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FP Essay Between Independence and Freedom How a fundamental tension in the declaration echoed through U.S. foreign policy. July 2, 2026, 10:25 AM - By Elisabeth Leake, the Lee E. Dirks chair in diplomatic history at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and an associate professor of history at Tufts University.

 FP

Essay

Between Independence and Freedom

How a fundamental tension in the declaration echoed through U.S. foreign policy.

July 2, 2026, 10:25 AM

By Elisabeth Leake, the Lee E. Dirks chair in diplomatic history at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and an associate professor of history at Tufts University.


A vintage-style woodcut illustration of a cracked bronze bell suspended from a wooden beam against a background of swirling, engraved clouds.


Pep Montserrat illustration for Foreign Policy


Thank you for subscribing. To celebrate America’s 250th birthday, we’ve lifted our paywall this week so you can share any article with your network, completely free.


The Declaration of Independence famously declared that “all men are created equal,” endowed with the rights to “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” But the document never explicitly mentions “freedom” or uses the word “American.” When it mentions “the united States of America,” “united” is left lower-case, while the concluding paragraph insists that the colonies (plural) are “Free and Independent States.”


More than a mere matter of semantics, this fact is worth reflecting on as Washington celebrates 250 years of “American freedom.” In reality, the Declaration of Independence called the United States into being as an independent political entity before defining an identity for its inhabitants or articulating who among them would be granted freedom.


An illustration with a weathered, textured look on a beige background. In the center is a blue, sketch-style globe showing the Western Hemisphere, primarily focusing on North and South America. A stylized red eagle with its wings spread is flying across the upper right portion of the globe, facing toward the right. The words "America Retold" are at left.


America Retold: 250 years of the United States and the world. Read more from the series.


This tension, between independence and freedom, has reverberated through U.S. history, shaping the country’s domestic debates and foreign policy alike. Throughout the 19th century, Americans fought over what freedom and equality meant at home. Then, in the 20th, they struggled, and often failed, to apply this new understanding to the rest of the world.


An oil painting depicting a large group of men in 18th-century European attire gathered in a formal room. A small committee stands at the center presenting a document to a seated man at a desk.


John Trumbull’s Declaration of Independence (1818) depicts the five-man drafting committee presenting their work to the Continental Congress. John Turnbull


When members of the Continental Congress gathered in Philadelphia in 1776, they did so with a clear purpose: to explain why colonists were justified in taking up arms against the British Empire, why King George III correspondingly had lost the right to rule the 13 colonies, and thus why the colonies deserved independence. This was a document built on Enlightenment principles—think John Locke on the social contract and the natural rights of man.


The declaration, as historian David Armitage reminds us, was written for foreign audiences as much as colonial ones. As Thomas Jefferson later recalled, it was “an appeal to the tribunal of the world.” The point was to persuade potential European allies that this was no mere rebellion. The declaration laid out King George’s failings in a 27-point list that showed how Britain had betrayed its North American subjects.


The widely read Law of Nations (1758) insisted, “For any nation … it is enough that it should be truly sovereign and independent, that is to say, that it governs itself under its own authority and its own laws.” By declaring independence, then, the Congress asserted the United States equal to its Old World peers. This was an act of rupture but also an insistence on the people’s rights to statehood.


But “the people” was, itself, a contentious term. The Declaration of Independence began the process of establishing a functioning United States of America by insisting on its legitimacy as an independent state. But it skirted the issue of who constituted an “American people” or nation. Among the country’s early ruling classes, there was broad consensus that the state’s apparatuses were the foremost concern.


Even the declaration’s framing—“all men are created equal”—indicated that who could contribute to the independence struggle was limited. Women were clearly excluded, as were Black and Indigenous Americans. Even white men did not count evenly among “the people.” Many U.S. states continued to stipulate that male voters had to own property, even after the end of the war. Many men did not have the necessary skills to run for office. In other words, equality was neither necessary nor inevitable among the people.


A low-angle shot of a dark museum wall featuring large, gold-engraved text at the top. Below the text stand several bronze statues of historical figures arranged in front of a brick-like display.


A statue of Thomas Jefferson standing next to a stack of bricks marked with the names of people he enslaved sits under the words of the Declaration of Independence at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington on Sept. 14, 2016.Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images


It was in the public sphere, rather than in initial policymaking, that a sense of shared identity began to circulate. Symbols, such as Benjamin Franklin’s “Join or Die” cartoon, showing a cut-up snake representing the colonies, helped create a sense of common cause, as did organizations like the Daughters of Liberty. But even with these, shared grievances and resistance to British oversight, rather than a sense of “Americanness,” offered common cause.


The War of 1812 provoked new attention to American identity. Partly this was due to a rematch with the British; the United States would not be recolonized. But it also was due to hemispheric happenings. As revolts broke out across Spanish America and local leaders issued their own declarations of independence, U.S. observers reveled in this sense that America, broadly defined, was leading the pursuit of popular sovereignty.


Here again, however, America was not synonymous with equality. From John Adams to Jefferson, U.S. observers insisted that South American republics would require a stronger guiding hand than the United States, thanks to their large mixed-race and nonwhite majorities. They lauded the literacy and landownership requirements that ensured a small white minority oversaw the new South American states.


At home, the United States’ ambitions also made clear that America was an exclusionary category. One of the sparks for the revolution had been colonists’ desire to move westward into lands the British had reserved for Native inhabitants. Thus, the declaration’s only reference to Indigenous Americans was as “merciless Indian Savages” who had supported the British in brutalizing the colonists. They were enemies of the new state, not its people.



A historic color lithograph showing a large outdoor gathering. On the left are white military tents and soldiers; in the center and right, a large assembly of Indigenous people sits in a circle under a ring of trees beneath American flags.


A painting by James Otto Lewis depicting the first treaty of Prairie du Chien in Wisconsin in 1825.North American Aboriginal Portfolio/Newberry Library


As white American settlers moved west toward the Pacific, the United States’ relationship with Native Americans shifted from an exercise in foreign policy—signing treaties, making agreements with tribal leaders—into one of exploitation and exclusion—claiming “Indians” were too backward to use their own lands appropriately. As a result, the United States ironically came to replicate the British Empire it had repudiated. The idea of Manifest Destiny bore many of the same hallmarks as the European “civilizing mission,” which justified overseas expansion. What’s more, the reservation system that emerged in the 19th-century United States bore a marked resemblance to British “tribal” policy in India and West Africa, which also involved isolating indigenous populations in often inhospitable lands.


Meanwhile, debates about abolition and the end of slavery leading up to the Civil War further drew attention to the paradoxes of freedom and equality at the heart of the American nation. Who could be American, and what rights and privileges should be expected by those living on American soil?


America Retold: 250 years of the United States and the world


An illustration in a woodcut engraving style showing a large brown American bison standing on a stylized, vintage map of the United States. Dark, heavy smoke billows out from an oil pumpjack and a drilling derrick on the map, enveloping the bison and filling the upper sky.

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An illustration in an engraved, woodcut style portrays a landscape scene divided by water under a sepia-toned sky. In the left foreground, a prominent flagpole holds a waving American flag over a grassy shoreline. Attached to the base of the flagpole is a heavy metal chain that stretches across the dirt path but ends abruptly with an open, broken link. Across a body of water in the distance, low rolling hills are visible. On the right side, a second flagpole flies the Mexican flag. Next to it, a small silhouette of a person stands looking toward a large, stylized sun with a human face that radiates beams of light across the sky.

Foreign Pressure, American Freedom


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An illustration in a detailed woodcut style depicts a large tornado swirling violently under a dark, heavy blanket of storm clouds. Caught in the outer winds of the vortex are two historical flags on broken poles: a Confederate battle flag on the left and a historical American flag with a circle of stars on the right. Swirling in the debris field below the flags are several silhouettes of rifles and pistols scattered by the force of the storm against a light tan background.

From Bloody Kansas to the Rebuilding of Europe This article has an audio recording


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An illustration on a textured red background featuring the dark silhouette of a person with a long braided ponytail. Three disembodied hands in suits interact with the silhouette: one hand places a string of blue and white beads around the neck, another hand rests on top of the head, and a third hand pins a small American flag to the torso.

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An illustration in a detailed woodcut or engraved style depicts a vintage brown leather suitcase adorned with several international travel stickers. The stickers include a Mexican flag, an "Aeronaves de Mexico" airline logo, an "Italia" shield sticker, a "Sicilia" sticker next to an Italian flag, a French flag, and vintage hotel labels from Paris and Marseille. Resting on the top right corner of the suitcase is a grey fedora hat turned upside down. Inside the hat, an American flag pattern lines the interior, and a black revolver rests tucked into the brim with its handle protruding out. The background is a textured tan color.

How America Made the Mafia This article has an audio recording

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An illustration of a vintage-style map featuring North America and parts of Europe and Africa. Overlaid on the map are 3D red brick walls shaped exactly like the borders of the contiguous United States and Alaska, casting long shadows to the right.

