The Struggle for Eurasia

Project Expert

Thomas Graham Headshot
Thomas Graham

Distinguished Fellow

About the Project

Great-power competition has returned as the driving force of world affairs. The last two U.S. administrations have placed this competition at the center of their national security strategies, implicitly acknowledging that a new multipolar world order is emerging and the era of unchallenged U.S. primacy has passed, even if the United States will likely remain the pre-eminent global power well into the future. The purpose of the project is to develop a long-term Eurasian strategy for the United States.  If the era of U.S. primacy has ended irretrievably, how should the United structure its relations with the key centers of power on the Eurasian supercontinent—China, Europe, India, and Russia? How does the United States build and sustain regional balances of power and mesh them into an overarching equilibrium in Eurasia that advances U.S. national interests? The Project on the Struggle for Eurasia will explore those questions in roundtables and writings with the goal of writing a book tentatively entitled The Struggle for Eurasia: How to Advance U.S. Interests in the Emerging Multipolar World Order.

No publications were found for this project.