Top Stories
Building Bridges Through Words Understanding Militant Ideologies in Modern Contexts Security: Beyond Walls and Weapons Upcoming Events: Connecting Ideas and People Previous Milestones: Reflecting on Our Journey Fatwas: Reclaiming the Spirit of Ethical Guidance Role of NATO in Conflict Resolution Washington Peace Deal Between Congo and Rwanda Social Justice and Equality in the Qur’ān: Implications for Global Peace The Qurʾānic Concept of Human Equality: An Analysis against Racism and Ethnic Discrimination in Contemporary Societies Reinterpreting Dhimmitude: A Reconsideration of Its Social and Political Functions in the Modern Context How China Is Playing the Long Economic War Ukraine Peace Efforts Advance Cautiously Despite Partial Alignment Among Parties How Pakistan-Libya Military Relations Strategic Outreach, Economic Stakes and Geopolitical Implications Aleppo Clashes as Syria and Kurdish-Led SDF Agree to Ceasefire Across the Border, Pakistani Ulema Stand Against Afghan Girls\' Education Ban Pakistan announce 500 fully-funded scholarships for Bangladeshi students in 8 programs How theTaliban regime threat for reginal peace Women Left Behind in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Education System Sudan’s Civil War: Anatomy of the World’s Largest Humanitarian Crisis Changing Security Architecture in Central Asia Pakistan Leads India on Economic and Peace Indicators in 2026 : Gallup Survey Submerged Classrooms, Long-Term Learning Loss Pakistan Security Report 2025: Terrorism Trends and the Peace Deficit HEC’s MAKTAB Initiative Signals a New Era for Higher Education Southern Yemen Faces Tensions and Urgent Need for Peace IUT Strengthens Education Integrity in Bangladesh Pakistan’s Arms Sales Contracts (2024–25) and the Peace Dimension Pakistan\'s Contribution to UN Peacekeeping Operations for Global Peace Pakistan Enhances Educational Cooperation with Sri Lanka through Scholarship The Growing Defense and Economic Nexus of the Muslim World Charter of Trump’s Board of Peace Pakistan & Myanmar Prioritize Education Strategic Saudi defense agreements are redefining the Middle East\'s security architecture What would be the consequences of the U.S.–Iran Conflict on Pakistan? How Indian Cricket Politics Affect Regional Peace The Kashmir issue remains a central peace and stability in South Asia American Weapons in Afghanistan Are Destabilizing Pakistan Global Education Coalition sixth annual meeting A New Chapter for Pakistan’s Universities: Leadership, Stability, and Vision under the New HEC Chairman The Evolution of the IMCTC into a Global Security Pillar Reintegration Initiative: Analyzing the 2026 IMCTC Engagement in Pakistan Psychosocial Warfare and the IMCTC Peace Journalists Initiative (2026) The Concept of ‘Ummah’ in the Qurʾān: Transcending Race, Tribe, and Ethnicity HEC Reforms Regulation, Defends Academic Freedom Pakistan’s Evolving Role in Fostering Peace and Security on the African Continent Recontextualizing Pakistan’s Role in the Board of Peace War in the Middle East: Measuring the Cost The Silent Bridge: Pakistan’s Strategic Neutrality and the Quest for Middle Eastern Stability The Geography of Escalation: Living in an Age of Permanent Crisis Mapping the Educational Crisis in the Middle East Conflict The Blind Alley of “Epic Fury”; A War with no End game A Pakistani Voice Against Digital Islamophobia: A Landmark Academic Contribution World Eye on Pakistan for Middle East Peace Leading with Truth, ICEP’s Analysis Outlasted the Skeptics on Middle East Crisis World Powers Push for Deal U.S. Presents 15-Point Plan and Iran Responds with 5 Conditions Pakistan and Türkiye Open New Chapter in Academic Cooperation with Strategic Initiatives Pakistan at the Crossroads of Global Trade as a Logistics Revolution Unfolds Why Ethical Dialogue necessary in a Diverse Pakistan for a Peacebuilding Initiative Pakistan\\\'s Game-Changer Role for World Peace Entrepreneurship Education Is Shaping Pakistan\'s Economic Future Dr. Jamil Akhtar Featured in Prestigious Brill Encyclopaedia (2026) A Milestone in Global Interfaith Scholarship Peace Light in a Dark Night WAR RESHAPES PAKISTAN’S ECONOMY AND OPEN DOORS FOR INTERPRENEURS From Gaza to Lebanon: ICC, UN, and the Unanswered Duty to Prosecute Can Pakistan turn a temporary ceasefire into lasting middle east peace? Bridging the Gap: Confronting Education Inequality in Pakistan Hierarchical Culture In Pakistani Organizations \"How It Kills Innovation — and What Leaders Can Do About It\" Can Diplomacy Survive the Iran Crisis? Peace Efforts in an Age of Permanent Escalation Why are Peace Talks a US strategic priority? Features of Intellectual Property in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (In the Context of World Intellectual Property Day) A Global Forum for Peace, Governance, and a Better World (France\'s Landmark Contribution to International Dialogue) IS UAE WANT A \\\'CURRENCY SWAP\\\' WITH THE USA Energy War by Sea: The Hormuz Blockade Proves Oil is Still a Weapon The End of Strategic Dependence In Europe? Pakistan\'s Strategic and Structural Evolution from Crisis to Consolidated World Peace Silent Deterrence: Hangor-Class SSP-2800 and Undersea Strategy of Pakistan Inside the $9 Billion Prediction Market Revolution Pakistan at the Crossroads: Between Fragile Stability and the Weight of Structural Crisis WHY DIALOGUE FAILS IN CONFLICT ZONES; A LESSON FOR POLICY MAKERS The Crisis of American Legitimacy in the Post-Unipolar Era THE OIL CLUB UAE JUST QUIT Inside OPEC’s Biggest Defection in Decades — and What It Means for the World The Kashmir Dispute: International Institutional Failure and Humanitarian Consequences
Conflict

