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  • Email Form Page
  • Walter's Blog.
    • Crime in Hong Kong >
      • Triads
      • The Saga That Rocked Hong Kong's Legal Fraternity
      • Yip Kai-foon - No Hero
  • History of Hong Kong Policing
    • History 1841 to 1941
    • History 1945 to 1967
    • Anatomy of the 50 cent Riot - 1966
    • The Fall of a Commissioner.
    • History 1967 to 1980
    • Three Wise Men from the West
    • 1980 Joining Up - Grafton Street >
      • Arrival and First Impressions
      • First Week
      • Training
      • Passing Out
      • Yaumati Cowboy >
        • Getting on the Streets
        • Jumpers, pill poppers and the indoor BBQ
        • Into a Minefield.
        • Tempo of the City
      • Why Tango in Paris, when you can Foxtrot in Kowloon? >
        • Baptism By Fire
        • Kai Tak with Mrs Thatcher.
        • Home; The Boy Returns
      • 1984 - 1986 >
        • PTU Instructor & Getting Hitched
        • Having a go: SDU
        • Starting a Chernobyl family
        • EOD - Don't touch anything
        • Semen Stains and the rules
      • 1987 to 1992 - Should I Stay or Go? >
        • Blue Lights, Sirens & Grenades
        • Drugs, Broken Kids & A Plane Crash
        • 600 Happy Meals Please!
        • Hong Kong's Best Insurance
        • Riding the Iron Horse
    • The Blue Berets.
    • The African Korps and other tribes.
    • Getting About - Transport.
    • A Pub in every station
    • Bullshit Bingo & Meetings
    • Godber - The one who nearly got away.
    • Uncle Ho
  • Home
  • Introduction
  • About Walter
  • Top 20 Films
    • 2001 - A Space Odyssey.
    • The Godfather.
    • Blade Runner
    • Kes
    • Star Wars
    • Aliens
    • Ferris Bueller's Day Off
    • The Life of Brian
    • Dr Strangelove.
    • Infernal Affairs
    • Bridge on the River Kwai.
    • This Is Spinal Tap.
    • Chung King Express
    • An Officer and a Gentleman
    • PTU
    • Contact
    • Saving Private Ryan
    • Family Guy Star Wars
    • Zulu
    • Hard Day's Night
  • Blogs Greatest Hits
    • Savile : Now Then, Now Then
    • A Silly Country
    • Vennells - In the Faustian Realm Page
    • A Bond Is Broken
    • The English Eccentric Lives On
    • How is democracy working for you?
    • Occupy Central - A creature void of form
    • Brave New World
    • Bob Dylan and Me.
    • Sweet Caroline - Never Seemed So Good!
    • Postmodernism - Spiraling down the sink hole.
    • Why Dad is so important.
    • Man Overboard
    • Suffer the Children
    • Tony Blair, the turd that won't flush
    • Algorithms and Robots - the changing face of work
    • Campus Warfare
    • Are We Alone?
    • There is no motive.
    • The State of Play
    • Crisis, What Crisis?
    • Milk Powder - A Test of public sentiment.
    • Hello Baldy - Free Speech.
    • THe Other Side of the Story
    • The Merry House of Windsor
    • The Utility of the Windsors
    • Civil War?
    • Big Lily - The Headscarf Hero
    • RTHK - Spinning.
    • Occupy Leaders Convicted - What Next?
    • Hypocrites
    • Hong Kong's Lady Macbeth
    • Beijing Says Enough Is Enough
    • The Gardens of Fuyang
    • Beating the Devil - under a flyover
    • Culture Eats Strategy for Breakfast
    • Gweilo 鬼 佬​
    • What goes around, comes around!
    • The Cobra
    • Liz Truss - A Cosplay Thatcher
    • Liz Truss trashes and crashes.
    • Hong Kong Judicary - has something gone wrong
    • Hubris, arrogance and failure.
    • Carry On Up the Khyber
    • The Unseen Hand
    • The Laptop that won't shut down
    • Legacy Media - the end is near
    • Malcolm Tucker Tribute Act
    • Journalism - Something has gone wrong?
    • Decline of the West? Maybe?
    • Canada's Killing Machine
    • English Uprising
    • South Yorkshire Police Madness
    • Deceitful BBC
    • Fair Dee Well
    • British Policing Needs A Reality Check.
    • Being a man is not a crime yet!
    • Putting Old Oak Common on the map.
    • When the winds stops blowing
    • Vietnam Part Deux - The Retreat from Kabul
    • Not Enough Of Us
    • The Long Read >
      • The Big Game
      • The Hidden Leader
      • British Policing - What's to be done?
      • How The Walls Come Down
      • War in Ukraine - the narrative and other stuff.
      • New World Order - Something is going on!
      • The Post Office; Lie, Deny, Cheat, Hide & Steal
      • To Scare the Monkeys
      • The U.K. is a tinderbox or are we all getting it wrong?
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Reflections on recent events, plus the occasional fact free rant unfiltered by rational argument. 

