s naval superiority in the Black Sea and the security of its southern flank. In the context of the Ukraine crisis, Turkey’s faithful application of Montreux provisions by closing the straits to warships of belligerent parties has once again proven the strategic value of this historic convention. The Kanal Istanbul initiative, aimed at bypassing the Turkish Straits, has led to intense international debate regarding the future of the Montreux regime and military balances in the Black Sea.

    The New Arena of Competition: The Northern Sea Route and Arctic Geopolitics

    As a tangible consequence of global warming, the seasonal retreat of the ice sheet in the Arctic Ocean has opened a brand new front in maritime trade and power struggle: the Northern Sea Route. This passage, stretching along the northern coastline of the Russian Federation from the Barents Sea to the Bering Strait, has the potential to shorten the distance between Asia and Europe by approximately forty percent compared to the Suez Canal route. A ship traveling from Shanghai to Rotterdam can reduce its sailing time by more than ten days if using this route.

    The unique dynamics of the Northern Sea Route distinguish it from classical straits and canals. Here, the struggle is not about closing a narrow passage but about freedom of navigation and the capacity to establish infrastructure across a vast geography. Russia, claiming that most of the route passes through its Exclusive Economic Zone, imposes mandatory icebreaker escort and transit fees on vessels wishing to use it, defining the route as a “National Transport Corridor.” In contrast, the US, China, and the European Union argue that the Northern Sea Route should have the status of an “international strait” under international law and be open to free passage. China’s large investments in Russia’s Yamal LNG projects under its “Polar Silk Road” vision and its efforts to build its own nuclear-powered icebreaker fleet indicate that the Arctic will not only be Russia’s but also a stage for new bipolar rivalry. In the long term, this new route is expected to relieve traffic pressure on the Suez Canal and shift the center of gravity of global maritime trade northward.

    From Supply Security to Systemic Risk: The Cost of Closure and the Search for Alternatives

    The impact of strategic waterways on the global economy is measured not only by the efficiency they provide when open but also by the systemic shock waves that emerge when they are disrupted. The grounding of the Ever Given vessel in the Suez Canal, paralyzing the supply chain for six days, meant billions of dollars in losses per hour for global trade and exposed the fragility of the “just-in-time” production model. Similarly, the diversion of vessels to the Cape of Good Hope due to security vulnerabilities in the Bab el-Mandeb Strait and the Red Sea drives freight prices to astronomical levels and increases inflationary pressure in Europe.

    This fragility pushes states and major logistics companies to search for alternative corridors. The Middle Corridor via the Caspian Sea, the Development Road Project planned to reach the Mediterranean through Iraq, the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC), and Israel-India-Arabian Peninsula connections are mega-projects aimed at reducing absolute dependence on traditional maritime straits. Although each of these new routes faces geographical challenges, regional political instabilities, and financing problems, the very existence of these searches proves how vital straits geopolitics truly is.

    The Maritime Projection of Geopolitical Fault Lines

    The geographical constraints upon which global maritime trade flows persist as constant parameters determining the fundamental dynamics of international relations. Each waterway examined is defined by its unique legal regime, different threat perception, and overlapping interests of rival states. The dependency relationship in the Strait of Malacca, the military buildup in Hormuz, the proxy war and asymmetric threat at Bab el-Mandeb, the colonial legacy at Gibraltar, the contractual exception of the Turkish Straits, and the environmental transformation on the Northern Sea Route reflect different tones of the global power struggle.

    The opening of the Arctic Ocean as a new trade artery due to global climate change and the possibility of new logistics corridors enabled by technological developments indicate that geopolitical competition will intensify further in the coming years. The recent crisis in Bab el-Mandeb and the Red Sea has proven that even non-state armed actors can paralyze global supply chains, necessitating a revision of the maritime security paradigm. In this context, the struggle for control over maritime trade routes has transformed into a multi-dimensional chess game to be won not only by the firepower of navies but also by infrastructure investments, interpretation of legal conventions, and diplomatic engagement capacity. While ensuring the openness and security of these narrow passages, the arteries of the global economy, emerges as a common responsibility of the international community, the question of how this responsibility will be shared will remain one of the greatest political challenges of the twenty-first century.

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    Sefa Yürükel

    Danish ethnographer and social anthropologist (MA)
    Aarhus University, 1997
    Independent Researcher
    Fields of Research: International Politics, Public International Law, Geopolitics, Sociology, Psychology, Cultural Studies, Systems and Structures