In the span of just one year, the United States has managed to unsettle allies, escalate conflict in the Middle East, and alienate key African partners. None of these developments, taken individually, would be unprecedented. Together, however, they point to something deeper: a shift in American diplomacy from persuasion to pressure.
This transformation is not without consequences. In a world that is no longer unipolar, power alone is no longer enough.
NATO: From Alliance to Instrument:
For decades, NATO has been the cornerstone of Western cohesion. It was built on consultation, collective defense, and shared strategic vision. Yet recent tensions reveal a different dynamic. Washington’s expectation that European allies would automatically align with its military posture towards Iran has been met with resistance, not defiance, but discomfort.
European capitals have signaled, quietly but firmly, that they will not be drawn into conflicts they neither shaped nor approved.The issue is not burden-sharing. It is decision-sharing. By acting first and consulting later, the United States risks turning NATO into something it was never meant to be: not a partnership, but an instrument.
Iran: The Return of Escalation Diplomacy:
The confrontation with Iran marks a familiar pattern in American foreign policy, one that prioritizes pressure over process. The logic is simple: economic sanctions, military deterrence, and strategic isolation to force concessions. But reality has proven more complex. Instead of compliance, escalation has produced escalation.
The breakdown of diplomatic channels has narrowed options on both sides, making conflict less avoidable, not more. The ripple effects are already visible: instability in energy markets, heightened regional tensions, and a reluctance among U.S. allies to follow Washington into another open-ended confrontation.
What is striking is not the use of force, but the absence of a credible diplomatic horizon. Without an off-ramp, pressure becomes a trap, not only for the target, but for the strategist.
Rwanda, a misread African equation:
Nowhere is the disconnect between Washington and its partners more visible than in Africa.
The U.S. decision to sanction Rwanda over its alleged role in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo reflects a policy that, while principled in intent, appears selective in execution.
Kigali has rejected the accusations, framing its actions within the context of long-standing security threats along its borders. Whether one agrees or not, the broader issue lies elsewhere: the perception of imbalance. Why would some privileged countries in the world be allowed to protect their own citizens and condemn the same principle for others? Aren’t human lives equal?
By taking a punitive stance while also positioning itself as a mediator, Washington risks undermining its own credibility. In a region where history, security, and sovereignty are deeply intertwined, diplomacy requires not only clarity, but equilibrium. Sanctions, in this context, can close doors that dialogue is still trying to open.
Africa and the new strategic autonomy
For many African nations, these developments reinforce a broader lesson: reliance on a single global partner carries risks. A number of governments are increasingly diversifying their partnerships towards China, Russia, the Gulf states, and other emerging actors.
This is not a rejection of the United States. It is an adaptation to a changing world. African diplomacy is becoming more pragmatic, more transactional, and above all, more sovereign. In this environment, influence is no longer granted, it is negotiated.
From leadership to leverage
The United States remains a global power of unmatched reach. But leadership in the 21st century is not measured only by military capability or economic weight. It is measured by the ability to build consensus, maintain trust and act with strategic patience.
Over the past year, Washington has too often relied on leverage openly motivated by an appetite for mineral deals and secretly by financial interests, where it once relied on leadership. The difference is subtle but decisive.
A moment for recalibration for the USA:
The question is not whether the United States will remain influential. It will. The question is whether it will adapt its diplomacy to a world where allies expect consultation not instruction, partners demand respect not alignment and regions like Africa insist on being actors not arenas. If there is a lesson from the past year, it is this: power can impose outcomes but only predictable diplomacy can sustain them.
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