By Independent News Roundup
In this new geopolitical breakdown, we dive into the latest analysis from the European Council on Foreign Relations and unpack what may be a historic turning point in European strategic thinking.
At this year’s Munich Security Conference, the message coming from mainstream European elites is clear: the liberal “rules-based international order” that defined global politics for nearly three decades is structurally finished. Not weakened. Not wobbling. Finished.
After the Cold War, the West — led by the United States — built a global system rooted in institutions, trade regimes, NATO expansion, and economic integration. The European Union flourished inside that framework. So did globalization.
But today? Washington is no longer the predictable guarantor of that system. Under leaders like Donald Trump, global institutions are questioned, alliances are transactional, and hard power has returned to center stage.
Meanwhile, China and Russia are not just resisting Western dominance — they’re offering alternative models: sovereignty-first diplomacy, multipolarity, civilizational identity, and Global South partnerships. Through platforms like BRICS, a parallel global architecture is emerging.
Add to that the rise of middle powers — Turkey, India, Brazil, Saudi Arabia — and what you get is fragmentation. A competitive mosaic of shifting alliances. Sector-based coalitions. Issue-driven cooperation.
And here’s the real shock: ECFR argues Europe cannot restore the old order.
Instead, Brussels must adapt to multipolarity. Work pragmatically. Form flexible coalitions. Compete with Beijing where necessary. Coordinate with Washington selectively. Engage the Global South strategically.
If this assessment holds, it marks a psychological break from the 1990s-era belief in Western universality.
Is Europe entering a new geopolitical era?
Has multipolarity officially arrived?
And what does this mean for NATO, the EU, Russia, China — and the future of global power?
Watch until the end for a deep strategic breakdown of what could be the end of the liberal international order — and the beginning of something far more unpredictable.