Close Menu
The Politic ReviewThe Politic Review
  • Home
  • News
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Elections
  • Congress
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Money
  • Tech
Trending

‘Someone’ might have to blow up prospective Russia-China pipeline – Fox News host

September 6, 2025

“Phillies Karen” Sets Internet Ablaze After Stealing Home Run Ball From Young Birthday Boy and Father (VIDEO)

September 6, 2025

President Trump and FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson Stand Up to South Korea’s Pro-China Tech Regulations

September 6, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Donald Trump
  • Kamala Harris
  • Elections 2024
  • Elon Musk
  • Israel War
  • Ukraine War
  • Policy
  • Immigration
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
The Politic ReviewThe Politic Review
Newsletter
Saturday, September 6
  • Home
  • News
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Elections
  • Congress
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Money
  • Tech
The Politic ReviewThe Politic Review
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Elections
  • Congress
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Money
  • Tech
Home»World»Fyodor Lukyanov: Russia and China anchor a new world order where the West is optional
World

Fyodor Lukyanov: Russia and China anchor a new world order where the West is optional

Press RoomBy Press RoomSeptember 6, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram

Historical anniversaries often provide the backdrop for diplomacy to become spectacle. This week’s Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in Tianjin was deliberately staged ahead of China’s grand parade marking 80 years since the end of World War II. Beijing, the host, made sure the symbolism landed. The timing also underscored the contrast with Washington: Donald Trump, who has long admired military parades, is already planning a lavish one next July for America’s 250th anniversary, after his low-key attempt last summer fell flat.

For the SCO itself, the Tianjin meeting carried weight comparable to last year’s BRICS summit in Kazan. Documents were signed, but as always the road from declarations to implementation will be long. What mattered most was setting a benchmark. In international politics, the very act of gathering matters as much as the outcomes. 

Beyond the West’s stage 

By inertia, many still measure importance by whether Western powers are in the room. For decades, world affairs were shaped by East-West confrontation in the Cold War, and then by the unilateral primacy of the US and its allies. Membership of the G7 (at one time G8) was once the crown jewel of global respectability. Even the G20, designed to reflect a more diverse world, remained dominated by Western influence over its agenda. Meetings without the West were seen as parochial or symbolic.

That perception is now outdated. The real turning point came last year – first at BRICS, now at the SCO. Both groupings, very different in composition, are drawing growing interest. Countries are applying to join or at least to participate. Simply appearing at these forums has become prestigious, and the corridor diplomacy surrounding them allows for meetings that are otherwise difficult to arrange.


The shift is not just about Russia. The attempt by Western governments to isolate Moscow after the escalation in Ukraine has backfired. Instead of leaving Russia in the cold, it accelerated the formation of what is now described as the “global majority.” Many states do not want to submit to anyone else’s political logic. They follow their own calculations of interest and expediency.

From rejection to attraction

Structures once mocked in the West as artificial, jealous imitations of Western clubs – BRICS and the SCO foremost among them – are now becoming indispensable. They are no longer simply ideological counters to hegemony, but practical platforms. This explains efforts to expand the BRICS New Development Bank and to set up an SCO Development Bank. These institutions will not rival the IMF or World Bank immediately, but the trajectory is clear: to build alternatives that bypass Western gatekeepers.

The West finds this almost impossible to digest. For Washington and Brussels, any institution outside their control looks like a threat, a conspiracy “against democracy.” In fact, the opposite is taking place. The West is retreating inward, shifting to a defensive crouch – sometimes aggressively so – and in the process cutting itself off from much of the world.

The formula that has gained currency in Moscow – “not against the West, but without it” – is finally becoming reality.


Fyodor Lukyanov: Trump and Putin are closing the era that Reagan and Gorbachev began

Trump’s catalyst

Another factor hastening this change is the blunt style of the Trump administration. Its message is simple: pay up, or pressure will follow. Allies have largely complied, reinforcing Washington’s belief that this approach works. But countries with no security obligations to the US have reacted differently. They reject being treated as clients, especially when it all comes down to money flowing to America.

