INTRO/20: The frameworks we use to understand American foreign policy were built for a different game. Realism. Liberalism. Constructivism. None of them explain what we're watching.

This thread introduces a new theory—Extractive Hegemonism. Not the security interest. The ownership claim. Twenty posts. Core theory, two live case studies, hard implications. I'll be rolling this out in four parts over the next several days.

Strap in.

#NatSec #GrandStrategy #ForeignPolicy #Military #Policy

1/20: Every analyst I know is walking around with the same quiet frustration. The old frameworks—realism, liberalism, constructivism—don't explain what we're watching. The map is wrong. Time to draw a new one.

#NatSec #GrandStrategy #IR #ForeignPolicy

2/20: We keep asking: what's the security interest here? That's the wrong question. This administration isn't operating on security logic. It's operating on ownership logic. Different premise. Different playbook. Completely different endgame.

#NatSec #Strategy #Geopolitics

3/20: Introducing: Extractive Hegemonism. Not isolationism. Not retrenchment. Something more aggressive—an attempt to monetize American structural power rather than spend it maintaining an international order.

#ExtractiveHegemonism #NatSec #ForeignPolicy #GrandStrategy

4/20: The foundational premise: the world is a collection of undervalued, poorly-managed assets. The U.S., under decisive management, is positioned to act as activist acquirer. This isn't metaphor. It's the operative worldview.

#ExtractiveHegemonism #Geopolitics #Strategy

BONUS/20: The U.S. is bombing Iran while simultaneously negotiating with Iran.

Analysts are calling it incoherent. It isn't.

Posts 1–4 of this thread explain it: this isn't security logic. You don't bomb someone you're negotiating with in good faith—unless the bomb IS the negotiation. Unless force is just the bid price when the target won't sell.

Iran won't be acquired. So the raider is restructuring by fire.

New map. Same logic.

#ExtractiveHegemonism #Iran #NatSec #Geopolitics #Strategy

**BREAK BREAK**

Rounds complete for today. Tomorrow: Security Logic vs. Ownership Logic, The Alliance Problem, and The Six Operating Principles.

5/20: Security Logic vs. Ownership Logic. Security logic: accumulate power to guarantee survival. There's an endpoint—stability, deterrence, a signed treaty. Ownership logic: accumulate to extract. No endpoint. Like capital itself, structurally expansionary. You stop when there's nothing left to acquire.

#NatSec #IRTheory #Strategy #Geopolitics

6/20: The Alliance Problem. Under security logic, NATO is a force multiplier. Under ownership logic, NATO is a liability structure—commitments that constrain your freedom of action without generating revenue. This reframes every confusing alliance interaction of the past two years.

#NATO

7/20: Core Element 1: Empire as Spectacle. Dominance must be performed continuously because the performance IS the leverage. This isn't propaganda. It isn't soft power. It's brand management. The spectacle doesn't serve policy—it is the policy. Attention is power.

#Strategy

8/20: Core Element 2: Business Raid Tactics. Classic corporate raiding: identify leverage points, open bid far outside normal range, create artificial time pressure, extract before the target organizes a defense. Sound familiar? Tariff announcements. Alliance ultimatums. The sixty-day Iran deadline. Shock and extract.

#Geopolitics #NatSec #TradeWar

9/20: Core Element 3: Zero-Sum Thinking. Not Mearsheimer's structural zero-sum—that at least has theoretical elegance. This is dealmaker zero-sum: the gut conviction that mutual gain is either naïve or proof you left money on the table. Alliances can't survive this. They're positive-sum by design.

#NATO

10/20: Core Element 4: The Dashboards. The feedback mechanism isn't geopolitical. It's financial and electoral. Watch the S&P and the approval ratings. When either signals distress, behavior modulates—not toward strategic recalibration, but toward impression management. Reversals aren't pivots. They're market corrections.

#Politics

11/20: Core Element 5: Strategic Chaos. The most important reframe in the whole theory. Chaos isn't incompetence. It prevents adversaries from building stable counter-strategies. Keeps allies dependent on bilateral reassurance. Preserves maximum flexibility. It's a deliberately deployed negotiating weapon.

#NATO #Politics #Geopolitics

12/20: Core Element 6: Bullying as Advertising. In a protection racket, bullying isn't aggression—it's demonstration. Proves capacity and willingness to harm. That's the precondition for selling protection. Greenland. Panama. Canada. #NATO burden-sharing. Establish that nothing is sacred. Then reassurance becomes a commodity.
13/20: Put those six elements together and you get one structure: a protection racket at hegemonic scale. The Master Structure. Demonstrate threat → offer reassurance at a price → undermine multilateral alternatives → extract continuously. Charles Tilly mapped this logic in 16th century Europe. It's back.

14/20: Institutions are targets. Every multilateral institution the U.S. built since 1945 was designed to provide public goods. Public goods don't generate private revenue. Under ownership logic, they're waste—worse, they give other actors recourse that doesn't run through Washington. Degrading them is the point.

#ForeignPolicy

**BREAK BREAK**

Rounds complete for today. Tomorrow: Case Studies.