America, the Once Global Nation


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A composite digital illustration showing the upper torso and head of the Statue of Liberty against a dark teal background. A white medical bandage wraps around her head, covering her forehead and one eye, which is depicted with a dark, bruised black eye. Her left arm is resting in a light pink medical arm sling across her chest.

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Michael Hirsh

Initially, both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution focused overwhelmingly on the mechanisms of governance and defining the legal rights of citizens. But in the aftermath of the Civil War, the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments focused on the relationship between identity and rights. These laws insisted that Americanness could not, and should not, be defined by racial difference. They expanded U.S. citizenship as a legal category and pointed toward a more aspirational definition of national identity that idealized a multiracial community. It helped instill a sense that freedom was critical to being American.


In fact, the promise of equal citizenship rights based on birthright and nondiscrimination struggled to materialize, as states found ways around the Constitution—at times with help from the federal government. As demonstrated by Supreme Court cases such as Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), which infamously endorsed the principle of “separate but equal,” rhetoric about the United States as a nation of free and equal people sat at odds with its practices.


This persisted well into the 20th century and beyond, as demonstrated by both the women’s rights and civil rights movements. Moreover, it crept into U.S. foreign policy in the era of global decolonization.


A black-and-white photograph of a man in a suit and hat pointing a woman away from a glass door. The door features painted text that reads "WHITE WAITING ROOM INTRASTATE PASSENGERS."



A black-and-white photo showing a line of Indigenous people waiting indoors at a wooden counter. At the front of the line, a person leans over the counter to sign a document held by a seated woman.


Left: Activist Doris Castle is directed away from a whites-only waiting room in Jackson, Mississippi, on May 25, 1961. She arrived on a Freedom Bus to protest racial segregation on U.S. buses.   Right: Native Americans line up to register to vote after federal courts granted them the right to vote in New Mexico in 1948. The state’s constitution had previously denied voting rights to those who did not pay property taxes while living on reservation lands. Bettmann Archive/Getty Images


As European empires began to break down in the mid-20th century, new Asian and African states emerged on the international scene. For leaders in these colonies-turned-states, the United States offered a potent model. After all, it was a country that had ripped its freedom from Britain’s clutches and, in independence, had become one of the most economically and politically powerful states in the world. Not only that, but rhetorically, U.S. leaders described their country as the leader of the “Free World,” seemingly positioning itself as a much-needed ally to other former colonies.


Ever since President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Atlantic Charter in 1941, U.S. governments had committed themselves to supporting self-determination abroad. Self-determination resonated with the Declaration of Independence. According to the Atlantic Charter, it was “the right of all peoples to choose the form of government under which they will live.”


But the United States proved ambivalent about spreading the gospel of “all men are created equal.” Nor did officials evince much interest in promoting freedom as anything more than political independence. Partly, this was a domestic issue: When segregation persisted at home and some states still barred Native Americans  from voting, how could the United States insist that India respect the rights of its ethnic minorities or demand an end to apartheid in South Africa?


It didn’t. All too often, an emphasis on independent statehood as self-determination served as an excuse to avoid wrestling with the more aspirational overtones the declaration gained during and after the U.S. Civil War. In articulating his eponymous doctrine in 1947, for example, President Harry S. Truman described Greece, a flawed democracy, as a “free nation,” while referring to Turkey, undeniably undemocratic, as an “independent and economically sound state.”

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Again and again over the coming decades, U.S. officials returned to the language of the Law of Nations, insisting they were helping decolonizing states to “govern themselves under their own authority and their own laws.” By doing so, they could define freedom and equality—or lack thereof—in former colonies as domestic problems in which the United States would not intervene.


In a particularly egregious example, the Nixon administration turned a blind eye to the 1971 genocide in East Pakistan. Army action in the east, President Richard Nixon and then-national security advisor Henry Kissinger insisted, was a purely internal issue: The United States was respecting Pakistan’s sovereign rights as a state by not intervening. The idea of free and independent states was turned on itself to ignore a blatant attack on Bengalis’ struggle for freedom—and independence. The fact that Pakistan’s government was helping Nixon facilitate talks with China went unmentioned.


In 1857, Abraham Lincoln had dismissed the Declaration of Independence’s “practical use” in severing connections to the British crown as “old wadding left to rot on the battle-field.” Instead, he insisted two years later, it was the “abstract truth” of equality that was the declaration’s real legacy. By the 20th century, official U.S. views had changed. For Cold War statesmen, the Declaration of Independence could be invoked as a nod toward ending European colonization. But whether the citizens of newly independent states actually gained freedom and equality was a different and far more complicated issue.


