Amid the bloody Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2021 and the escalating tensions across the Taiwan Strait, the geopolitical balance of power has changed significantly in a very short period. If current trends continue, we may be witnessing a tectonic realignment unseen in more than a century.
In 1904, Halford Mackinder delivered a seminal lecture entitled ‘The Geographical Pivot of History’ to a packed house at the Royal Geographical Society in London about the historic changes then taking place on the world stage. Britain was the great power of that historical moment, but its political, military, and economic primacy was under serious challenge from the United States, Germany, and Russia. Mackinder predicted that the ‘heartland’ of Eastern Europe held the key to global hegemony and that the struggle for control over this region would be the next great conflict. Ten years later, when an assassin’s bullet in Sarajevo launched the world into a calamitous war, Mackinder’s analysis proved prescient.
As esteemed historian Jeremy Black argues in this timely new volume, the 2020s may be history’s next great pivot point. The continued volatility of the global system in the wake of a deadly pandemic exacerbates these pressures. At the same time, the American public remains divided by the question of engagement with the outside world, testing the limits of US postwar hegemony. The time has come for a reconsideration of the 120 years from Mackinder’s lecture to now, as well as geopolitics of the present and of the future.
Table of Content
Preface
1. Liberal Unionist Geopolitics and Mackinder
2. From World War One to Its Sequel, 1914–1939
3. American Approaches to Global Struggle
4. The Global World War Two
5. The Liberal Internationalism of Cold War American Geopolitics
6. An Ascendant World Order Slips Under Pressure, 1989–2021
7. The Geopolitics of the Present: Ideas and Realities
8. Into the Future
Notes
Index
About the author
Jeremy Black is a pre-eminent historian, and the author of numerous books, including A Brief History of History; Tank Warfare; and Charting the Past: The Historical Worlds of Eighteenth-Century England. He is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Exeter and a Senior Fellow both of Policy Exchange and of the Foreign Policy Research Institute. Black is a recipient of the Samuel Eliot Morison Prize from the Society for Military History. Follow Black on his website, jeremyblackhistorian.wordpress.com.