Hence the surprise in Washington when so many states line up for BRICS+ or SCO+. They are not necessarily embracing Russia or China unconditionally; they are signaling their refusal to live by rules drawn elsewhere.

Russia’s place

Against this backdrop, Russia finds itself not marginalized but central. Western isolation efforts only underscored Moscow’s role as a key pole around which non-Western states can organize. For many, Russia is proof that there are alternatives to Western tutelage.

President Vladimir Putin, addressing the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok just after the SCO summit, emphasized Russia’s two-headed eagle: the country looks both ways. He insisted Russia has not closed the door to the US or the rest of Europe. American businesses, he said, could benefit enormously from joint projects if their government allowed it.


The West had its century. The future belongs to these leaders now

At the same time, Moscow is strengthening ties with China, India, and the wider Global South. The new agreements with Beijing – from energy deals to visa-free travel – are practical steps along this path.

The symbolism matters too. At the SCO summit, Chinese President Xi Jinping launched “global governance initiative” with Putin’s backing. Far from being an anti-Western conspiracy, it reflects the search for a more balanced order.

A world in transition

What is emerging is not a neat bloc or a new Cold War divide, but something looser and more diverse. International politics is shifting away from Western-centric hierarchies towards a multipolar landscape. The SCO summit should be read in this context, as part of a larger realignment.

The world is messy and the processes chaotic, but the direction is clear. Non-Western states are asserting their right to set agendas, to create institutions, and to act together without waiting for permission. The attempt to quarantine Russia has only sped this up.

The West may still believe nothing serious happens without it. But at Tianjin, as at Kazan before it, the message was unmistakable: much of the world is now prepared to move on.

This article was first published in the newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta and was translated and edited by the RT team 

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link

Related Articles

World

‘Someone’ might have to blow up prospective Russia-China pipeline – Fox News host

September 6, 2025
World

‘Tory Party Is Dead’ — Former Conservative Minister Nadine Dorries Defects to Farage’s Reform UK

September 6, 2025
World

Trump threatens EU over ‘unfair’ $3.5bn Google fine

September 6, 2025
World

UK Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner Resigns over Property Tax Scandal

September 6, 2025
World

West floats plan to send Bangladeshi or Saudi troops into Ukraine buffer zone – NBC

September 6, 2025
World

Pop Singer Ellie Goulding ‘Embarrassed to Be British’ After Asylum Protesters Gathered Outside Hotel

September 6, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

“Phillies Karen” Sets Internet Ablaze After Stealing Home Run Ball From Young Birthday Boy and Father (VIDEO)

September 6, 2025

President Trump and FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson Stand Up to South Korea’s Pro-China Tech Regulations

September 6, 2025

‘Tory Party Is Dead’ — Former Conservative Minister Nadine Dorries Defects to Farage’s Reform UK

September 6, 2025

Executives Jumping Ship: Elon Musk’s xAI Loses CFO After Just Months on the Job

September 6, 2025
Latest News

GOA, NRA, Other Gun Rights Groups Unite in Opposition to Potential Trans Gun Ban

September 6, 2025

Trump threatens EU over ‘unfair’ $3.5bn Google fine

September 6, 2025

NYT Alleges Secret 2019 SEAL Team 6 Mission to North Korea Ended in Failure, Civilian Murders

September 6, 2025

Subscribe to News

Get the latest politics news and updates directly to your inbox.

The Politic Review is your one-stop website for the latest politics news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
Latest Articles

‘Someone’ might have to blow up prospective Russia-China pipeline – Fox News host

September 6, 2025

“Phillies Karen” Sets Internet Ablaze After Stealing Home Run Ball From Young Birthday Boy and Father (VIDEO)

September 6, 2025

President Trump and FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson Stand Up to South Korea’s Pro-China Tech Regulations

September 6, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest politics news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2025 Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.