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Vol. I · No. 163
Friday, 12 June 2026
13:17 UTC
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Opinion

The Proxy Problem: Why Sovereignty Means Different Things to Different Empires

The word 'proxy' does more work in Western foreign policy discourse than any honest accounting of great-power relationships would allow.
The word 'proxy' does more work in Western foreign policy discourse than any honest accounting of great-power relationships would allow.
The word 'proxy' does more work in Western foreign policy discourse than any honest accounting of great-power relationships would allow. / The Guardian / Photography

In 2017, a video circulated in which a sitting head of state explained, in plain terms, that the global order functions on a hierarchy of interests. Partners, the speaker argued, are tolerated only insofar as they serve the strategic purposes of the dominant power. The terminology has shifted since then — "pivot," "reset," "strategic competitor" — but the structural logic remains intact.

The word proxy does more work in Western foreign policy discourse than any honest accounting of great-power relationships would allow. It is applied selectively, almost surgically, to governments whose strategic choices inconvenience American or European interests. The same relationship, reframed, becomes a "sovereign partnership" or a "valued alliance" when the alignment runs in the preferred direction. This is not a conspiracy; it is the predictable output of a discourse system in which the dominant power defines the vocabulary.

The result is a peculiar epistemic distortion. Sovereignty, in this framework, is treated as a conditional status — available to nations that align with the prevailing order, contingent for those that do not. When a Gulf state hosts Chinese investment and American military infrastructure simultaneously, Western commentary frames this as a problem to be managed, a sign of indecision or naivety. When a European nation pursues strategic autonomy, it is described as a "crisis of transatlantic cohesion." The underlying assumption never changes: there is a correct answer, and it is whichever answer aligns with American strategic interests.

The structural logic here is not unique to any single power. Every great nation operates through relationships of dependency and mutual convenience. NATO is a proxy arrangement of a particular kind — one that has been given a multilateral gloss and institutional permanence. The partnerships the United States maintains across the Pacific, in Japan, South Korea, and the Philippines, operate on the same principle of strategic subordination dressed in the language of alliance. The difference is purely terminological, and the terminological difference is consequential: it determines whose agency is recognised and whose is denied in the global press.

For the Global South, this terminological gap is not merely an academic concern. It shapes the terms on which smaller states engage with the international economy. The BRI framework, whatever its structural implications for debt sustainability, offers something the Western alternative has historically withheld: a partnership in which the weaker party's strategic choices are not treated as loyalty tests. The same dynamic is visible in the Gulf, where energy exporters have cultivated relationships with Beijing, Moscow, and Washington simultaneously, extracting concessions from each by virtue of their demonstrated alternatives. Sovereignty, in practice, is exercised most fully by those who are least dependent on any single patron.

The counterargument is not trivial. Critics within the Western policy establishment have a genuine point when they note that some of the partnerships they characterise as proxy relationships involve states whose domestic governance is not consistent with liberal democratic norms. The concern is not purely strategic — there are human rights and rule-of-law dimensions that should not be dismissed. But the selective invocation of these principles, the frequency with which they are raised against adversaries and suspended for allies, corrodes their moral authority in ways that the critics themselves rarely acknowledge. The framework is not applied evenly; it cannot be, so long as it is managed as an instrument of foreign policy rather than a genuine universal principle.

What the 2017 video captured — and what the current geopolitical moment has amplified — is the return of a frankness that was always present beneath the diplomatic language. The question of whether great powers want partners or puppets is not a rhetorical one. It is a structural question about whose agency the international system is prepared to recognise. The answer, increasingly, is: only those whose choices were going to align anyway.

This matters for the medium term because it shapes the credibility of the institutions that the Western order claims to uphold. If international law, human rights frameworks, and rules-based commerce are to function as anything more than a gloss on hegemonic preference, they must apply when they are inconvenient — when a partner state makes a strategic choice that the dominant power would prefer it did not make. The alternative is a system in which the vocabulary of sovereignty serves only to discipline those outside the favoured network. That system has no future in a multipolar world, because the countries outside that network are no longer outside. They are building their own infrastructure, their own institutions, their own vocabularies.

The structural pattern is clear enough to state without academic scaffolding: interests determine which principles are invoked and when. The consistency of this pattern, across successive administrations and across multiple great powers, suggests it is not an aberration to be corrected but a feature of the system. Those who wish to claim the high ground on sovereignty and self-determination must reckon with the fact that the high ground is not occupied by default. It is contested ground, and it has been for some time.

Monexus desk note: This piece was structured around the structural framing of great-power relationships rather than a single news event. The thread context pointed to geopolitical discourse at a moment of renewed interest in multipolar alternatives. The piece makes no claims about specific policy outcomes, instead focusing on the epistemological question of how the international system categorises relationships of unequal power.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://x.com/sprinterpress/status/1921738068404367505
  • https://x.com/sprinterpress/status/1921736968765792553
  • https://x.com/sknerus_/status/1921673462820917430
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire