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Even according to its own propaganda outlets, America has "become the villain", is "Officially an Empire in Decline", and we are witnessing its "final act".
And, as we await the titan's inevitable fall, the world is considering the future. Everyone is talking about the "multipolar world order" just over the horizon.
From "Pax Americana to Pax Multipolaris".
This "Multipolar World" has been a political talking point for a long time, but it has been building momentum over the last few years, and noticeably accelerating since the beginning of Donald Trump's second term.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has been calling for this multipolar order for years, and did so again last week. China's Xi Jinping regularly does the same, most recently during his trip to South America in February. North Korea's Kim Jung Il echoed these sentiments in April.
Xi and Putin signed a joint declaration on "building a multipolar world" this morning.
Two weeks ago, in a talk at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government, former German Chancellor Olaf Scholz called for "a post-imperial world [and] a resilient rules-based order in a new era of multipolarity".
In a speech during his trip to China last month, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez called for "embracing a multipolar world order":
"What is happening today is not a transfer of hegemony, but an increase in multipolarity — in both power and prosperity,"
Outside of politicians speechifying, the multipolar world order has become the main focus of the international think-tank circuit as well.
"Multipolarization" was the main topic of the Munich Security Conference Report in February 2025.
In December, the Tony Blair Institute partnered with the JPMorgan Chase International Council to publish a report called "World Rewired: Navigating a Multi-Speed, Multipolar Order", which concludes in the foreword (written by Blair himself and Jamie Dimon of JPMC):
The world still offers enormous potential for those willing to engage constructively—to build coalitions, invest in innovation, and help shape the rules of the next era rather than simply react to them.
And then in March, the World Economic Forum published an (exceedingly dull) report titled "The Future of Materials Systems: Cooperation Opportunities in a Multipolar World", which uses sentences like this…
In a multipolar world, agile interest-based cooperation will be decisive in shaping resilient, productive and sustainable materials systems.
That's the traditional circle in which "multipolarity" is most discussed. Reports for alphabet agencies and non-profits, market predictions and risk assessments. Academic language that camouflages meaning in layers of surplus verbiage.