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Reading: 1. How Trump’s assault on the global order puts everyone at risk 2. Trump’s attack on the world order – why we’re all in danger 3. When America withdraws: Trump, the international order, and the stakes for us all 4. The global consequences of Trump’s batt
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Reading: 1. How Trump’s assault on the global order puts everyone at risk 2. Trump’s attack on the world order – why we’re all in danger 3. When America withdraws: Trump, the international order, and the stakes for us all 4. The global consequences of Trump’s batt
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Donald Trump > Opinion > 1. How Trump’s assault on the global order puts everyone at risk 2. Trump’s attack on the world order – why we’re all in danger 3. When America withdraws: Trump, the international order, and the stakes for us all 4. The global consequences of Trump’s batt
Opinion

1. How Trump’s assault on the global order puts everyone at risk 2. Trump’s attack on the world order – why we’re all in danger 3. When America withdraws: Trump, the international order, and the stakes for us all 4. The global consequences of Trump’s batt

By Ava Thompson May 18, 2026 Opinion
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A Shrinking Architecture: How U.S. Policy Shifts Are Reshaping the Rules-Based International Order

Overview: from steady stewardship to strategic unpredictability
For decades, a U.S.-led, rules-based international order provided predictable frameworks for trade, collective defense and cross-border cooperation on pandemics, climate and arms control. Recent administrations’ repeated departures from longstanding treaties, selective engagement with multilateral institutions and growing use of unilateral economic measures have altered that equilibrium. Far from being confined to Washington or diplomatic communiqués, these policy choices have produced discernible effects: partners hedge, competitors probe seams, and collective problem-solving becomes slower and more fractured.

What’s changing at multilateral institutions
Many of the institutions that anchor interstate cooperation-security alliances, trade dispute mechanisms and global health coordination bodies-are feeling the strain of inconsistent U.S. engagement.

– NATO and alliance trust: Ambiguity about America’s security guarantees prompts members to rethink force posture and burden-sharing. While NATO’s combined defense budgets have reached levels that reflect renewed attention to conventional deterrence, political doubts about long-term U.S. reliability complicate planning and force modernization decisions for smaller members that rely on predictable American backing.

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– The WTO and trade governance: The multilateral trade system’s dispute-resolution apparatus has suffered from delays and political pressure as unilateral tariffs and extraterritorial measures proliferate. When major economies prefer bilateral coercion or ad hoc restrictions to negotiated remedies, rule enforcement at the global level weakens and business planning becomes less certain.

– Global health coordination: Episodes of politicized funding, data frictions and inconsistent engagement with health agencies have slowed some outbreak responses and impeded vaccine equity initiatives. In public-health crises, time and clear interoperability matter; when contributors withdraw or condition assistance, rapid, coordinated action becomes harder.

A fractured order has cascading consequences. Adversaries exploit openings; middle powers pursue strategic autonomy or dual-track alignments; and international organizations lose some of the authority and resources that make them effective.

Trade tools as instruments of power-and their side effects
Economic instruments that were once narrowly deployed are now routine levers of diplomacy: tariffs, export controls on advanced technologies, and secondary sanctions are being used persistently to advance strategic aims. This normalization of economic coercion is restructuring global commerce.

– Supply-chain fragmentation: Firms are accelerating diversification of production and sourcing-shifting manufacturing capacity to countries like Vietnam, India and Mexico-to reduce exposure to tariffs or sanctions. While this can build resilience, it raises costs and complicates global production networks.

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– Tech decoupling: Controls on semiconductors, telecommunications equipment and certain dual-use technologies shrink addressable markets for affected companies and prompt new regional technology ecosystems. For example, semiconductor companies have expanded investments in multiple geographies to avoid single-point dependencies, altering investment flows and competitive dynamics.

– Compliance and transaction costs: Companies face layered regulatory regimes and increased due diligence obligations. That raises the expense of cross-border commerce, discourages smaller players from global expansion and incentivizes regional blocs to develop divergent standards.

