Anonymous ID: a4d517 Feb. 18, 2019, 6 a.m. No.5241158   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1315

I kinda appreciate the different direction geopolitics seems to be taking. Nations looking out more for it's interests, the supranational unions we've become used to falling apart. I predict an increasing aggressive arms race with Russia and China, better weapons to have been made, overall increased technological advancement, and territorial swaps with Russia as the EU falls. Probably within the next decade.

Will the 21st century be defined by the U.S., China, and Russia being competitors?

Anonymous ID: a4d517 Feb. 18, 2019, 6:25 a.m. No.5241356   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1397

>>5241315

I'm sure about them being our allies, sure, how else could ISIS have fallen as quickly as it has? But, look at what's visibly happening on the world stage. Russia and Belarus will re-unify by 2020, the EU will fracture soon enough, and our departure from the INF is sure to open up our capabilities if there will be an arms race with Russia. (Some might already say it's happening now.) We're also not near the end of our trade war with China and the South China Sea issue will remain there. I'm sure privately all three nations are allies, but publicly I'm pretty sure the future is going to be defined as "what superpower can accumulate more power?"