In our own moment, this tension between freedom as political independence and freedom as social or cultural equality is playing out most evidently in debates about “America First.” The meaning of America First has become increasingly diluted both at home and abroad. Foreign-policy decisions, like the interventions in Venezuela and Iran, seem to indicate that America First means putting U.S. strategic interests—state interests—first. Veering away from America First’s roots in protectionism, officials’ attention has turned outward and away from the domestic economic concerns that drove many voters to embrace America First in the first place.


But the American identity in America First also is fracturing. Republicans and Democrats; city-dwellers and country-people; northerners and southerners; coasts and heartlands: Who, or what, is American looks very different depending on the vantage point. Polling has shown how divided the country is politically, and this is directly linked to how people identify America and Americans differently.


So what, then, is America First? Ironically, perhaps, Americans have returned to an understanding of the Declaration of Independence focused on its litany of complaints, not its assertions of equality. At home and abroad, Americans’ lists of what they are fighting against are growing ever longer than the lists of what they are fighting for. Meanwhile, America the nation, and America the state, continue to drift apart.


Enjoyed this article? Share it with your network. This week only, we’ve lifted the paywall across ForeignPolicy.com to commemorate America’s 250th birthday.


Elisabeth Leake is the Lee E. Dirks chair in diplomatic history at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and an associate professor of history at Tufts University.












FP America, the Once Global Nation At 250, the country is struggling to come to terms with the world it created. - July 2, 2026, 12:30 PM - By Odd Arne Westad, a professor of history and global affairs at Yale University and the director of Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center.

 FP

America, the Once Global Nation

At 250, the country is struggling to come to terms with the world it created.

July 2, 2026, 12:30 PM

By Odd Arne Westad, a professor of history and global affairs at Yale University and the director of Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center.




An illustration of a vintage-style map featuring North America and parts of Europe and Africa. Overlaid on the map are 3D red brick walls shaped exactly like the borders of the contiguous United States and Alaska, casting long shadows to the right.

Pep Montserrat illustration for Foreign Policy


Thank you for subscribing. To celebrate America’s 250th birthday, we’ve lifted our paywall this week so you can share any article with your network, completely free.

----------------------


Ever since its inception, the United States has been remaking the world in its image. Driven by relatively high economic growth rates, increasing predominance in its own hemisphere, and a peculiar knack for making useful innovations, the country has become not only powerful, but an object of emulation for many others. The expanding global influence of the United States was created not just by its own power in military and diplomatic terms, but by its economic, social, and cultural influence.


By the 20th century, the U.S. position in the world was unique. Not only was it powerful enough to act on its own inclinations, it was attractive and popular on a global scale in ways that many Americans have never fully understood.


An illustration with a weathered, textured look on a beige background. In the center is a blue, sketch-style globe showing the Western Hemisphere, primarily focusing on North and South America. A stylized red eagle with its wings spread is flying across the upper right portion of the globe, facing toward the right. The words "America Retold" are at left.


America Retold: 250 years of the United States and the world. Read more from the series.


The United States is, in many ways, the first empire that is also a global nation. Founded by European settlers, it has had close to 85 million immigrants arrive since 1870. Of its current population, roughly 51 million are immigrants, and close to half the U.S. population has at least one foreign-born grandparent.


Immigration has been America’s greatest strength and attraction.  But it has also been politically troublesome at home. Americans have constantly worried about what new waves of immigrants were doing to the country—even if those doing the worrying only arrived on a slightly earlier boat.


A historic black-and-white photograph showing a group of immigrants, mostly women and children wearing headscarves and heavy coats, walking down a wooden gangplank from a ferry. A man in a cap stands at the bottom of the ramp next to them, with a large brick building in the background across the water.


Immigrants arrive to Ellis Island in New York circa 1880. Fotosearch/Getty Images


For the world at large, America’s openness has been its most significant appeal. Anyone could become an American, whether through consumption, culture, or migration. Someone growing up in India could aspire to one day, through hard work, become a U.S. citizen. Someone at school in Lebanon could form a band playing music by Americans and imagine themselves in Los Angeles or Nashville.


The U.S. remaking of the world has been as much about these values as it has been about economic or military power. Moreover, no other country has had even close to this kind of appeal, at least not in modern times.