The Crisis of American Legitimacy in the Post-Unipolar Era

Amid the transitional phase of the world from the unipolar order led by the US to an increasingly multipolar world, the US-Israel-Iran war has intensified the doubts over the credibility, leadership, and legitimacy of the United States. In today’s world, where the influence of a state depends mainly on attraction rather than coercion, the soft power of the US is increasingly eroding at a time when it is needed the most, as the global opinion shifts due to double standards, hypocrisy, and unilateral actions of the US. While the rising powers seek to assert themselves and the traditional allies re-evaluate their alignment, the US's declining soft power not only calls into question its moral authority but also challenges its ability to lead in a world that is no longer unipolar.

Soft power, a concept coined by Joseph Nye, derives from a state’s culture, ideology, and foreign policy. Following WWII, the foreign policy of the US was largely shaped by the emerging neoliberal order, which promoted democracy, human rights, and liberal values. This vision appealed globally and provided Washington with a legitimate rivalry foundation with the USSR during the Cold War. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Washington justified its intervention in Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 under the banner of ‘war on terrorism’. However, in the contemporary era, the US clearly lacks a widely accepted justification for its actions that are against international norms and laws, fostering mistrust among its Middle East and European allies, and diminishing the weight of its voice in future international discourse.

In the current era, the United States seems to be caught between strategic withdrawal and continued global interventions. Though the National Security Strategy 2025 acknowledged the prolonged military commitments of the US as a reason for its domestic weakening, and called for prioritizing the US’s national borders, economic and industrial growth, the US's continued intervention in the Iran-Israel war explicitly contradicts the stated restraint and the actual policy behavior. This inconsistency uncovers Trump’s weak long-term planning and a tendency to achieve immediate political gains, rather than a sustained strategic vision. This unpredictability raises a question among its allies: if strategy changes with time and pressure, can it still guide a superpower?

This framework must be seen through Robert Keohane’s theory of after hegemony, according to which even when a superpower persists materially, its ability to structure consent declines once its institutional legitimacy weakens. This is precisely what is visible today, i.e., the US’s leadership is merely accepted now out of necessity, not attraction. This is evident from BRICS expansion, Saudi Arabia’s simultaneous engagement with Washington, Beijing, and Moscow, and Europe’s pursuit of its strategic autonomy. This risks the international system being in a ‘systematic drift’ where order is replaced by managed instability. In this way, the US’s leadership no longer operates by default, but as an option among many in the global market of fragmented power, which can soon be replaced.

In the Iran-Israel war, the United States is facing an unintentional but self-created strategic dilemma. The main purpose of the war was to demolish Iran’s nuclear capabilities, but it turned out to be the demise of the US-led global order. The initial stage of war exposed the fragility of its security guarantees among NATO and Middle Eastern allies. At the same time, the accelerating geo-economic shift, particularly de-dollarization, and alternative currency arrangements (Petro yuan) at choke points like the Strait of Hormuz, pose serious challenges to the dollar's reserve currency status, a main structural pillar of the US. In this context, the Strait of Hormuz -not Iran’s nuclear program- is becoming a final litmus test for the US’s hegemonic durability, creating a space where even partial loss of control would signal not just a global setback but the complete erosion of the US’s soft power. 

In the contemporary international system, superpower status is increasingly determined not by coercive power alone but by the ability to sustain trust with middle powers and the Global South. In this way, the legitimacy, soft power, and influence are now shaped by the broader range of actors that shape the outcomes through alignment, geographical importance, and interdependence. In this context, the United States has lost its credibility and trust among the middle powers and has given leverage to China to capitalize on this, and has allowed Beijing to position itself as a more reliable partner through its non-intervention posture, as states now increasingly evaluate power not through military capabilities, but through economic utility and policy consistency. In this sense, the future hierarchy of global influence hinges more on the soft power factor, mainly among the global South and middle powers, which now shape the systemic legitimacy.

The erosion of soft power doesn’t remain confined to Washington alone; it is gradually restructuring the broader architecture of the global system into a more fragmented order. While there’s a shift from rule-based order towards the interest-driven bargain, the institutions are losing their legitimacy, which allows the states to do selective compliance. This makes alliances more transactional, commitments more conditional, and international norms more flexible than binding. It will eventually result in a diffused authority rather than an orderly transition, where no single actor possesses the potential to universalize its vision of order. This system will drift towards a managed instability rather than cohesive leadership.