Does this signal the decline of the US as the world’s superpower? America’s control of the international situation since WW2 has been built upon her military strength. Today the US does not enjoy the same primacy as it did prior to its invasion of Iraq. Iraq and Afghanistan have impacted US power and depleted her resources. The global economic crisis further exacerbated America’s standing in the world, as it turned towards Socialist intervention to prop up its economy. Because of such challenges America’s presence in the world is being considered as overstretched and untenable. Whilst the US is faltering and despite all the setbacks it has faced the US still remains the world’s dominant power, sets the worlds agenda and controls the global balance of power.
As a result of America’s apparent weakness the challenges stemming from her competitors have grown in size and scope and today are much stronger. China has a military industry in better shape than Russia, but it lacks the global ambition necessary to remove the US as the world’s superpower.
Russia on the other hand has managed to take advantage of America’s weakness and strengthen itself in the Former Soviet republics. However Russia is still very far from the necessary economy and industrial base needed to pose a direct challenge to the US. For these reasons the US will remain the world’s superpower for the foreseeable future even though it is faltering, because none of the other powers can directly challenge it, yet.
The US faces challenges from two potential challengers, China and Russia, however US national intelligence estimates have continued to reiterate the demand for Islam by the Islamic Ummah around the world as a threat.
Without a state the Ummah will be unable to become the leading nation and American aims are all geared towards ensuring the Ummah remains without a state to challenge the US. The world is at a cross roads unlike any time in recent history as the worlds superpower is visibly facing a variety of threats. As global competition intensifies, as nations compete with the US this will further preoccupy the US and will give the Ummah a great opportunity to change the status quo in the Muslim lands and establish their own state.
The Ummah’s yearning for Deen has alarmed the West who view the Khilafah, Shari’ah and Ummah as a threat to Western liberal democracy. The US and Britain have attempted to reform Islam in the West in the hope of exporting this new Islam without politics and Khilafah to the Muslim world. Such a strategy has failed to achieve anything substantial as it has been unable to enlist anyone with any credibility to carry the campaign to reform Islam, those from amongst the Ummah who sold their deen have been labeled traitors.
The global work for Khilafah needs to intensify, and such work needs to be translated into exposing the role of the Muslim rulers against the Ummah and the Deen. The armies in the Muslim world need to be shown beyond any shadow doubt that the Ummah, globally, wants change and backs the army to make this happen 100%.
[Extracted from the book ‘Strategic Estimate 2010’ by Adnan Khan]
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