"To the forces of the Red Army and the Navy: On May 8, 1945, representatives of the German High Command signed an act of unconditional surrender of the German Armed Forces. The Great Patriotic War that was waged by the Soviet people against the German-Nazi invaders has victoriously concluded. Germany has been completely defeated," