By Victor V. Motti*
The recent statement issued by Asia Without Borders—addressing geopolitical tensions spanning Venezuela, Greenland, and Iran—is, at first glance, a compelling defense of sovereignty in an increasingly unstable international system. It skillfully blends descriptive analysis with normative concern, articulating a principled objection to perceived violations of international law and the erosion of internal agency. Yet beneath its clarity lies a deeper tension: the statement reads less as foresight and more as elegy.
From a futures studies perspective, timing is not incidental—it is constitutive. Insights of this nature, had they been articulated a decade earlier, might have functioned as anticipatory signals within a foresight framework, enabling policymakers and civil society to prepare for the systemic shifts now unfolding. Instead, they emerge retrospectively, documenting rather than shaping the transformation. This distinction matters because what we are witnessing is not merely a series of geopolitical disruptions, but the reactivation of a historical pattern: the return of empire.
Recent developments illustrate this shift with striking clarity. Reports of U.S. intervention in Venezuela, renewed territorial rhetoric regarding Greenland, and escalating tensions with Iran reveal a pattern of assertive power projection that challenges the post–Cold War narrative of a rules-based international order. Analysts have noted that such actions suggest a redefinition of sovereignty itself—no longer an absolute principle, but a conditional one, subject to strategic calculation.
However, to interpret these events solely through the lens of American unilateralism risks missing a broader systemic dynamic. The Asia Without Borders statement, while forceful in its critique of the United States, remains largely silent on parallel developments involving China and Russia. Both have engaged in expanding territorial claims and consolidating spheres of influence, contributing to a multipolar environment in which great powers increasingly test the limits of international norms.
This omission is not trivial. It reflects a lingering asymmetry in global critique—one that foregrounds Western transgressions while underestimating the transformative ambitions of emerging powers. In particular, the ideological dimension of China’s evolving global narrative deserves closer scrutiny. The invocation of a “shared future of mankind,” framed within a reinterpretation of Marxist thought, signals not merely a diplomatic slogan but a civilizational project. Unlike the episodic disruptions of international law attributed to the United States, this project aspires to reshape the normative foundations of global order itself.
From a futures-oriented standpoint, this raises a paradox. While the immediate violations of sovereignty and international law are alarming, they may be symptoms rather than causes—manifestations of a deeper transition from a unipolar to a contested imperial system. In such a system, multiple centers of power advance competing visions of order, each blending material capability with ideological narrative.
The discourse surrounding Venezuela and Greenland further illustrates this complexity. Reactions from global actors have been marked by inconsistency, revealing what some critics describe as selective adherence to principles of sovereignty and international law. Such selectivity undermines the credibility of the very norms being defended, reinforcing a perception that rules are contingent upon strategic interest.
What, then, does the “return of empire” signify in this context? It does not imply a simple reversion to nineteenth-century colonialism. Rather, it denotes the re-emergence of hierarchical, sphere-based governance structures within a formally sovereign world. Empires today do not necessarily annex territory; they shape environments—economic, technological, informational—in ways that constrain the autonomy of others.
This is where foresight becomes indispensable. The challenge is not merely to critique current actions but to anticipate the trajectories they imply. A foresight analysis conducted a decade ago might have identified early indicators: the erosion of multilateral institutions, the resurgence of great-power competition, the strategic centrality of resources and logistics, and the rise of civilizational narratives as tools of legitimacy. Today, these indicators have matured into defining features of the global landscape.
In this light, the Asia Without Borders statement can be read as part of a broader intellectual effort to reclaim the language of sovereignty and agency. Yet its impact would be amplified by a more comprehensive engagement with the full spectrum of imperial dynamics—Western and non-Western alike—and by a deeper integration of futures thinking.
Ultimately, the question is not whether empire has returned, but what form it will take—and whether alternative imaginaries can still emerge. If the current moment is indeed one of systemic transition, then the task ahead is not only analytical but creative: to articulate visions of global order that transcend both the fading liberal internationalism of the past and the resurgent imperial logics of the present.
In that sense, the most urgent need is not retrospective critique, but anticipatory imagination.

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Scenario A — Brain Size Continues to Decrease


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