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16/12/2025 2 Comments

Pax Americana Is Over!

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"The release of Trump's new U.S. national security strategy trashes long-standing policies, leaving nations scrambling to grasp the implications."
In case you didn’t notice, President Trump has fundamentally disrupted the global geopolitical order. Globalisation, traditional alliances, and polite diplomacy have been swept aside. 

Since WWII, there has been a steady overlap in U.S. foreign policy from President Truman to President Biden, regardless of which party was in power. The common thread has been a rules-based world order, with the U.S. and its allies, to a lesser extent, acting as enforcers.

In his first term, President Trump supported this approach, although signs indicated that the thread was beginning to unravel. Now, it is broken. 


The release of his new national security strategy (NSS) trashes long-standing policies, causing nations to scramble to understand the implications. These changes are neither small nor incremental; they are seismic.

By law, each president must produce an NSS, although most resemble wish lists. Usually, such strategies are based on assessments that identify risks, threats, and opportunities. However, this NSS is full of aspirational statements, often lacking clear methods for achieving them or a comprehensive analysis of the current environment.

In this new NSS, Trump asserts that only the nation-state matters and that genuine power derives from economic and military strength—with the United States in the lead. It’s a blunt statement that the U.S. doesn’t have friends; it only has interests. 

While the NSS aligns with Trump’s public statements in recent years, this formalisation lends new momentum to his worldview—an approach that has surprised many countries, especially in Europe.

European nations are now singled out in the NSS, while traditional adversaries such as Russia receive only a brief mention.

Significantly, the so-called ‘special relationship’ between the UK and the US is absent from the NSS, confirming a long-held suspicion that it is more important for Britain than for Trump’s America. All Sir Kier’s grovelling to Trump has come to nothing.

European commentators and politicians have reacted with alarm, describing the strategy as ‘astonishing,’ ‘deeply disturbing,’ ‘alarming,’ and ‘staggering.’ Yet Trump has signalled his intentions for years. So why the surprise? Conversely, Russian officials welcomed the new strategy, claiming it aligns with their understanding of global affairs.

Essentially, Trump claims that the United States must remain the world’s strongest economy and most powerful military. The US will work with other nations only when it serves its core interests, and will take all necessary measures to defend them.

This is not a quid pro quo arrangement. However, implicit within the NSS is that the U.S. will act solely in its own interests, primarily limiting its direct influence to its immediate neighbours and leaving China and Russia to manage their respective spheres.

In many respects, this signifies a return to the realpolitik that once governed Europe before the Treaty of Westphalia. This pivotal moment introduced diplomacy and laid the groundwork for the modern international system.

For example, the very existence of NATO may now be in doubt. Similarly, intelligence sharing among Western allied nations is becoming increasingly uncertain. In fact, the UK and Dutch governments are already restricting their intelligence cooperation with the U.S. due to concerns over military actions, particularly alleged extrajudicial killings.

Additionally, European-supplied intelligence has appeared on social media chats among U.S. officials. Meanwhile, Denmark has moved to declare the U.S. a security risk, a remarkable stance for a NATO founding member.


Trump has clearly expressed that Latin America is within the US’s sphere of influence, and others should stay clear. This is the Monroe Doctrine on steroids. 

Notably, the NSS mentions events in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East only briefly. It also pays little attention to the perceived threats from Russia and China, a feature of the previous policy stance. Instead, the strategy mainly criticises European nations for failing to defend their borders, culture, and civilisations.

Trump has gone as far as to support political parties in Europe that share his worldview. He’s warned against ‘civilisational erasure’ in Europe and aims to ‘cultivate resistance’ to governments he believes are out of line with his ideals. We are familiar with that approach in Hong Kong. Throughout 2019 and much of 2020, Hong Kong saw the US funding ‘resistance’ that led to months of firebombs and rioting. 

In an interview with Politico that accompanies the release of the NSS, Trump is uncompromising in his attacks on European nations. "Europe’s leaders are not doing a good job … some are stupid," and "Many European countries will not be viable soon." "Most European nations are decaying, they are weak, they don’t know what to do." He asserts, "Europe is getting destroyed." And on it goes.

