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Home » Strategic Costs of US Global Success: Stephen Kotkin (Transcript)

Strategic Costs of US Global Success: Stephen Kotkin (Transcript)

Editor’s Notes: In this thought-provoking lecture at the Hoover Institution, renowned historian Stephen Kotkin explores the paradoxical challenges arising from the United States’ immense global influence. He argues that current international crises are often a byproduct of the very successes achieved by the US-led order over the past 50 years. By comparing the geopolitical landscape of 1975 to 2025, Kotkin provides a deep dive into the evolution of power, the complexities of dual-use technology, and the future of global equilibrium. (Mar 20, 2026)

TRANSCRIPT:

Introduction

STEPHEN KOTKIN: I’m thinking about why there’s a sense of crisis now when American power is so vast across every single dimension, and there’s never been a power in recorded history like America. So believe it or not, I’m going to explain to you why the problem is our success, and why success is usually a much bigger problem than anything else. It’s a little counterintuitive, but we succeeded beyond our wildest dreams, and as a result, we’re in trouble. That’s going to be the main point of today’s, whatever you want to call it, performance, failure. Good shoes there, dude.

America Then and Now: A Fifty-Year Comparison

Okay, here we go. So let’s imagine that you fell asleep in 1975. Of course, you weren’t there in 1975, I was. But let’s imagine you fell asleep and you had a really good long rest and you woke up in 2025. So you had a nice fifty year rest.

And what would you have noticed if you were an analyst of geopolitics and international affairs? What if anything had changed in those fifty years when you were asleep?

Well, when you went to sleep in ‘seventy five, American power was at a low ebb. We lost the war in Vietnam. We had the Watergate scandal, and a president resigned. We had the oil shock in 1973, which ripped the country apart also. Our international standing was really low as a result of all of this, and there was a lot of talk of the end of America or American decline.

And if you woke up fifty years later, you’d be saying, wow. This country is unbelievably powerful and successful. The GDP is still twenty five percent of the global economy as it has been since 1880. Hundred and fifty years of twenty five percent of global GDP with five percent of the population, you’d say, my god.

The US is an energy superpower again, which it wasn’t in 1975. That was part of our problem, but which we had been for most of our history prior to that. And here we are again, an energy superpower.

A military superpower? We lost that war in Vietnam, and we’ve lost wars subsequently. And yet we’re still fifty percent of global military. That’s right, five percent of global population, twenty five percent of global GDP, and fifty percent of global military.

We’re also, besides an energy, military, and economic superpower, we are also, yes, a science, tech, and innovation superpower. And here we are at Stanford University, Silicon Valley being a spin off of Stanford University, and it’s just awesome what goes on on this campus in these laboratories. Awesome. Yeah. Blows you away. Innovation tech superpower. Across the board.

We’re also a cultural superpower. We got people speaking our language and imitating our culture without coercion. Across the globe. Yes, anti-Americanism is the most powerful ideology in the world in some ways. Again, as Secretary of State said, because nobody likes anybody who’s too powerful.

So if you go to an American embassy abroad, anyone, pick one, you go to it, there are two things that are always true. One, there’s an anti-American demonstration outside, and they got a lot of legitimate grievances. And the other, the longest line for visas you’ve ever seen.

So here we are. Who would have thought it in ‘seventy five? Pretty impressive. So is America in decline? That’s got to be the funniest question of the day. Just ridiculous. Okay. Facts are interesting. Really interesting. Measure of power is really interesting.

The Geopolitical Landscape: Familiar Rivals, Shifting Roles

Alright. Let’s do some more. ‘Seventy five to 2025. If you were alive in ‘seventy five, you would have seen America and its allies, the maritime powers based on limited government, trade, and navies, in a struggle to the death with a giant landmass Eurasian power, which was autocratic, repressed its own people, and banged around abroad the same way it treated its own people at home.

Yes. In ‘seventy five, that was the Soviet Union, and China was a subordinate version of that in ‘seventy five. And today, China is the version of that, and Russia is the subordinate version. Well, if you study history, that wouldn’t surprise you that China was the top dog, and Russia was now the vassal almost of China. Back then, the Soviet Union was at the height of power, and China was more like the junior partner there.

But a struggle against a landmass autocratic, different system, Eurasian based power, ancient empire, ancient civilization, the maritime power and alliances of the United States — that looks really the same to me despite the fact that Russia and China have changed places. Very similar. So the geopolitics hasn’t changed that much.

Yes. Iran flipped from one side to the other. Yes. In ‘seventy five, Iran was our puppet, was the United States’ partner under the Shah. And after the 1979 Islamic revolution, Iran flipped. We’ll see how long that lasts. It’s lasted so far this much time in global history. A pinch. 1979 till today. We’ll see if it lasts any longer. Maybe Iran flips back the other way.

But in any case, Iran is less consequential. It fits into this Eurasian land based autocratic ancient civilization power, arrayed against the United States and its maritime power model. Okay.

So if I’m waking up in 2025 after that long rest, I’m looking at a world that looks really similar to the one that I fell asleep in, except that American power is vaster.