Strangled In The Cradle: Preserving Empire In The Age Of Multipolarity

There’s an old saying: when an empire starts to slip, it tightens its grip. That’s where we are now. The United States, long the unchallenged boss of the global economy, is watching its dominance unravel, not all at once, but piece by piece. The dollar isn’t what it used to be, Washington can’t just dictate terms to the world like it once did, and the international working class—along with the colonized nations of the world—are no longer willing to just sit back and take it.

But empires don’t just fold and walk away. They cling, they strangle, they sabotage. The U.S. ruling class knows that it can’t rule the world like it did in the past—but it sure as hell can make sure no one else does either. If the Global South tries to build its own independent systems, the empire will choke off trade routes, hijack financial networks, militarize supply chains, and plunge whole regions into chaos if necessary.

That’s where we are now. The old unipolar world is dead, but the multipolar world is still in the process of being born. And the U.S. is determined to smother it in the cradle.

Empire in Crisis: Why the U.S. Is Losing Its Grip

There’s no single reason why the U.S. is losing control—it’s a long, slow collapse, a crisis with too many causes to count. The country that once built the world’s factories now builds little more than tech monopolies and military budgets. The endless wars in the Middle East drained its credibility. The financial crashes exposed its economic system as a rigged casino. The rise of China, the defiance of Russia, the revolts across Africa and Latin America—all of it has put the empire on the backfoot.

Now, the ruling class is divided on how to manage this decline. The three factions of the U.S. elite—the Yankee financiers, the Cowboy militarists, and the Digerati tech overlords—all have different priorities, but they all agree on one thing: if the Global South gets its act together, the game is up.

So they’ve gone for a new strategy. Instead of direct control, they’re turning to containment. Instead of just running the world, they’ll block, sabotage, and strangle anything that threatens to break free. This is where technofascism comes in—not old-school colonial rule, but rule through algorithms, financial blockades, digital surveillance, and AI-managed economic warfare.

Latin America: The U.S. Keeps the Monroe Doctrine on Life Support

A Region That Refuses to Stay Colonized

The U.S. has treated Latin America like its backyard for centuries—the place where presidents get overthrown, trade gets dictated, and the economy is permanently kept at the service of Washington. But that grip is slipping. ALBA survived every coup and sanction, CELAC is pushing regional unity, and China has overtaken the U.S. as the region’s largest trading partner. Even Argentina, despite its IMF-debt-choked government, was invited to join BRICS.

This isn’t just a shift in policy—it’s a crisis of control. The Yankee bankers aren’t worried about Venezuela because they care about democracy; they’re worried because if Latin America integrates, the U.S. loses its ability to loot the region.

How Washington Plans to Choke It Off

Weaponized Debt

Argentina’s IMF crisis is an economic gun to the head of Mercosur. As long as the region is buried in debt, Washington can keep its leash tight.


The Lithium Wars

The U.S. can’t afford to lose the lithium triangle (Argentina, Bolivia, Chile)—not with China moving in. So expect “anti-corruption” campaigns, color revolutions, and economic warfare disguised as environmental activism.


Panama Canal Manipulation

If Latin America keeps drifting toward China, expect the U.S. to start “securing” the canal for national security reasons—meaning restricting trade when it suits them.

Africa: AFRICOM and the New Scramble for Resources

A Continent That’s Had Enough

Africa has seen every trick in the imperialist book. Colonialism, neocolonialism, debt slavery, military coups, structural adjustment—you name it, they’ve tried it. But something is shifting. The Alliance of Sahel States (AES)—Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger—has told the West to get lost. They kicked out French troops, abandoned their colonial currency, and started talking to Russia and China instead.

This isn’t just about these three countries—it’s about setting an example. If AES succeeds, more African nations might follow, breaking the chains of Western financial and military control. And that is something Washington cannot allow.

How the Empire Plans to Choke It Off

AFRICOM: The Military Occupation No One Talks About

AFRICOM doesn’t run direct colonial rule—it runs proxy armies, drone bases, and “counterterrorism” operations that just so happen to secure U.S. corporate interests.


AI-Managed Destabilization

Algorithmic blacklists, cyber disinformation, and digital surveillance will be used to shut out African nations that try to break free. The coup model is old—sanctions and AI-driven financial strangulation are the future.


Energy Strangulation

Niger’s uranium fuels France’s nuclear power—if AES decides to keep its own resources, expect rebellions, “human rights” interventions, or just old-fashioned sabotage.

Eurasia: The Nightmare of Land-Based Trade

A Trade Network That Sidesteps the Empire

The U.S. built its empire on controlling the seas. But what happens when the world’s biggest economies start trading by land instead? That’s exactly what’s happening. China, Russia, and Iran are building the Belt & Road Initiative (BRI) and the North-South Transport Corridor—a global economic system that completely bypasses the U.S. and its allies.

For Washington, this is an existential crisis. If these trade routes become dominant, the U.S. loses its ability to dictate economic rules. And if it can’t dictate the rules, the whole global order collapses.

How the Empire Plans to Choke It Off

Weaponizing Separatist Movements

The U.S. is stoking ethnic conflicts and separatist movements in Kazakhstan, Xinjiang, and the Caucasus to disrupt Eurasian trade routes.


Sanctions and Financial Blackouts

Iran and Russia have already been cut from the Western financial system, but the Digerati class wants more—automated AI-driven sanction algorithms to crush entire economies before they can resist.


Proxy War in the Caucasus

The Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict is a NATO-Russia showdown over key Eurasian trade routes. The U.S. will keep this region as unstable as possible to disrupt integration.

The Empire’s Last Move

The U.S. is no longer trying to rule the world—it’s just trying to stop anyone else from ruling themselves.

Latin America must never be allowed to integrate.

Africa must stay an open-air resource mine for the West.

Eurasia must never build an independent trade network.

This is the new face of imperialism—not global conquest, but global sabotage. The U.S. isn’t winning the fight—it’s just making sure no one else does either.

But history teaches us one thing: Empires don’t last forever. And as much as they tighten the chokehold, the world is learning to breathe on its own.

Leave a comment

Website Powered by WordPress.com.

Up ↑