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by Timofey Bordachev
Program Director of the Valdai Club
April 08, 2026
from
RT Website

© AP Photo / Vahid
Salemi
The
war between the US and Iran
marks the
end of an anomalous era...
Regardless of how the conflict between
the United States and
Iran formally concludes, its
symbolism is already unmistakable.
An ancient civilization, one of the oldest
continuous states in human history, has emerged as the final
obstacle to the project of American global dominance.
That alone tells us something about the direction
in which the world is moving.
For historians, the deeper meaning of the current
Middle Eastern crisis lies in the
confrontation between two powers at opposite ends of the historical
spectrum.
Iran is arguably the world's oldest
centralized state, with roots stretching back to around 530 BC.
Since then, it has never ceased to exist as a
unified political entity. That continuity is remarkable.
Even
Russia, the major Western
European powers,
India and
China have all experienced
fragmentation at various points in their histories.
The United States, by contrast, is among the youngest major
nations - barely 250 years old...!
Its history is ten times shorter than that of
Persia.
In that sense, the present conflict pits
antiquity against modernity, a civilization forged over millennia
against a state that rose rapidly in a uniquely favorable historical
moment.
In purely military terms, such comparisons mean little.
The United States retains overwhelming
destructive capacity.
If it chose to do so, it could devastate
Iran.
This is, after all, the only country in
history to have used nuclear weapons against civilian
populations.
That fact alone should temper any illusions
about the limits of American power.
Yet the long-term significance of this
confrontation lies elsewhere.
It isn't about whether Iran can defeat the
United States in a conventional sense.
It's about whether the current international
order, one shaped by American dominance, can continue to
function as it has.
Modern Iran represents more than a state:
It's a living embodiment of civilizational
continuity...
Over 2,500 years, it has endured invasions and
dynastic upheavals, yet has preserved a distinctive political
culture and a strong sense of unity. Many of its historical
adversaries have disappeared altogether. Iran remains.
This doesn't make it invincible. But it does mean that it must be
taken seriously, not only as a military opponent, but as a political
and historical actor.
Iranian decision-making reflects a depth of
strategic thinking that few contemporary states can match. It's
precisely this quality that makes Iran such a difficult counterpart,
both for allies and adversaries.
The United States, meanwhile, has long sought to imprint itself on
history as a transformative force. Yet its successes have
been tied to exceptional circumstances rather than intrinsic
durability.
Its meteoric rise in the 20th century
was made possible by a unique convergence of factors.
First, that century witnessed an
unprecedented clash of ideas.
For the first time in history, global
politics was driven not only by states and interests, but by
competing ideologies - liberalism, communism, socialism and
nationalism - each claiming universal relevance.
Second, Western Europe, which had dominated world affairs
for centuries, was exhausted by internal conflict.
Russia and China, though powerful, were
primarily concerned with preserving their independence rather
than projecting global influence.
This left a vacuum that the United States was
uniquely positioned to fill.
Finally, the collapse of European empires created a vast
number of new states, many of them vulnerable.
The United States lacked the capacity to
subdue major powers directly, but it could exert influence over
smaller, weaker countries.
This allowed it to construct a global system
of influence that, under normal historical conditions, would
have been difficult to sustain.
The result was a paradox:
a form of hegemony achieved not through
enduring civilizational depth, but through favorable timing and
circumstance.
For a time, this led many to believe that the
United States was uniquely capable of reshaping the world.
That illusion is now fading...!
The United States is facing a profound
internal crisis, intellectual and political.
Its political system has become increasingly
polarized, its strategic thinking narrower, and its ability to
formulate coherent long-term policies more limited.
These weaknesses are visible in the decisions
and contradictions of recent administrations.
Even Western Europe, once firmly within the
American orbit, is showing signs of resistance.
The assumption that the transatlantic
relationship would remain unchallenged indefinitely is proving
to be misplaced...
In this context, the conflict with Iran takes on
broader significance.
It is not merely another regional war. It is part
of a larger process in which the United States is being forced to
adapt to a reality that other states have always known:
that no single power can exercise uncontested
control over global affairs.
Iran's role in this process is, in many ways,
symbolic.
It's not a perfect state.
It lacks the economic resources of
China, the mobilization
capacity of
Russia, or the intellectual
traditions of
Western Europe.
Even a victory over the United States would
not transform it into a global hegemon.
And yet, it may prove decisive in bringing an era
to a close.
The attempt to construct a system of American-led global dominance,
what might be called the "Frankenstein" of modern geopolitics,
is encountering its limits.
Iran has become the point at which those limits
are most clearly exposed.
The consequences extend far beyond the Middle East. What is at stake
is not simply the outcome of a particular conflict, but the broader
structure of international relations.
The idea that one state can impose its will
universally, shaping the global order in its own image, is being
tested, and found wanting.
History offers many examples of powers that
aspired to such dominance.
None succeeded in the long term.
Even those that appeared closest ultimately
encountered constraints, structural or strategic, that they
couldn't overcome.
The United States is no exception.
The end of this illusion will mark the true
conclusion of the 20th century, an era defined by
ideological confrontation, unprecedented globalization and the
temporary ascendancy of a single power.
What follows will be more familiar:
a world of multiple centers of power,
competing interests and shifting alliances.
The war between the United States and Iran is one
of the moments through which this transition is taking place.
Regardless of how it ends, one conclusion is already possible.
Iran, by standing its ground, has made a
significant contribution to the evolution of the international
system.
It has become, in effect, the final weight
that brings down a structure built on overreach and illusion.
The world won't be the same...
Not because of the destruction or the diplomacy
that may follow, but because a fundamental idea, that of uncontested
global hegemony, is losing its hold.
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