Between Washington and Beijing: The Middle East's Strategic Gambit
Authors/Creators
- 1. 3rd Year BA International Relations, Faculty of Political Science and Journalism AMU Poznan, Poland.
Description
The strategic architecture of the Middle East is undergoing a fundamental reordering, marked by the decomposition of American hegemony and the emergence of a contested, multipolar landscape. This review analyzes this transition through a synthesized theoretical framework, integrating Hegemonic Stability Theory (HST) and Regional Security Complex Theory (RSCT). It posits that the decline of U.S. primacy has not been succeeded by a new hegemon but has instead activated the region’s inherent security dynamics, transforming it into an increasingly autonomous subsystem. Within this space, global power diffusion intensifies latent regional rivalries. The analysis examines the consequences of U.S. retrenchment, China’s economically driven penetration, and the enhanced agency of regional powers particularly Iran, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Israel in shaping diplomatic and security outcomes. It investigates key mechanisms of this transformation, including the discursive power of think tanks in securitization processes, the logic of Iran’s proxy warfare, the omnidirectional hedging of Gulf monarchies, and the rising stakes of digital sovereignty. The review concludes that the emerging order will be defined less by stable alliances and more by fluid economic partnerships, technological capability, and the adeptness of regional states in leveraging great power competition to advance their strategic autonomy.
Files
MSIJMR2202025 GS.pdf
Files
(299.3 kB)
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Additional details
Dates
- Accepted
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2025-10-13