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Home » Transcript: A Future of Great Power Politics and Peer Hegemons – John Mearsheimer & Joshua Byun

Transcript: A Future of Great Power Politics and Peer Hegemons – John Mearsheimer & Joshua Byun

Editor’s Notes: In this presentation, Professor John Mearsheimer and Assistant Professor Joshua Byun explore the future of great power politics and the strategic necessity of preventing the rise of a “peer regional hegemon.” They argue that the United States, as the current sole regional power, has a vital interest in stopping China from dominating East Asia to avoid an inherently dangerous and intense security competition. By challenging modern academic skepticism, the speakers provide a rigorous theoretical and historical case for why a distant rival hegemon poses a unique existential threat to American interests. This talk offers a deep dive into their forthcoming book, which re-evaluates American grand strategy in an increasingly multipolar world. (May 11, 2026) 

TRANSCRIPT:

Introduction

UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Alright. So let me introduce our guests. We have Joshua Byun. He’s an assistant professor in the political science department at Boston College. He specializes in international relations with a focus on questions related to grand strategy and alliance politics.

His broader research interests center on topics such as preventative war, the role of nuclear weapons in grand strategy, the relationship between power politics and international norms, and performative uses of violence by state and non-state actors. And then we have John Mearsheimer, who’s the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago, where he has taught since 1982. He graduated from West Point in 1970 and then served 5 years as an officer in the US Air Force. Professor Mearsheimer has written extensively about security issues and international politics. He has published 6 books and soon to be a seventh, which we will hear about today.

So thank you and please join me in welcoming our guests.

Overview of the Talk

JOSHUA BYUN: Alright. Thank you, Jenna. Thank you all for being here. So how we’re going to do this is for about 45 minutes, I’m going to give you a layout of what our forthcoming book with Yale University Press is all about. And then John would be happy to take all of your questions afterwards.

So John and I will be talking about the problem of a peer regional hegemon as it relates to American grand strategy. And this is only the second time we’ve given an extended talk on this book since we shared an early version at the Harvard Kennedy School in 2024. So we’re very excited to hear your thoughts.

This is the agenda for today. First, I’ll be laying out the motivation behind this project and telling you exactly what John and I are trying to do here. Then I’ll be laying out a new theory that addresses this puzzle. And then I’ll briefly flag a number of objections that critics might raise against our arguments. Then I’ll conclude with some thoughts about US foreign policy and the broader US grand strategy debate.

Motivation: The Problem of a Peer Regional Hegemon

Let me begin with our motivation.

In January 1993, outgoing US Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger wrote a parting memo to his successor Warren Christopher where he laid out his thoughts about the challenges confronted by US foreign policy in the post-Cold War era. And one of the first substantive points that Eagleburger made in this memo is that we, the United States, retain a vital interest in preventing the domination of key regions — Europe, East Asia, and the Persian Gulf — by a single great power.

And this observation was not the idiosyncrasy of one statesman or one historical moment. In fact, the idea that the United States, number one, reaps enormous strategic advantages by virtue of being a militarily unchallenged power in the Western Hemisphere, and then number two, it should go to great lengths to prevent another great power from reaching a similar position of privilege in one of the 3 core regions of Eurasia, has been a recurring assumption or theme in top US foreign policy discourse at least since World War I.

Challenges to the Traditional View

However, in recent years, a growing number of prominent international relations scholars have raised serious questions about the continued relevance of this assumption. Just to share a few examples of what these challenges look like, Christopher Lane, who should be a familiar name to anyone who is interested in the US grand strategy literature, writes that without the driving fear of a Eurasian hegemon, it would be hard to find a compelling justification for a permanent US military involvement in Eurasia. Red lights should flash whenever this argument is made because US officials have cried wolf too many times in the past and exaggerated the dangers posed by this hypothetical.

John Mearsheimer, another important voice in the grand strategy community, writes that given the stopping power of water — by which he means the widely recognized difficulty of launching a direct assault against a modern state’s territory across the oceans — given the stopping power of water, it’s unclear why an incumbent regional hegemon should fear the emergence of another regional hegemon.

And if you’re someone who follows the academic discourse on US grand strategy, you’ll know that the biggest players in this literature are increasingly veering toward this kind of thinking in recent years. In January 2024, there was a small workshop hosted in Washington DC by the Texas A&M Alberton Center for Grand Strategy where 14 experts on US grand strategy were brought together and asked to share their views on one question: Would a regional hegemon outside the Western Hemisphere be very threatening, moderately threatening, or not threatening at all to the United States?

And all of these individuals were card-carrying realists who believed that power really matters in international politics and who have a deep appreciation for history and have thought deeply about how war and military power works. And every person on the list that you see, except for me and John, thought that having a peer regional hegemon would either be not threatening at all or only moderately threatening at worst to the United States.

The Central Question and Argument

Hence, John and I wrote a book, which is forthcoming again with Yale University Press early next year.