A short, high‑level pattern: U.S. foreign policy under some recent administrations is shifting back from rules‑based multilateralism to a form of pragmatic, project‑by‑project coercion — selective strikes, regime removal, and ad‑hoc occupations — resembling earlier eras of great‑power behavior. The shift uses criminal indictments and law‑enforcement language as legitimating tools and relies on rapid operational spectacle to create political effects that outstrip deliberative, legal constraints.
— If this reversion holds, it will reshape alliance politics, legal oversight of the executive, and expectations about when and how democracies can use force abroad — forcing debates on authorization, accountability, and strategic consequences.
Halina Bennet
2026.01.12
72% relevant
The article’s theme — presenting presidential action as terminating conflicts by unilateral means — aligns with the documented trend that U.S. policy is shifting away from rules‑based multilateralism toward transactional, power‑driven tactics; the piece provides an instance of that reversion in rhetoric and action.
Damon Linker
2026.01.09
100% relevant
Damon Linker’s piece uses the Trump administration’s January 2026 Caracas strike and capture of Nicolás Maduro (and the accompanying public justifications invoking law enforcement and American prerogative) as the focal example of this reversion.
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