These shifts encourage blocs organized around practical supply-chain logic-regional manufacturing hubs in East Asia, tailored regulatory regimes in Europe, and selective reshoring in North America. The result: higher prices for consumers, constrained market access for exporters, and an environment in which businesses must choose between commercial opportunity and geopolitical compliance.

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Geopolitical implications: who benefits, who loses
In a more fragmented system, revisionist powers such as China and Russia can exploit gaps created by weakened collective institutions. They pursue influence through bilateral deals, infrastructure investment and targeted pressure campaigns. At the same time, U.S. partners may recalibrate foreign policy to hedge against uncertain American leadership-strengthening ties with each other, investing in independent capabilities or pursuing pragmatic accommodations with rivals.

The cumulative effect is not merely strategic; it has economic and human consequences. Slower coordination on global health and climate responses increases costs and suffering. Eroded arms-control frameworks heighten the risk of miscalculation. And inconsistent trade rules undermine growth prospects for export-dependent communities.

Policy levers to stabilize and renew cooperation
Policymakers, legislatures and civil society can take concrete steps to arrest drift and rebuild durable mechanisms that reduce the chance of sudden reversals.

– Institutionalize commitments: Legislative measures can enshrine treaty obligations and funding streams that are less vulnerable to executive fluctuation. Codifying certain alliance commitments and funding for diplomacy and development creates continuity that allies can rely on.

– Reinvest in diplomacy and multilateralism: Restoring steady, well-resourced diplomatic engagement-especially in health, climate and nonproliferation-improves the ability to lead coalitions during crises. Predictable financing for global programs reduces the risk that emergency responses will be politicized.

– Harmonize allied economic tools: Allies can coordinate export-control lists, sanctions criteria and investment-screening frameworks to avoid fragmented approaches that penalize third parties and destabilize supply chains. Jointly calibrated measures maintain leverage while reducing the burden on businesses.

– Strengthen oversight and transparency: Robust congressional oversight and transparent legal benchmarks for the use of emergency authorities or trade remedies can temper abrupt policy shifts, ensuring that major strategic choices receive broader consensus.

– Empower civil society and the private sector: NGOs, think tanks and industry consortia can provide monitoring, legal challenges and pressure campaigns that reinforce norms and hold governments accountable to commitments made in international fora.

Short-term, high-impact actions could include a multilateral agreement to protect health-data sharing in outbreaks, an allied compact on semiconductor supply-chain resilience, and expedited agreements on mutual recognition of certain regulatory standards to ease trade frictions.

Reframing the debate: predictability as strategy
The central strategic advantage of a rules-based order is predictability. States that can trust the system to uphold contracts, resolve disputes and coordinate defense are better able to invest, cooperate and deter aggression. When predictability erodes, risk premiums rise-on investment, on diplomacy and on the calculation of adversaries.

Imagine a marina whose buoys and charts are suddenly unreliable: commercial mariners will divert, insurers will raise rates, and smaller operators will stop sailing. The oceans remain the same, but the cost and danger of navigation increase. The international order functions similarly; when markers of reliability shift, the global economy and security environment become more costly and hazardous to traverse.

Conclusion: choices ahead and what to watch
The next phase will be decisive. If U.S. policy moves toward institutional reinforcement, coordinated economic tools and sustained diplomacy, many of the current strains can be managed and reversed. If unilateral tactics continue without allied calibration, the longer-term result is a more layered, competitive international system with fewer common rules-and greater risk of misstep.

Watch for three indicators of whether the rules-based order is stabilizing: (1) legislative measures that lock in treaty and funding commitments; (2) formal allied coordination on sanctions, export controls and defense posture; and (3) renewed investment in global health and arms-control frameworks. How Washington, allied capitals and nonstate actors respond in the coming months will determine whether recent ruptures are temporary shocks or the start of a lasting realignment of international governance.

TAGGED:Donald TrumpOpinionUSA
By Ava Thompson
A seasoned investigative journalist known for her sharp wit and tenacity.
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