The Week the New Global Reality Showed Itself
Historians may look back on this week as one of the most pivotal moments in geopolitics since the Soviet Union's collapse. President Trump is heading to China for a summit with Xi Jinping that could reshape the Asia-Pacific, while Vladimir Putin appears under mounting pressure to end the Ukraine war and pivot toward Europe for economic salvation. Are we witnessing the crystallization of a new world order — or the fracturing of the old one before its successor is clear? The convergence of these three crises raises a fundamental question: can the great powers stabilize their relationships before internal political tensions tear their plans apart?
Punti chiave
Putin has conceded Russia cannot win in Ukraine and is seeking a peace deal, marking the first time since World War II that Russia has been demonstrably weak rather than a regional threat.
China desperately needs economic access to the United States and is willing to make military concessions — including a likely settlement on Taiwan as an autonomous region — to secure it.
Europe now faces a critical choice: unify as a coherent political power capable of negotiating with Russia, or remain divided and allow Putin to exploit national differences for economic partnerships.
The Trump-Xi summit is not a negotiation but a blessing of an already-completed deal worked out by officials in South Korea, signaling the U.S.-China relationship is being fundamentally reset.
Iran's closure of the Straits of Hormuz appears to be a last-ditch effort to sabotage the U.S.-China rapprochement, but with Russia pivoting to Europe and China aligning with America, Tehran is increasingly isolated.
In breve
The old geopolitical order is collapsing in real time: Russia has effectively lost in Ukraine and is turning to Europe for rescue, China is negotiating a grand bargain with the United States to save its economy, and Europe faces an existential choice about whether it can act as a unified power or remain a fractured continent vulnerable to division.
Putin's Pivot: From War to Negotiation
Russia admits defeat in Ukraine and turns to Europe for economic rescue.
Vladimir Putin placed a call to President Trump — not the other way around — and offered a financial arrangement with the United States, signaling a dramatic shift. More significantly, Putin stated publicly that «the war is going to come to an end soon», the first time he has conceded Russia will not conquer Ukraine. This marks a fundamental break: Russia has not been demonstrably weak since World War II, and its inability to subdue Ukraine has destroyed its claim to regional power status.
Putin's economic desperation is acute. Russia cannot print more money without exacerbating already severe inflation, leaving the Kremlin unable to pay factories, soldiers, and essential services. With the U.S. and China moving toward rapprochement, Putin is looking to Europe — not America or China — for investment and trade. He even suggested Gerhard Schröder, the former German chancellor with deep ties to Russian energy, as a mediator. This is not just about ending the war; it is about Russia's identity crisis as it realizes it is no longer a global or even regional power.
Internally, Putin appears under pressure from intelligence and military factions frustrated by the war's failure. Rumors suggest elements within Russia's security apparatus have turned hostile, forcing Putin to admit what he long resisted: the war is lost. The challenge now is whether Russia can pivot from adversary to partner with Europe, and whether Europe is capable of responding as a unified actor.
Europe's Existential Question
Russia's weakness forces Europe to decide if it's a unified power or fractured continent.
“The fundamental question now for the Russians is going to be, can they divide the Europeans? In other words, can they find certain allies in Europe who are willing to take advantage of the economic possibilities? I don't think it was accidental they asked for a German to be the negotiator.”
The Emerging U.S.-China Grand Bargain
The Summit Is a Blessing, Not a Negotiation
The real U.S.-China deal is being finalized in South Korea right now.
The Summit Is a Blessing, Not a Negotiation
Summits between great powers are not where deals are made — they are where deals are blessed. U.S. and Chinese officials are meeting in South Korea this week to finalize the agreement that Trump and Xi will announce. The May 14 summit in Beijing will be ceremonial, not substantive. The hard work has already been done.
Iran's Last Play: Sabotaging the Summit
Tehran closes Hormuz to pressure the U.S., but isolation looms.
Iran's closure of the Straits of Hormuz appears designed to sabotage the U.S.-China summit by demonstrating American weakness and forcing Washington to choose between opening the strait and consummating the deal with Beijing. The strategy is unlikely to work. China is not providing meaningful support to Iran, even though the two signed a mutual defense treaty. Russia is pivoting to Europe. Tehran is increasingly isolated.
The United States has achieved most of its military objectives against Iran but cannot invade — occupying a well-armed, mountainous country with a trained Revolutionary Guard Corps would be precisely the quagmire Trump promised to avoid. The summit itself may become the trigger that ends the war. Once Iran sees that China will not help and Russia is focused elsewhere, the calculus shifts. The U.S. has leverage, and Iran's options are narrowing.
Key Figures Driving the Shift
Poland's rise and Europe's internal fractures will define the next era.
What Comes Next: The Unanswered Question
Europe must decide what it is — or the new order will be decided without it.
The storm has arrived, and the old system is breaking apart. Russia has admitted weakness. China is negotiating subordination of its military ambitions to economic survival. The United States is orchestrating a new concert of powers. But one player remains undefined: Europe.
Europe is, taken together, the world's second-largest economy. But it is not a unified actor. Britain, France, and Germany pursue different foreign and defense policies. Eastern Europe — Poland, the Baltics, Romania, Hungary — has fundamentally different interests than the West. Putin's play is to exploit these fractures, offering economic partnerships to Germany while isolating Poland and the eastern flank. If Europe cannot answer the question «What are we?» then the new geopolitical order will be written without it — or worse, against it.
The week has shown us the contours of the new reality. Whether that reality stabilizes or fractures further depends on whether Europe can act as one.
Persone
Glossario
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