Governance

Beyond Blocs: How Nations Navigate the Fracturing Global Order

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The world isn’t simply splitting between East and West—it’s fragmenting into a complex web of strategic autonomy, hedged alliances, and national self-interest.

When BRICS welcomed four new members on January 1, 2024—Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates—and then announced ten additional “partner countries” at its Kazan summit in October, Western analysts scrambled to decode what this expansion meant for the international system. Was this the birth of an anti-Western bloc? A challenge to dollar hegemony? The formalization of a new Cold War divide?

The reality is far more nuanced, and arguably more consequential. What we’re witnessing isn’t the clean bifurcation of a new Cold War, but rather the messy emergence of a multipolar world order where nations increasingly refuse to choose sides—even as the pressure to do so intensifies. The question facing capitals from New Delhi to Brasília, from Jakarta to Riyadh, isn’t whether to align with Washington or Beijing. It’s how to maximize national advantage while navigating between competing power centers that each offer different combinations of economic opportunity, security partnerships, and geopolitical leverage.

This strategic complexity represents a fundamental departure from the post-Cold War “unipolar moment” and demands a more sophisticated understanding of how power actually operates in 2024.

The Death of Easy Alignment

The numbers tell a striking story. According to the IMF’s 2024 data, BRICS countries now account for 41 percent of global GDP when measured by purchasing power parity. Yet this statistic obscures more than it reveals. BRICS isn’t a unified bloc in any meaningful sense—it’s a loose coalition of countries with divergent interests, competing territorial disputes, and vastly different governance models. China’s economy is six times larger than Russia’s. India and China fought a border war in 2020 and maintain 50,000 troops each along their disputed Himalayan frontier. Brazil’s democratic institutions bear little resemblance to Iran’s theocratic system.

What unites BRICS members isn’t ideology or even shared strategic interests. It’s a common desire for greater autonomy from Western-dominated institutions and a multipolar global architecture that affords them more influence. As Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar stated at the Kazan summit: “This economic, political, and cultural rebalancing has now reached a point where we can contemplate real multipolarity.”

Consider how global trade patterns have evolved. The World Trade Organization reported in 2024 that US-China bilateral trade grew more slowly than either country’s trade with the rest of the world—evidence of deliberate diversification rather than decoupling. Meanwhile, China’s 2024 trade surplus exceeded one trillion dollars, while the US trade deficit widened to record levels, driven not primarily by tariffs or trade policy, but by fundamental macroeconomic imbalances: weak Chinese consumer demand pushing exports, and strong US fiscal expansion pulling in imports.

The IMF’s External Sector Report confirms that global current account balances widened by 0.6 percentage points of world GDP in 2024, reversing a two-decade narrowing trend. Yet this wasn’t driven by geopolitical bloc formation—it reflected domestic policy choices in individual countries that happen to align with divergent economic strategies.

The Strategic Autonomy Imperative

No country embodies the complexity of modern alignment choices better than India. With the world’s largest population, fastest-growing major economy, and a geographic position straddling South Asia, the Indian Ocean, and the Indo-Pacific, India has systematically refused to choose between competing power centers.

India participates in the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue alongside the United States, Japan, and Australia—a grouping widely seen as aimed at countering Chinese influence. Simultaneously, India remains Russia’s largest arms customer, purchasing 70 percent of its military equipment from Moscow, and has increased bilateral trade with Russia by 400 percent since 2022, largely through discounted oil purchases. India also engages China through BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, even while maintaining significant military deployments along their disputed border.

This isn’t contradiction—it’s what Indian policymakers call “strategic autonomy,” an evolved version of Cold War non-alignment adapted for a multipolar era. As a senior Indian diplomat explained to me recently, “We judge each issue on its merits relative to our national interest. Why should we sacrifice our relationship with Russia to satisfy American preferences when Russia supplies our defense needs and offers energy security?”

