Trump’s Vision: Three Powers in One World?
Trump’s recent words and actions indicate that he may prefer a scenario in which the United States, China, and Russia each rule over their own spheres of influence.
Any moment is ideal for President Trump to negotiate deals, especially with the heads of China and Russia.
In what seemed to be an effort to ease the pressure on Moscow to end its conflict with Ukraine, Mr. Trump stated last week that he wanted to normalize trade relations with Russia. He is also attempting to mitigate the effects of his own global trade war by pushing the Chinese president to contact him.
“We all want to make deals,” Mr. Trump stated in a recent interview with Time magazine. “However, I am this huge shop. Everyone wants to shop in this massive, gorgeous establishment.”
Perhaps Mr. Trump has something even larger in mind involving China and Russia, which would be the ultimate agreement.

Some foreign policy experts believe that his deeds and words imply that he may be imagining a planet in which each of the three alleged great powers—the United States, China, and Russia—rule their respective regions.
It would be a throwback to the manner of imperial administration during the 19th century.
Mr. Trump has stated that he wants to reclaim American authority over the Panama Canal, annex Canada, and seize Greenland from Denmark. His wish to establish a sphere of influence in the nation’s backyard is most evident in those efforts to increase American hegemony in the Western Hemisphere.
He has discussed pulling American forces out of the world and has slammed allies. This might help China and Russia, who are trying to lessen the American security presence in Europe and Asia. Mr. Trump frequently describes Russian President Vladimir V. Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping as intelligent, powerful men who are his close buddies.
To that end, as part of a possible peace agreement that critics claim would effectively divide Ukraine, much as major powers did during the era of empires, Mr. Trump has been attempting to formalize Russian sovereignty over some Ukrainian land and American access to Ukraine’s minerals. In a two-hour phone conversation last week, Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin discussed Ukraine.
“The tone and spirit of the conversation were excellent,” Mr. Trump posted on social media.
The leaders of the United States, Russia, and China are all seeking “an imaginary past that was freer and more glorious,” according to Monica Duffy Toft, a professor of international politics at Tufts University’s Fletcher School.
In a recent article for Foreign Affairs magazine, she said, “Commanding and extending spheres of influence seems to restore a fading sense of grandeur.” At the Berlin Conference of 1884–185, where European nations agreed to a formal strategy to divide up Africa, the phrase “spheres of influence” was first used.
Some close observers of Mr. Trump, including members of his initial administration, warn against assuming that his words and deeds are deliberate. They claim that Mr. Trump lacks a view of the global order, despite having firm and longstanding opinions on a few topics, particularly immigration and commerce.
However, there are indicators that Mr. Trump and possibly some of his advisers are beginning to approach the world in the way that emperors once did when they imagined spheres of influence.
Stephen Wertheim, a Carnegie Endowment for International Peace historian of U.S. foreign policy, said, “Trump’s desire to extend America’s overt sphere of influence in the Western Hemisphere is the best evidence.”

However, even for a superpower, establishing a sphere of influence in the post-imperial era is not simple.
Mark Carney, a former prime minister who opposed Trump, was elected by Canadians last month. Carney’s Liberal Party seemed set to lose the election until Trump made hostile statements about Canada. The notion of U.S. domination has been refuted by the government of Greenland, which is an independent Danish territory. Chinese authorities are warning that a Hong Kong corporation will not be allowed to sell its business operating two ports in the Panama Canal to American investors.
“China will not give up its stakes in the Western Hemisphere so easily without a fight,” stated Yun Sun, a China analyst at the Stimson Center in Washington.
Nevertheless, Mr. Trump and his staff are still attempting to increase American influence over a larger area, stretching from the Arctic Circle to South America’s Patagonia. Mr. Trump responded to Mr. Carney’s statement in the Oval Office this month that Canada was “not for sale” by saying, “Never say never.”
To reaffirm Mr. Trump’s intention to seize the region, Vice President JD Vance traveled to a U.S. military installation in Greenland in March.
Not by chance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio has made his two most important journeys since assuming his position in the Caribbean and Latin America.
Mr. Rubio established what is essentially an American jail colony in El Salvador by negotiating with the strongman leader Nayib Bukele to have the nation jail immigrants deported by the U.S. government. Mr. Rubio also put pressure on Panama over its ports.
In July 2022, at a Senate hearing, Mr. Rubio, who represents Florida, stated that paying closer attention to the Western Hemisphere was “critical to our national security and our national economic interests.”

He said, “Geography matters” because “proximity matters.”
A reporter asked Mr. Rubio during that trip to the area if administration officials had talked about establishing spheres of influence, which would require negotiating restrictions on each superpower’s footprint, including in Asia.
In contrast to Mr. Trump, who has more traditional foreign policy views, Mr. Rubio stated that the United States will continue to support its military alliances in Asia. It can establish troops throughout the area because to those alliances.
“We don’t discuss spheres of influence,” he stated. “The United States is an Indo-Pacific nation. We have relationships with Japan, South Korea, and the Philippines.” We will maintain those connections.
According to some experts, Mr. Trump’s strategy for the conflict in Ukraine aligns with the idea of spheres of influence. The United States is in negotiations with another major power: Russia, which is attempting to regulate its own natural resources and is unsure of how to define the borders of a smaller nation.
Mr. Trump has offered settlement terms that would primarily favor Russia, such as U.S. recognition of Russian sovereignty over Crimea and acceptance of Russian control over significant portions of eastern Ukraine. In fact, Mr. Trump appeared to retract his demand this week that Russia and Ukraine reach an immediate truce. He had previously persuaded Ukraine to sign a deal that would allow American firms access to the country’s mineral resources.
Mr. Trump’s settlement offer, according to its supporters, is a reflection of the situation on the ground, as Ukraine continues to struggle to drive out the Russian occupiers.
However, European countries are growing increasingly concerned about a possible decline in the U.S. presence in their geographic region as a result of Mr. Trump’s persistent mistrust of America’s role in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and his admiration for Mr. Putin and Russia.
The same holds for Taiwan and Asian security. Due to Mr. Trump’s repeated criticism of the island over the years and his constant praise of Mr. Xi, the head of China, Taiwanese and American officials are unsure as to whether he would change his mind about U.S. military aid to Taiwan, which is required by law by Congress.
Mr. Trump claims that he wants to come to an agreement with China. It’s unknown if that would extend beyond tariffs to cover topics like Taiwan and the U.S. military presence in Asia.
Ms. Sun stated that Beijing’s primary goal would be Taiwan and that it would want to strike a massive agreement with the US on spheres of influence.
The extent to which the United States would go to protect Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion has not been specified by officials of the Trump administration. During his confirmation hearing, Senator Tom Cotton, Republican of Arkansas, questioned Elbridge A. Colby, the under secretary of defense for policy, about why his position on protecting Taiwan seems to have “softened” lately.
Taiwan is “not an existential interest” for the United States, according to Mr. Colby, who reiterated a hazy commitment to Asia by stating, “It’s very important the core American interest is in denying China regional hegemony.”