Of course, the United States has also intervened abroad in far more direct ways. U.S. presidents generally did so in what they viewed as the cause of freedom, however contested that concept may be both at home and elsewhere. The major U.S. interventions were against trade restrictions, authoritarianism, and expansionism—against Germany (twice), against Japan, and against the Soviet Union in the Cold War. World War I was a dividing line. It was the first time the United States sent its own soldiers to fight other major powers overseas. Even though the number of casualties were light compared to other powers—just over 300,000, compared to nearly 3 million Brits and over 7 million Russians—the psychological impact at home was severe, splitting the country between interventionists and anti-interventionists for almost a generation.


The combination of World War II and the Cold War that followed proved significantly more deadly. These conflicts saw about a million American dead and wounded in the world war and more than 300,000 in the Cold War, mainly in Korea and Vietnam.


America Retold: 250 years of the United States and the world


An illustration in a detailed woodcut style depicts a large tornado swirling violently under a dark, heavy blanket of storm clouds. Caught in the outer winds of the vortex are two historical flags on broken poles: a Confederate battle flag on the left and a historical American flag with a circle of stars on the right. Swirling in the debris field below the flags are several silhouettes of rifles and pistols scattered by the force of the storm against a light tan background.


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An illustration on a textured red background featuring the dark silhouette of a person with a long braided ponytail. Three disembodied hands in suits interact with the silhouette: one hand places a string of blue and white beads around the neck, another hand rests on top of the head, and a third hand pins a small American flag to the torso.


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A vintage-style woodcut illustration of a cracked bronze bell suspended from a wooden beam against a background of swirling, engraved clouds.

Between Independence and Freedom This article has an audio recording

Elisabeth Leake


An illustration in an engraved, woodcut style portrays a landscape scene divided by water under a sepia-toned sky. In the left foreground, a prominent flagpole holds a waving American flag over a grassy shoreline. Attached to the base of the flagpole is a heavy metal chain that stretches across the dirt path but ends abruptly with an open, broken link. Across a body of water in the distance, low rolling hills are visible. On the right side, a second flagpole flies the Mexican flag. Next to it, a small silhouette of a person stands looking toward a large, stylized sun with a human face that radiates beams of light across the sky.


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An illustration in a woodcut engraving style showing a large brown American bison standing on a stylized, vintage map of the United States. Dark, heavy smoke billows out from an oil pumpjack and a drilling derrick on the map, enveloping the bison and filling the upper sky


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An illustration in a detailed woodcut or engraved style depicts a vintage brown leather suitcase adorned with several international travel stickers. The stickers include a Mexican flag, an "Aeronaves de Mexico" airline logo, an "Italia" shield sticker, a "Sicilia" sticker next to an Italian flag, a French flag, and vintage hotel labels from Paris and Marseille. Resting on the top right corner of the suitcase is a grey fedora hat turned upside down. Inside the hat, an American flag pattern lines the interior, and a black revolver rests tucked into the brim with its handle protruding out. The background is a textured tan color.


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The Cold War and its aftermath made the United States into the world’s hegemon. It was a global empire in all but name, with alliances, interests, and preoccupations spread across the world. The successful rebuilding of Europe and Japan, and their integration into a U.S.-led economic and political world order, formed the center of this enterprise, contributing to a rapidly globalizing, or Americanizing, international system.


Since at least the start of the 20th century, United States has wrestled with the question of how to employ its global power and attraction. Some of the answers were, if not given, then at least over-determined by America’s own historical experience. Spreading capitalism and consumerism reflected the 19th century U.S. experience—while also advancing U.S. economic interests abroad.


Promoting trade also fit with America’s experience and interests. U.S. leaders consistently pushed for access to foreign markets, opening the doors (sometimes by force) to countries and regions that had not previously been fully available to foreign commerce. Ironically, America only proved willing to open its own markets much later, starting in the 1930s. Despite Washington’s recommendations to others, the United States itself arguably did not truly practice free trade until the Reagan administration in the 1980s.


Some other elements of the U.S. approach to the world were more contingent, though here too there was a strong connection to the country’s own historical experience. U.S. foreign policy showed a consistent tendency to fear and oppose social revolution. At the end of the 1700s, many U.S. leaders saw the French Revolution, with its emphasis on equality and social justice, as the evil twin of their own revolution. A century or more later, their successors viewed socialism in Europe or the developing world as the antithesis of Americanism. For Americans, an emphasis on individual liberty trumped social improvements. They often viewed systematic attempts at abating poverty and inequality as threats to the existence of freedom everywhere. Certainly, 20th century revolutionaries provided more than enough crimes and atrocities to turn people against them, not just in the United States. But the U.S. resistance to revolution was more instinctive, not just based on the terrible experience of some radical experiments.



