1. United States (US)
Primary Interests:
-
Global hegemony: Maintain military, economic, and technological dominance.
-
Containment of rivals: Counter China’s rise and Russia’s aggression (NATO expansion, Indo-Pacific alliances like AUKUS, Quad).
-
Energy security: Protect oil routes (Middle East, Strait of Hormuz).
-
Promotion of democracy & human rights: Often used as leverage in foreign policy (e.g., sanctions on authoritarian regimes).
-
Cybersecurity & tech dominance: Lead in AI, semiconductors, and space (competition with China).
Key Tools:
-
Military alliances (NATO, bilateral pacts).
-
Economic sanctions (e.g., on Russia, Iran).
-
Dollar dominance (SWIFT system, trade restrictions).
2. China
Primary Interests:
-
Territorial expansion: Secure control over Taiwan, South China Sea, and disputed borders (India, Japan).
-
Economic dominance: Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), yuan internationalization, tech self-reliance (semiconductors).
-
Global governance influence: Expand roles in UN, WHO, and BRICS to counter Western-led institutions.
-
Military modernization: Challenge US naval power in Indo-Pacific.
-
Resource security: Secure food, energy, and rare earth supply chains (Africa, Latin America).
Key Tools:
-
Economic coercion (trade bans, debt diplomacy).
-
Military buildup (artificial islands, hypersonic missiles).
-
Diplomatic alliances (Russia, Pakistan, African states).
3. Russia
Primary Interests:
-
Great power status: Maintain influence over former Soviet states (Ukraine, Belarus, Central Asia).
-
Energy leverage: Use oil/gas exports (Europe) as political weapon.
-
Military deterrence: Nuclear parity with US, hybrid warfare (cyberattacks, disinformation).
-
Undermine NATO/West: Support anti-US regimes (Syria, Venezuela, Iran).
-
Arctic dominance: Secure Northern Sea Route and resources.
Key Tools:
-
Energy geopolitics (Gazprom, Nord Stream pipelines).
-
Proxy wars (Wagner Group in Africa/Ukraine).
-
Cyber warfare (election interference, infrastructure hacking).
4. United Kingdom (UK)
Primary Interests:
-
Post-Brexit relevance: Strengthen ties with US (AUKUS), Commonwealth, and EU on security.
-
Financial hub stability: Protect London’s banking sector from sanctions fallout.
-
Nuclear deterrent: Maintain Trident program and NATO commitments.
-
Global health/democracy: Vaccine diplomacy, anti-authoritarian stance (e.g., Hong Kong criticism).
-
Arctic & Atlantic security: Counter Russia in Northern Europe.
Key Tools:
-
Intelligence-sharing (Five Eyes alliance).
-
Sanctions coordination with US/EU.
-
Naval power projection (Carrier Strike Group deployments).
5. France
Primary Interests:
-
European strategic autonomy: Reduce NATO/US dependency (e.g., push for EU defense).
-
African influence: Military presence in Sahel (anti-jihadist ops, resource access).
-
Nuclear independence: Maintain Force de Frappe as deterrent.
-
Mediterranean security: Counter Turkey, Russia in Libya/Syria.
-
Climate leadership: Push for green energy deals in Africa/Asia.
Key Tools:
-
Military interventions (Mali, Chad).
-
Arms exports (biggest EU seller to Middle East/India).
-
EU diplomacy (Franco-German engine).
Common Threads & Conflicts
-
US vs. China/Russia: Cold War-style rivalry over tech, trade, and military spheres.
-
France/UK vs. Russia: NATO tensions (Ukraine, cyber threats).
-
China/Russia alignment: Informal alliance to counter US, but with economic tensions.
-
P5 Veto Power: Used to block actions against their interests (e.g., Russia on Syria, US on Israel).