States can project control not only by occupying territory but by removing a regime figurehead and then governing through the surviving state apparatus — military, courts, ministers — using sanctions and the threat of force to discipline elites while avoiding long‑term occupation. This creates a paradoxical outcome: the old regime’s ideology and structures survive in a rebranded, clientalised form that serves the intervener’s economic aims without direct governance costs.
— If repeated, this model changes how democracies conceive of intervention, complicates accountability (who governs), and raises new legal and humanitarian questions about sovereignty, proxy rule, and the long‑term stabilization effects of removing leaders but preserving their systems.
Jon Hoffman
2026.04.15
76% relevant
The author describes US efforts to co‑opt or subdue Iran into a client network rather than to promote self‑determination, mirroring the idea that the U.S. sustains influence by preserving compliant local orders (managed continuity) instead of democratic transformation.
Matthew Yglesias
2026.03.14
75% relevant
Yglesias explores a scenario where the U.S. negotiates with France to leave a Maximilian‑led regime in place while limiting its alignment — a classic example of indirect hegemony and managed continuity (using diplomacy and recognition to steer rather than topple foreign governments).
Arta Moeini
2026.01.05
100% relevant
Trump administration operation removing Maduro, reported liaison with Delcy Rodríguez and US strategy of coercive continuity (sanctions, embargoes, credible force threat) instead of occupation.
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