A bright, outdoor close-up shot of a smiling woman sitting in a stadium crowd, holding a young toddler who is waving a small American flag. In the foreground, the blurred profile of a man wearing a blue military uniform cap is visible, looking back toward them.


U.S. Air Force Airman Michael Drah, originally from Ghana, smiles with his wife, Akosua Yeboah-Drah, and daughter Rashana Drah before his naturalization ceremony in Los Angeles on Aug. 29, 2022.Mario Tama/Getty Images


Another preoccupation of U.S. foreign policy, rooted in the country’s own history, has been race. America’s founding contradiction, between freedom and slavery, has proven remarkably persistent, even after Americans began to seriously confront their own past in the latter part of the 20th century. The legacy of racism, alongside the resistance against social revolution, made the United States reluctant to support the anti-colonial struggles that in many ways defined the past 100 years. This shortfall helped tarnish the United States in the eyes of many post-colonial leaders, with consequences that are still in place today.


At the same time, America’s history of interventionism has produced a counter-reaction at home as well. This is not isolationism, but a widespread disengagement from overall currents in the world at large. Americans are not just tired of their country’s global role, which a significant number believe has brought little but forever wars, unfair competition, job losses, and unwanted immigration. They are also in many ways rebelling against the global system that the United States itself has put in place.


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On matters ranging from security to trade to climate change and pandemics, the opinions of a large number of Americans—and a thumping majority among those who support the current administration—are out of whack with those in other countries. Less than one-third of Republican voters believe in human-driven climate change, or in electric vehicles, or in lowering tariffs. What’s more, relatively few believe that social inequality, whether at home or abroad, is a problem. On a global scale, an average of close to 80 percent see inequality as a “very big” or “moderately big” issue.


In addition to these many divergences, the question of race has again come to the fore. The United States made remarkable progress in how it was perceived abroad on matters of racial equality during the late Cold War and after. However, the current president is widely viewed as unapologetically racist, due in large part to his approach toward immigration. At a December 2025 rally, President Donald Trump elaborated on what he first said in 2018: “Why is it we only take people from shithole countries[?] Why can’t we have some people from Norway, Sweden, just a few? Let us have a few from Denmark. … We always take people from Somalia, [places that] are filthy, dirty, disgusting.”


Trump’s prioritization of white South Africans as refugees has also produced a unique degree of global disgust. Of the small number of refugees resettled in the United States between October 2025 and April 2026, 99 percent were from South Africa, a country where whites control the vast majority of the national wealth. Only three refugees were admitted from Afghanistan, a country where the United States fought a war for 20 years.



A low-angle shot of several law enforcement officers in tactical gear, vests labeled "ERO," and face coverings standing in the foreground. Behind them is a tall chain-link fence topped with multiple rows of coiled razor wire against a blue sky with light clouds.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents gather outside the federal immigration center at Delaney Hall in Newark, New Jersey, on May 28.Spencer Platt/Getty Images


These changing attitudes and policies should be understood in relation to the way the world is changing. For the first time since 1945, the United States has real rivals both in economic and strategic terms. As a result, U.S. power to shape the world is becoming increasingly limited. The country’s ever narrower fixation on pet issues, often informed by domestic policy divides or personal resentments, is characteristic of great powers that see their positions as under threat.


What is most curious about the current administration’s policies is that they do constitute a revolution of sorts, a symbolic rebellion against the world that the United States has created. Trump has forged a policy based on the performance of grievance. It is intended to deliver instantaneous gratification to partisan positions at home, with little or no strategic cohesion.


The country, of course, remains very divided on the president’s approach, with Trump’s current approval rating at around 36 percent. This makes it increasingly likely that the Democrats will soon return to power. More long term, the country will undoubtedly recover from its current division and crisis. But when it does so, the world will be fundamentally transformed, with increasing economic diversity and great power multipolarity.


Ironically, this will also be a world that the United States helped bring into being—by denial and omission more than design.


Enjoyed this article? Share it with your network. This week only, we’ve lifted the paywall across ForeignPolicy.com to commemorate America’s 250th birthday.


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Odd Arne Westad is a professor of history and global affairs at Yale University and the director of Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center. His most recent book is The Coming Storm: Power, Conflict, and Warnings From History.


















ForeignPolicy.com. - July 05,2026 - essays on U.S. history as America turns 250...