Understanding the Great-Power Competition

Understanding the Great-Power Competition

Dr. Muhammad Akram Zaheer

Great-power rivalry has once again become the defining feature of global politics. The 21st century, much like the 20th, is witnessing a struggle among powerful states to shape the world order according to their interests and visions.

Yet, unlike the Cold War which was framed largely as a clash between capitalism and communism the current competition cannot be understood solely through ideology. It is a deeper contest over geography, economic influence and control of the global commons. The divide today is between two enduring worldviews: the continental and the maritime. This conflict over how the world should be organized through control of land or dominance at sea has existed for centuries. Historically, great empires have risen and fallen according to how well they adapted to one of these models.

The continental powers, traditionally land-based, emphasize control over territory, resources and regional security zones. In contrast, maritime powers focus on global trade, open sea routes and flexible alliances that allow them to project power across the world. This geographic divide has once again come to shape international relations. The post-Cold War period was marked by a brief illusion of consensus. The collapse of the Soviet Union led many in the West to believe that the liberal, market-oriented and maritime vision of global order had triumphed permanently.

The United States stood unchallenged as the dominant naval power, commanding the world’s sea lanes and promoting a system of globalization centered on open trade and financial flows. However, the early decades of the 21st century have shown that history never ends. As new powers rise and old ones recover, the underlying geographic logic of international politics has returned.China and Russia, the two main continental powers of the modern era, have challenged the Western maritime order. Their cooperation, though often uneasy, is rooted in a shared perception that the U.S.-led system limits their sovereignty and strategic freedom.

Both countries seek to secure their continental peripheries Russia in Eurasia and China across East Asia and to reduce the influence of maritime powers along their borders. For them, the international system is not merely about rules or norms but about the physical control of space and the ability to shape trade, energy and security routes.

For continental powers, geography dictates a worldview built around defense and depth. Their primary concern is the security of borders and the stability of their neighboring regions. Russia, for example, sees the plains of Eastern Europe as both a potential invasion route and a buffer zone essential to its survival. Its interventions in Ukraine, Georgia and Central Asia are rooted not only in politics but in geography a desire to prevent the expansion of hostile forces into its near abroad.

Similarly, China’s Belt and Road Initiative represents an effort to anchor its economic and strategic influence across the vast expanse of Eurasia, connecting its industrial heartlands to markets and resources through railways, pipelines and highways that cannot be blocked by foreign navies.In this continental logic, power is derived from territorial control, resource security and regional integration. The land becomes both a source of wealth and a defensive shield. The modern expression of this worldview can be seen in Russia’s energy diplomacy, China’s infrastructure-led expansion and their mutual preference for multipolarity over Western-dominated globalization. Both states are trying to build a world in which no single maritime power can dictate the flow of goods, technology, or ideas.

The maritime powers led by the United States and its allies in Europe and the Indo-Pacific see global order through a different lens. For them, the seas are not barriers but bridges. Control of maritime routes enables economic interdependence, international cooperation and access to distant markets. The power of the maritime world rests not on conquering territory but on maintaining open and secure sea lanes, stable institutions and technological leadership.

Historically, maritime powers have thrived on trade and innovation. From the British Empire’s control of the oceans to America’s postwar dominance of the Pacific and Atlantic, their prosperity depended on the ability to move goods, capital and information freely. The U.S.-led alliances NATO in Europe and the network of partnerships across the Indo-Pacific reflect this maritime tradition. They are not empires of occupation but systems of coordination, where mutual defense ensures freedom of navigation and the protection of shared interests.

In today’s context, the maritime order faces growing challenges. China’s naval expansion, Russia’s renewed submarine activity and Iran’s influence over the Strait of Hormuz all test the stability of global sea routes. The competition is not only military but also technological and economic. Disputes over undersea cables, maritime surveillance and freedom of movement in the South China Sea illustrate how the contest between continental and maritime powers now extends into new domains, including cyberspace and outer space.

Unlike the rigid bipolarity of the Cold War, the present great-power competition is more fluid and complex. The dividing line between land and sea power is blurred by technology and interdependence. China, for instance, though primarily continental in its origins, has developed a formidable navy and invested heavily in port infrastructure across Africa, the Middle East and South Asia through the “Maritime Silk Road.” Meanwhile, the United States and its allies have expanded their influence inland, building defense partnerships in Central Asia, Eastern Europe and even parts of Africa.

The result is a global tug-of-war over the architecture of power. On one side stands the vision of a connected, rules-based maritime world led by the United States and supported by partners like Japan, Australia and the United Kingdom. On the other stands a continental vision led by China and Russia, which prioritizes sovereignty, security and control over internal regions and trade corridors. The tension between these two visions defines the strategic dilemmas facing many middle powers, from India and Turkey to Iran and Pakistan. Each must balance access to global markets with the need for regional security.

The central question for the future of international order is whether these two worldviews can coexist. Some analysts argue that interdependence will force a compromise, as both systems depend on each other’s resources and markets. Others believe the divide is deepening, with military build-ups, sanctions and regional conflicts creating a self-reinforcing cycle of suspicion. What is certain is that geography continues to shape destiny. The physical layout of continents and oceans still defines how states perceive their threats, opportunities and ambitions.

In this emerging era, power is no longer measured solely by nuclear arsenals or GDP figures but by control over supply chains, digital infrastructure and the movement of energy and data. Whether it is China building railways across Central Asia, the United States forging alliances in the Indo-Pacific, or Russia asserting its dominance in the Arctic, all major powers are adapting old geographic principles to new technological realities.

The contest between continental and maritime powers is thus not merely a matter of ideology or military might. It is a struggle over how the world’s wealth, security and influence should be organized. The outcome will determine whether the 21st century is shaped by networks of open connectivity or by blocs of territorial control. Geography, once again, is destiny but in this era, it is being redrawn through both land and sea.