
For a few fleeting days, the mood among Western leaders was almost celebratory. At the latest G-7 summit the sense of relief was unmistakable. There were no dramatic walkouts, no public explosions of anger, no headline-grabbing attacks on allies. French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer reportedly went as far as offering military support to help the United States secure the Strait of Hormuz after Iran threatened one of the world's most important energy corridors. In return, they sought stronger American backing for Ukraine. Diplomacy appeared to be functioning once again.
In today's geopolitical climate, however, the definition of success has become remarkably modest. The benchmark is no longer bold agreements or visionary leadership. It is simply avoiding disaster. As one observer noted, success now means the absence of rupture. If the United States behaves in a relatively normal fashion and the summit concludes without a transatlantic crisis, leaders leave feeling victorious.
That alone says a great deal about the state of the Western alliance. The optimism surrounding the summit was real, but it was also fragile. It existed largely within the carefully managed confines of diplomatic meetings, private discussions, and choreographed public appearances. Once the summit ended, reality returned with remarkable speed. Opinion pages, political analysts, and foreign policy commentators quickly filled the media landscape with a very different conversation: the growing possibility that we are witnessing the gradual end of American dominance.
The contrast was striking. Inside the summit halls, leaders spoke of cooperation, stability, and shared interests. Outside those halls, the debate centered on decline, fragmentation, and uncertainty.
This disconnect reveals the central challenge facing Western governments. They are attempting to project confidence at a time when confidence itself has become increasingly difficult to sustain. The institutions built after World War II were designed around the assumption of consistent American leadership. NATO, the global trading system, and much of the international security architecture depended on a United States that was both powerful and predictable.
Today, power remains. Predictability does not. The rest of the world notices this. Allies notice it. Rivals certainly notice it. China continues expanding its influence across multiple continents. Russia remains determined to challenge Western interests despite immense economic pressure. Middle Eastern powers are pursuing increasingly independent foreign policies. Even traditional allies are quietly discussing scenarios that would have seemed unthinkable a decade ago: a future in which Washington becomes less willing, or less able, to act as the central pillar of the international order.
None of this means American dominance will disappear tomorrow. Great powers rarely collapse overnight. More often, influence erodes gradually while political leaders insist everything remains under control. The real danger is not sudden decline but complacency, the belief that maintaining appearances is equivalent to maintaining strength.
That is why the relief displayed at the G-7 summit deserves closer examination. Relief is not strategy. Temporary harmony is not long-term stability. And the absence of conflict during a few days of meetings does not answer the larger questions confronting the West.
As leaders prepare for the upcoming NATO summit, they face a reality they would rather avoid. The challenge is no longer simply keeping the United States inside the Western camp. The challenge is convincing the world that the camp itself remains coherent, confident, and capable of leading.
For now, Western leaders are celebrating a summit that did not go badly. In another era, that would have been the bare minimum. Today, it is treated as a triumph. That may be the most revealing sign of all.










