In the News Now: Reflections on Empire and Decline
These contemporary assessments invite comparison with historical theories of civilizational cycles. The fourteenth-century scholar Ibn Khaldun developed a framework centered on two key concepts: `asabiyya, or social cohesion, and hadara, the sophisticated urban civilization that emerges when cohesive groups consolidate power. In his analysis, empires rise when strong group solidarity enables conquest and institution-building, but gradually weaken as prosperity erodes that solidarity, replacing shared purpose with individual ambition and administrative complexity. The transition from desert austerity to urban luxury, in Khaldun's view, sows the seeds of eventual fragility.
Applying this lens to current debates requires careful distinction between symptoms and structural shifts. Military overextension, domestic polarization, and economic strain are not new challenges for any hegemon. What matters is whether these pressures reflect temporary setbacks within a resilient system or evidence of deeper civilizational misalignment—where institutions no longer channel collective energy toward common goals. Some analysts argue that the United States retains significant advantages in innovation, demographic dynamism, and alliance networks that complicate any simple narrative of terminal decline.
The recurrence of decline discourse itself carries weight. When influential voices in media and diplomacy invoke the language of imperial twilight, they shape perceptions that can become self-fulfilling. Allies may hedge their commitments; adversaries may test boundaries; domestic audiences may grow skeptical of international engagement. The psychological dimension of power—confidence, legitimacy, the belief in a shared project—matters as much as material capabilities.
History offers no predetermined endpoints. Empires have reversed course through reform, renewal, and recalibration. The value of frameworks like Ibn Khaldun's lies not in prediction but in diagnosis: prompting reflection on what sustains collective purpose, how institutions adapt to changing circumstances, and whether a society can renew its foundational solidarities without abandoning its core principles. The question for any nation navigating moments of uncertainty is not whether decline is inevitable, but whether it possesses the wisdom to recognize the difference between the end of an era and the beginning of a necessary transformation.