The Grand Chessboard: How the U.S. Played Multiple Moves in One Global Game


If we observe global politics like a chessboard rather than isolated events, the last four years begin to look very different.

Wars, regime shifts, proxy battles, sanctions, and economic pressure often appear chaotic. But sometimes, when you zoom out, the pattern starts to look like a carefully played long game.

This is my geopolitical observation.

The war between Russia and Ukraine initially looked like a regional conflict. But strategically, it forced Russia into a prolonged war of attrition. Even if Russia manages territorial gains, the real cost is economic isolation, military exhaustion, and long-term sanctions that weaken its global influence.

At the same time, another quiet shift happened in the Middle East.

For decades, Syria had been a critical geopolitical anchor backed by Russia and Iran. When the regional balance shifted and the regime weakened, it disrupted an entire network of alliances across the region.

That shift had ripple effects.

Groups aligned with Iran such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and Houthis began facing intensified pressure.

At the center of this regional realignment stands Israel, which suddenly found itself with greater operational freedom against hostile forces around its borders.

Meanwhile, another interesting development occurred thousands of miles away.

China had invested heavily in Venezuela, viewing it as a strategic foothold in the Western Hemisphere. But instability in Venezuela, combined with geopolitical pressure, has complicated those ambitions.

When you connect these dots, the broader picture becomes clearer.

One prolonged war weakens Russia.
Middle Eastern shifts isolate Iran.
Regional militant networks shrink.
China faces pressure in strategic investments.
And Israel emerges in a more secure position.

In one sequence of global events, multiple strategic rivals are forced onto the defensive.

This is why geopolitics often resembles chess more than warfare.

Sometimes winning the war is not about conquering territory.
It is about exhausting your rivals, reshaping alliances, and controlling the economic systems that power the world.

If energy markets remain aligned with the petrodollar system, global financial dominance stays where it has been for decades — with the United States.

In that sense, even if Russia wins battles on the ground in Ukraine, the larger geopolitical game may already be moving in a different direction.

And on the global chessboard, the most powerful move is often the one played several years before anyone notices.

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