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Transcript of George Friedman on The Tucker Carlson Show

Here is the full transcript of geopolitical forecaster George Friedman’s interview on The Tucker Carlson Show episode titled “George Friedman Predicts the Next 50 Years of Global Affairs and the Importance of Space Domination”, premiered on April 23, 2025.

The Future of America: Fortress North America

TUCKER CARLSON: George, thank you for doing this. So you have made a career of predicting the future. And I think that you’ve done a better job than anyone I’ve met in predicting sort of the big picture movements of nations. Clearly we’re in, and I hope we can talk about this in a transition away from the post war order. But I just want to start at the end. Where do you think the United States will be in 50 years?

GEORGE FRIEDMAN: Well, I think the United States is withdrawing not to isolationism, but to Fortress America. It’s interesting that the Mexican president called for Fortress North America. And it was a very wise move. We were engaged, forced to be engaged in the wars because the United States cannot be invaded. Canada can invade us no matter if they’d like to. Now Mexico can invade us. It’s the command of the sea. That’s our defense. When the Germans started U boats in the First World War, sinking Lusitania. That’s when we invaded, intervened. When the British Navy looked like it was going to fall in the hands of the Germans by invasion, that’s when we got agitated. When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, that’s where we’re agitated.

So we’re a unique country, enormously wealthy and immune from attack, except from the sea. So our basic strategy has to be command of the sea. Now, when the Russians ended World War II, we were terrified that they would conquer Europe. Not because we loved the Europeans, but because what if they had control of the Atlantic ports in France? What would the Russian Navy do? So we built a forward strategy. Instead of waiting for that to happen, we built NATO. And NATO existed primarily to block the Russian entry into the Atlantic.

We had to rebuild Europe in order to make it viable. And they lost their empire. And that became the Third World. Officially, yes. And we fought constantly with the Russians, hand to hand combat sort of covert operations trying to block them. And that’s for the last 80 years what we did.

Russia’s Limitations and America’s Future Role

Well, Russia proved in Ukraine that it is not going to be able to occupy Ukraine. It can’t occupy Europe. And the Europeans have had a free ride. And I think that’s pretty true. And our commitment is to defense of the United States. The major danger to the United States is of course nuclear war. And that battle is fought in space. Satellites sensing launches being able to do MAD mutual assured destruction and so on.

Next 50 years will be about a much less integrated US with the world. Not isolated, certainly trading intensely with countries. But we have spent the past 85 years in constant warfare. Small, large, covert, overt. I participate in some of that and it was exhausting. So the country really doesn’t have to do that.

So what I see happening is two things. One, the United States taking on a role it had for most of its history as a country that is self-sustaining, highly trading involved in the world, certainly on alert with the great military. But the battle next battles were fought in space.

The Space Battlefield

This sounds strange, but it would have been strange in World War I to say the next war in Europe would be fought in the air and that nuclear weapons would arise. We were protected from nuclear war by mutually assured destruction. It was the one war in which the leaders themselves would be killed on the first round. We would hit and they would hit. And so there was no war because we had 30 minutes warning because we had radars.

And after the U2 was shot down and we were kind of spying on the Russians, they were spying in other ways. We launched satellites. Remember the first American satellite and the first American Russian satellite were launched a month from each other. First American manned space and the first Russian man in space launched weeks apart.

So I always wondered, I don’t know that there was a kind of collaboration between the Russians and Americans to maintain MAD Mutual assured destruction. It was a really neat name for it. Now MAD is short from space. Satellites are flying there. Satellites blocked the Russians in Ukraine. American satellites could see small units down to a meter level resolution. And we put in things like HIMARS, these missile systems that could with precision hit them.

So now tactical war is governed from space. MAD is covered from space and space is full of debris anti-satellite systems. The Chinese are launching them constantly. We’ve launched 200 satellites this year.

TUCKER CARLSON: So communication satellites, military satellites.

GEORGE FRIEDMAN: Absolutely. Well, they’re all communication satellites. They’re all looking for, you know, climate on earth. That’s what they want to look at. These are all spy satellites going up there and they’re looking to the earth and they’re maneuvering around each other. And one of the things the American public has to understand is the importance of space as a strategic facility.

And in due course it will emerge. But the next 50 years, the Americans are going to be, I think, in a very golden age. New technologies are coming. Every age we have, every cycle we have is built. The last one was built on the automobile, transforming it. Now it is built not so much on artificial intelligence. In my mind, by material science, we are crafting new materials at molecular level for space.

Material Science: The Next Technological Revolution

TUCKER CARLSON: Physical materials.

GEORGE FRIEDMAN: Physical materials. For example, lenses on satellites can see things that glass can’t show them.