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Wednesday, January 21, 2026

The Alaska Pact: The End of the Transatlantic Era and the "New Divide" of the World

The Alaskan Pact represents the definitive collapse of the post-1945 liberal order, marking a transition from a world of shared values to a brutal landscape of neo-imperial pragmatism. In this emerging reality, the traditional alliances that defined the twentieth century are being dismantled in favor of a new global partition, a secret understanding between Washington and Moscow that mirrors the dark logic of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. This contemporary realignment is catalyzed by a dramatic American shift toward territorial expansionism, specifically centered on the strategic annexation of Greenland.

Under this mirror-image scenario, the United States moves first, abandoning its role as the guarantor of international law to secure its own resource-rich fortress in the North. The annexation of Greenland is not a diplomatic purchase but a blunt assertion of power that shatters the foundational trust of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. By violating the sovereignty of a NATO ally, the United States effectively triggers an automatic and irreversible divorce from its European partners. This action serves a dual purpose: it secures the vast mineral wealth and Arctic shipping lanes for an isolationist America while simultaneously signaling to the Kremlin that the era of collective defense is over.

With the American nuclear umbrella retracted and the Alliance in a state of terminal paralysis, the Baltic states find themselves isolated and exposed. The subsequent Russian invasion of Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia is not a challenge to American power, but rather the fulfillment of the Alaskan Pact’s quiet agreement. In this new world order, the Baltic region is the price paid for American dominance in the Western Hemisphere. The European powers, stripped of American logistical and military support, are forced into a state of stunned inaction, relegated to the role of observers as their eastern flank is reabsorbed into a neo-imperial sphere of influence.

The final stage of this geopolitical reshuffling involves the inevitable absorption of Canada. Under the pretext of responding to a heightened Russian threat—a threat that Washington itself facilitated through its withdrawal from Europe—the United States moves to "protect" its northern neighbor. This process, which may be framed as integrated defense or administrative necessity, serves as a de facto occupation, consolidating North America into a single, resource-independent entity. The Alaskan Pact thus reveals itself as a blueprint for a world divided between apex predators, where the sovereignty of smaller nations is traded like currency, and the Atlantic Ocean is no longer a bridge between allies, but a moat.

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