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There are moments in history when power does not merely shift—it exposes itself. The first year of Donald Trump’s second term has become such a moment, not because it introduced entirely new instruments of American statecraft, but because it redirected the same tools of pressure, coercion, and economic weaponization that the United States once reserved for weaker or dependent nations toward its own traditional allies.

In doing so, Washington did not just shock the global system; it fractured it, driving country after country—by calculation, necessity, or defiance—into the strategic and economic orbit of China.

For decades, the United States shaped the political and financial architecture of much of the developing world through a familiar mechanism: military reach, dollar dominance, and institutional leverage over global bodies such as the IMF and World Bank. Countries in South Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, Eastern Europe, and parts of Africa learned to live within a system where access to capital, trade, and even political legitimacy could be expanded or constricted at Washington’s discretion.

Many endured in silence, not because they agreed, but because they lacked the economic or military weight to resist. What changed in this era is not the method, but the target. The same logic of tariffs, sanctions, threats, and strategic intimidation was applied to nations that had long believed themselves protected by alliance and shared identity.

Canada, Europe, and the wider Western hemisphere were confronted not as partners, but as economic adversaries and strategic liabilities. This reversal carried a powerful message: loyalty offered no immunity.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2026

Qamar Bashir

The writer is a former Press Secretary to the President, An ex-Press Minister at Embassy of Pakistan to France, a former MD, SRBC Macomb, Detroit, Michigan

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