India’s approach reflects a broader pattern among middle powers. When the UN General Assembly voted in 2023 on resolutions condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, 141 countries supported the measure, but 52 either voted against, abstained, or were absent. Of those 52, 45 were from the Global South. Research analyzing these voting patterns found that abstentions were primarily driven by Global South membership, while Russian aid recipients were more likely to vote in Russia’s favor.

Critically, these voting patterns don’t reflect a coherent anti-Western coalition. They reveal countries pursuing distinct national interests that happen to diverge from Western positions. Countries with significant trade dependencies on Russia, military equipment supplies from Moscow, or participation in China’s Belt and Road Initiative were less likely to condemn Russian actions—not because of ideological alignment, but because of practical considerations about economic ties and security relationships.

The Economics of Hedging

Follow the money, and the multipolar reality becomes even clearer. According to UN Trade and Development data, global trade hit a record $33 trillion in 2024, expanding 3.7 percent. Services drove growth, rising 9 percent annually, while goods trade grew 2 percent. Developing economies outpaced developed nations, with imports and exports rising 4 percent for the year, driven mainly by East and South Asia.

Yet beneath these aggregate figures lies a world of hedging behavior. Take Saudi Arabia’s economic strategy. The kingdom has deepened defense cooperation with the United States while simultaneously pursuing major investment partnerships with China, joining the Shanghai Cooperation Organization as a dialogue partner, and exploring BRICS membership. Saudi Arabia isn’t choosing between Washington and Beijing—it’s leveraging its position as the world’s largest oil exporter to extract maximum benefit from both.

Similarly, the United Arab Emirates joined BRICS in 2024 while maintaining its position as a major US security partner and hosting American military bases. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has applied for BRICS membership while remaining a NATO member—a combination that would have been unthinkable during the Cold War but makes perfect sense in today’s multipolar environment.

The economic logic is straightforward. In 2024, China produced 32 percent of global manufacturing output compared to 16 percent for the United States. China has also become competitive in advanced technologies ranging from electric vehicles to artificial intelligence. For countries seeking infrastructure development, manufacturing partnerships, or technology transfer, China often offers more attractive terms than Western alternatives. But for financial services, advanced chips, and certain defense technologies, Western countries maintain decisive advantages.

Why choose when you can hedge? This is the fundamental insight driving strategic behavior across the Global South and among middle powers.

The Institutional Breakdown

The multipolar shift is perhaps most visible in the declining effectiveness of postwar multilateral institutions. The UN Security Council has reached what analysts describe as “quasi-paralysis” on major conflicts. Russia’s veto power has provided political immunity for its Ukraine invasion, while the council proved equally ineffective in Gaza, where vetoes and procedural disputes prevented meaningful action despite the humanitarian catastrophe.

The World Trade Organization has struggled to adapt its rules to digital trade, state capitalism, and industrial policy. The IMF and World Bank face declining legitimacy in much of the Global South, where they’re viewed as instruments of Western economic ideology. Meanwhile, China has established alternative institutions—the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the New Development Bank, and the Belt and Road Initiative—that offer developing countries access to capital without the governance conditions attached to Western lending.

Yet these alternative institutions haven’t displaced the Bretton Woods system; they’ve supplemented it. Most countries maintain relationships with both Western and Chinese-led institutions, accessing whichever offers better terms for specific projects. This institutional pluralism reflects the broader multipolar logic: diversify partnerships, maximize options, avoid dependence on any single power center.

Consider voting patterns in the UN General Assembly. A 2024 Bruegel Institute analysis of thousands of UN votes found that European alignment with Chinese voting positions declined from 0.7 in the early 2010s to between 0.55 and 0.61 currently—a modest but meaningful shift that coincides with Xi Jinping’s more assertive foreign policy. Yet this doesn’t mean European countries have aligned more closely with US positions. Instead, it reflects growing divergence between major powers that leaves middle powers with more complex calculations.

