
The Duran Podcast Preventing empire collapse
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Dec 8, 2025 Join journalist and geopolitical analyst Alexander Mercouris as he unpacks the new U.S. National Security Strategy. He contrasts it with past policies and emphasizes a shift from world domination to national re-industrialization. Mercouris discusses U.S. strategies for Latin America, the competition with China, and critiques of European policies. He also explores the historical parallels to British reform under Chamberlain and debates the implications of internal U.S. divisions. Expect insights on how rival powers like Russia and China will exploit the strategy's contradictions.
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US Strategy Acknowledges Limits Of Global Domination
- The new U.S. National Security Strategy shifts from seeking world domination to focusing on re-industrialization and spheres of influence.
- It frames globalization as having hollowed out the US economy and ceding control to proxies and allies.
Monroe Doctrine Reimagined As Sphere Control
- The strategy explicitly reasserts a US sphere of influence in the Western Hemisphere and revives a Monroe Doctrine-style stance.
- It demands no other great power have presence in Latin America and seeks a vice-like grip there.
Maintain Primacy While Naming China Main Rival
- The paper still insists the US remain the richest and most powerful nation while preventing any rival from overtaking it.
- China remains the primary strategic challenge, despite softer wording like 'rival' instead of 'enemy'.

