In 2016, Singapore’s then-Defense Minister Ng Eng Hen was asked in Parliament how the country would respond if the United States were to pull back from its security commitments in Asia. At the time, the question was hypothetical.
Today, with Donald Trump in his second term and Ng stepping down after 14 years as Singapore’s longest-serving defense chief, the question has become reality. The American security umbrella – long taken for granted by many of its allies – appears to be fraying.
The post-WWII order, underwritten by US military dominance and financial centrality, is no longer assured. And in anticipation of a post-Pax Americana world, states are adjusting accordingly for a new order.
American fault lines
The first fault line lies in deterrence. For decades, US allies were content to rely on American protection rather than build up their own armed forces. That era is over. Germany has committed US$107 billion to defense upgrades. Poland now spends 4% of GDP on its military – more than any other NATO member.
Asia tells a similar story. Japan is doubling its defense budget by 2027, upending long-standing pacifist traditions. In South Korea, 76% of citizens now support developing nuclear weapons – an idea once unthinkable under the US nuclear umbrella. Across both regions, allies are hedging against the possibility of American abandonment.
The second fault line is financial. The American military’s reach has long been sustained by global demand for US Treasuries. But the foundations of that system are weakening. In FY2023, the US ran a budget deficit of $1.7 trillion, $1.1 trillion of which went to defense and veterans’ spending.
Meanwhile, foreign appetite for American debt is shrinking. Overseas ownership of US Treasuries has dropped from 42% in 2013 to 31% in 2023. China alone has reduced its holdings by more than $330 billion. The dollar’s share of global foreign reserves, once above 70% in 1999, has fallen to 58%.
What’s more, the weaponization of the dollar – through sanctions, export controls and financial restrictions – has spurred countermeasures. The BRICS bloc is expanding non-dollar trade and exploring alternatives like central bank digital currencies. Economist Dr Yanis Varoufakis calls this the rise of “cloud capital”, a global financial architecture slowly decoupling from American control.
The third fault line is institutional. The legitimacy of US leadership was once rooted in its commitment to multilateralism. Today, that commitment appears selective.
From withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Paris Climate Agreement to the chaotic exit from Afghanistan, Washington’s global posture has become more transactional. Conditional support for Ukraine and shifting rhetoric on NATO have deepened doubts about America’s reliability in its new role as an offshore balancer.
The recent India–Pakistan conflict – killing over 50 civilians and inflicting $90 billion in economic damage by some estimates – revealed how quickly a confrontation between nuclear powers can now spiral without a more timely US intervention.
Rise of civilizational multipolarity
Yet the greater challenge may not be the retreat of the American umbrella itself but rather what emerges in its absence – a shift I call “civilizational multipolarity.”
What makes this moment distinct from any other in history is not just the redistribution of power – it is the nature of the actors now asserting that power. For the first time, multiple civilizational states – China, India, Russia and Iran – are rising within a shared global system.
Historian Professor Wang Gungwu calls this the return of “civilizational consciousness” – a dynamic in which states derive legitimacy not from universal norms but from deep structures of language, religion and institutional memory.
China exemplifies this shift. As scholar Dr Martin Jacques observes, China views itself not merely as a nation-state but as a “civilization-state,” with 5,000 years of political tradition and moral philosophy. The Chinese Communist Party’s claim to authority is not based on liberal norms but on restoring what it sees as the Middle Kingdom’s rightful place in history.
This has far-reaching consequences. Professor Graham Allison’s “Thucydides Trap” warns of conflict when a rising power threatens a ruling one. But in today’s context, the competition is not only over power – it is over values and visions of world order.
Professor John Mearsheimer has argued that liberal internationalism cannot survive in a world governed by nationalism and realism. Civilizational multipolarity intensifies that prognosis: Powers now export governance models rooted in their own traditions rather than converging on a single set of norms.
Plurality and co-existence
Professor Samuel Huntington’s “Clash of Civilizations” posits that cultural and religious identities will inevitably drive global conflict in the post-Cold War era, as fundamental civilizational differences – rooted in history, religion, and values – become irreconcilable fault lines between nations and blocs.
But there is still agency in how states respond. ASEAN, for instance, offers an instructive model through its principle of “omni-enmeshment”, an approach that avoids binary alliances while encouraging engagement across civilizational lines.
Rather than choosing sides, ASEAN states create space for dialogue and cooperation, preserving autonomy while participating in global governance. If the global community can embrace this ethos, civilizational multipolarity need not be seen as a threat, but as an opportunity: the foundation for a more pluralistic order within a shared framework.
Singapore’s new Defense Minister, Chan Chun Sing, captured this outlook well when he remarked at the 41st IISS-Asia Fullerton Lecture in 2021: “Middle powers and small states can help to build bridges, create platforms for dialogue and uphold the multilateral system. By working together, we can provide alternative pathways for cooperation, even when larger powers disagree.”
If this transition is managed wisely, the post-American era need not mark the unraveling of global order. It could instead herald the rise of a more inclusive, resilient and balanced system, one not defined by dominance, but by the peaceful co-existence and constructive engagement of civilizations.
That would be a first in human history. And perhaps, its greatest achievement.
Marcus Loh is a Director at Temus, a Singapore-based digital transformation services firm, where he leads public affairs, marketing and strategic communication. He was formerly the president of the Institute of Public Relations of Singapore.
He presently serves on the digital transformation chapter executive committee of SGTech, the leading trade association for Singapore’s technology industry. Loh completed an executive program in public leadership from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and earned master’s degrees from the Singapore Management University and University College, Dublin.