The same analysis found that when China and the United States take opposite positions—which occurs in 84.7 percent of UN votes—countries respond based on specific national interests rather than bloc loyalty. Global South countries display higher alignment with Chinese positions on issues related to sovereignty, development rights, and opposition to humanitarian intervention. But this doesn’t translate into automatic support for Chinese positions on security issues or territorial disputes.

Technology as Battleground and Bridge

Nowhere is multipolar complexity more evident than in technology governance. The semiconductor industry illustrates the challenge. The United States, Netherlands, and Japan coordinate export controls on advanced chipmaking equipment to China. Yet China remains the world’s largest semiconductor market, and most major chip companies derive significant revenue from Chinese customers.

Countries face an impossible choice: align with US technology restrictions and sacrifice access to the Chinese market, or maintain Chinese market access and risk US sanctions. Most have pursued a middle path—implementing some restrictions while maintaining maximum permissible engagement with China.

The same dynamic plays out in artificial intelligence governance, data localization requirements, and digital infrastructure. Western countries promote their regulatory frameworks emphasizing privacy and competition. China offers a model emphasizing sovereignty and state oversight. Most countries adopt hybrid approaches, cherry-picking elements from different models based on domestic political considerations.

This technological fragmentation imposes real costs. Supply chains become less efficient. Standards proliferate. Innovation faces barriers. Yet it also creates opportunities for countries that position themselves as bridges between competing technological ecosystems. Singapore, for example, has positioned itself as a neutral hub for both Western and Chinese technology firms, offering access to both markets while maintaining regulatory credibility with each.

The Climate Complication

Climate change should be the ultimate multilateral challenge—a threat that affects all countries and requires collective action. Yet even here, multipolarity creates obstacles. COP28 in late 2023 demonstrated yet again how difficult it is to achieve consensus when countries have vastly different development priorities, historical responsibilities for emissions, and capacities to transition to clean energy.

Western countries push for ambitious emission reduction targets and rapid transition away from fossil fuels. China and India argue that developed countries must provide significantly more climate finance to enable developing country transitions, given that Western industrialization caused the bulk of historical emissions. Gulf states seek to protect oil and gas revenues. Small island states face existential threats from sea level rise and demand far more aggressive action than major emitters are willing to contemplate.

In a multipolar world, no single power or bloc can impose its preferred climate framework on others. Progress requires painstaking negotiation among numerous power centers with conflicting interests. The result is often the lowest common denominator—agreements that sound ambitious but lack enforcement mechanisms or sufficient ambition to address the scale of the challenge.

Yet multipolarity also enables innovation. China has become the world’s dominant manufacturer of solar panels, wind turbines, and electric vehicles—not through multilateral consensus but through massive state-directed industrial policy. India leads the International Solar Alliance, a coalition of solar-rich countries pursuing South-South cooperation on renewable energy. These parallel initiatives sometimes achieve more than formal multilateral processes precisely because they don’t require universal consensus.

Where Multipolarity Leads

Three possible futures emerge from current trends, each with profound implications for global stability and prosperity.

The first is managed multipolarity—a world where major powers and middle powers negotiate new rules of the road that accommodate diverse interests while maintaining sufficient cooperation on shared challenges. This requires Western powers accepting diminished influence, rising powers exercising restraint in pursuing their interests, and middle powers resisting pressure to choose sides. It’s the most desirable outcome but perhaps the least likely, given the competitive dynamics already underway.

The second is chaotic fragmentation—the path we’re currently on. Trade restrictions proliferate: countries imposed about 3,200 new trade restrictions in 2022 and 3,000 in 2023, up from 1,100 in 2019 according to Global Trade Alert data. Security partnerships multiply and sometimes conflict. Technology ecosystems diverge. International institutions decline in effectiveness. Countries hedge and hedge again, creating a complex web of overlapping and sometimes contradictory commitments. This approach may avoid direct confrontation between major powers but imposes mounting costs through inefficiency, uncertainty, and the inability to address collective challenges.

The third is bipolar breakdown—a scenario where mounting tensions between the United States and China force countries to make the binary choices they’ve thus far avoided. This could result from a Taiwan crisis, a major financial crisis, or an escalating technology war that makes hedging untenable. The result would resemble a new Cold War, though with important differences: economic interdependence remains far deeper than during the original Cold War, nuclear arsenals are more widely distributed, and many countries are more powerful and independent than during the bipolar era.

Policy Implications for 2025 and Beyond

For Western policymakers, the key insight is that most countries aren’t looking to join an anti-Western bloc—they’re pursuing strategic autonomy. Framing the world as democracy versus autocracy or West versus the rest creates a self-fulfilling prophecy that drives countries into opposing camps. A more sophisticated approach recognizes legitimate demands for greater voice in global governance, acknowledges the appeal of Chinese economic partnerships, and competes on the substance of what the West offers rather than demanding loyalty.

This means reform of international institutions to give emerging economies greater decision-making power. It means offering competitive alternatives to Chinese infrastructure finance rather than simply criticizing the Belt and Road Initiative. It means accepting that countries will maintain relationships with Russia, China, and other rivals even while partnering with the West on specific issues.

For rising powers like China and India, multipolarity offers opportunities but also requires restraint. China’s wolf warrior diplomacy and coercive economic tactics have often backfired, strengthening US alliances and prompting countries to hedge more heavily. A more confident China could afford to be less coercive, recognizing that genuine multipolarity requires multiple independent power centers, not Chinese dominance replacing American hegemony.

For middle powers and Global South countries, the imperative is to build the domestic capabilities that make strategic autonomy sustainable. This means investing in defense production to reduce dependence on single suppliers, diversifying trade relationships, developing indigenous technology capabilities, and building regional coalitions that amplify their voices in global forums.

The Uncomfortable Reality

The uncomfortable truth about multipolarity is that it makes everything harder. Negotiating climate agreements becomes more complex. Pandemic response requires coordination among more actors. Trade rules must accommodate more diverse economic models. Security architectures multiply rather than consolidate.

Yet there’s no going back to unipolarity, even if it were desirable. The world’s 8 billion people live in countries with vastly different histories, cultures, and interests. The notion that any single country or small group of countries should write the rules for everyone else lacks legitimacy outside the West. The postwar liberal international order delivered unprecedented prosperity and avoided great power war for eight decades—remarkable achievements worth preserving. But that order reflected the power realities of 1945, not 2024.

The question isn’t whether we want multipolarity—it’s already here. The question is whether we can manage it wisely, preserving cooperation where it matters most while accommodating legitimate demands for greater equity and voice. The alternative to managed multipolarity isn’t a restoration of the old order. It’s chaos and, potentially, conflict on a scale the postwar era has been fortunate enough to avoid.

As Vladimir Putin said at the November 2024 Valdai Discussion Club, “The current of global politics is running from the crumbling hegemonic world towards growing diversity, while the West is trying to swim against the tide.” One needn’t agree with Putin’s politics to recognize the basic truth: the multipolar world is not a disruption of the natural order. It’s a return to the historical norm, where power is distributed among numerous centers and countries navigate complex relationships based on interest rather than ideology.

The sooner we accept this reality and develop strategies suited to it, the better positioned we’ll be to address the genuine challenges—climate change, pandemic disease, nuclear proliferation, economic development—that affect all countries regardless of their alignment preferences.

Success in a multipolar world requires what it has always required: diplomatic skill, strategic patience, and recognition that other countries have legitimate interests that may differ from our own. The era of imposing solutions from above is ending. The era of negotiating them among equals—or at least rough equals—is beginning. Whether this transition proves peaceful and productive or chaotic and conflictual will define the next quarter century.


Author is a Senior Opinion Columnist and Policy Expert on Foreign Policy, International Security, and Global Governance. Former adviser to think tanks and government officials on geopolitical risk assessment. Views expressed are the author’s own.

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