But what did the Europeans expect? They have remained silent while the US has interfered with governments across the globe for decades. The US has a history of toppling unwelcome leaders, installing puppet regimes, and funding revolutions. Now those tactics are reaching Europe, with Trump eager to install favourable leaders.

Will US cavalry charge across the Atlantic if Putin kicks off against NATO? That’s the question Europeans are asking. German Chancellor Frindrich Mertz has already answered it. “Pax Americana is over.”

Meanwhile, they’ll scramble to invest huge sums in upgrading their military forces, including recruiting personnel. In the UK, that might prove tricky because most frontline fighters come from white working-class communities who have been vilified and ignored for decades. Why should they step up and fight for a country that scorned them?

In all of this, the primary beneficiaries are Russia and China. Trump’s vision of the new world order essentially regards China as the dominant power in Asia, while maintaining the status quo on Taiwan and freedom of passage. Similarly, his approach to the war in Ukraine has consistently shown he tends to support Putin's position.

However, there are contradictions in the NSS. Trump asserts he will utilise the U.S.’s unmatched ‘soft power’ to influence events. Nonetheless, it is already evident that other nations no longer trust the U.S. because of Trump’s uncompromising stance. This attitude will undermine any ‘soft power’.

Furthermore, the policy assumes that other countries have no choice but to comply with U.S. demands. This is mistaken. Nations are already looking for new alliances.

Trump claims to be the ‘President of Peace’, which is an assertion we should commend. Although his statements should be taken with a pinch of salt. Has he truly brought long-term resolution to eight wars? For starters, the conflict on the Thai-Cambodian border has reignited. Additionally, he has failed to make progress on the Ukraine conflict.

With a touch of schadenfreude, Hong Kongers are watching these events. Europe is now on the receiving end of American hubris that has caused so much damage elsewhere. 

Henry Kissinger’s statement, “It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal," has never been truer. Of course, in context, Kissinger was asserting that the U.S. needed to support its allies to maintain international credibility, particularly to prevent the perception that aligning with the U.S. carried ‘fatal’ consequences.

Critics frequently use this shortened, popular version of the quote to suggest that the U.S. exploits, abuses, and then discards its allies for its own gain. 


That iteration of the Kissinger quote is now coming to pass. 

2 Comments

2/12/2025 1 Comment

The Archaeology of the Recent Dead

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"With respect, every fragment is handled carefully, recognising the deceased and honouring their memory."
A fire scene erupts as a hive of frenzied rescue efforts. Now that it's known there are no more survivors, the mood shifts. The urgency gives way to careful precision rather than haste.

​The site is declared a crime scene until proven otherwise, cordoned off with perimeter tape. A heavy, focused silence descends, broken only by the crunch of debris and quiet commands.


​Now, the painstaking task of identifying the human remains at the site is underway. Each day, a sombre procession of masked white figures, makes a subdued journey to the scene.

Young men and women, who last week were in offices investigating deceptions and fraud, are now sifting the wreckage. It is a methodical, slow and profoundly challenging task that blends forensic science with grim physical and emotional labour. They undertake it with the core principles of preserving evidence and dignity.  

Charred floors and walls are susceptible to collapse. Toxic chemicals, sharp metal, and broken glass are scattered everywhere. The air is heavy with the unforgettable smell—acrid smoke, melted plastics, and the sickly-sweet odour of burnt organic matter beneath it.

Everything appears in monochrome—shades of black, grey, and white. Familiar objects distort into grotesque shapes.

The scene now a grid system with each sector designated to a team. The officers work from the least-damaged areas towards the most-damaged, and from the upper layers downwards. 

Debris is methodically removed piece by piece. This delicate task involves small hand tools such as trowels, rakes, and ultimately, gloved hands. The search is tactile as officers feel for irregularities, for the density of bone or tooth amidst ash and plaster.

With respect, every fragment is handled carefully, recognising the deceased and honouring their memory. The goal is identification; each recovered fragment could be crucial for naming the victim, providing closure to grieving families, and supporting justice.

Investigators encounter the most personal and tragic moments preserved in destruction— a child's toy melted beside a bed or photographs curled into ash-reminding us of the emotional weight carried by this work.

The psychological impact on teams is well recognised; they support each other while professional help is on hand to cope with the emotional weight of the scene. 

This is one of the most demanding tasks in policing, requiring a rare blend of scientific detachment, physical endurance, and profound humanity.

This is the archaeology of the recent dead—a meticulous, respectful reversal of destruction to recover identities and, with them, the potential for justice and closure. 
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