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Showing posts from February, 2026

Top 10 Countries That Control the World Economy in 2025 | Geo Glance

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Top 10 Countries That Control the World Economy (2025 Reality Check) In 2025, global economic power is no longer measured by GDP alone. Trade routes, currency influence, energy control, technology leadership, and financial institutions all play a decisive role in determining which countries truly shape the world economy . This article takes a realistic, data-driven look at the top 10 countries that exert the greatest influence over the global economic system in 2025 , based on multiple indicators—not hype. 1. United States 🇺🇸 The Financial and Currency Superpower The United States remains the single most influential economy in the world. While its share of global GDP has gradually declined, its control over the global financial system is unmatched. Why the U.S. dominates: The US dollar is involved in over 80% of global trade transactions Home to Wall Street, the IMF’s largest voting power, and the World Bank Global technology giants (Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon)...

Boards of Peace: How the United States and Trump Shape Global Stability

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Boards of Peace: Power, Strategy, and the American Blueprint for Global Stability Introduction In international politics, peace is rarely accidental. It is designed, negotiated, enforced, and constantly adjusted through institutions, alliances, and power structures that quietly shape global order. These structures can be described as “Boards of Peace” —a network of diplomatic forums, military alliances, economic agreements, and strategic doctrines that major powers use to prevent large-scale conflict while protecting their own interests. In recent years, the United States has remained the central architect of these boards. From NATO and the United Nations to trade corridors and regional security pacts, Washington continues to influence how peace is defined, defended, and sometimes delayed. The return of Donald Trump to the center of U.S. political debate has again raised critical questions: What kind of peace does America want? Who benefits from it? And what are the long-term costs? ...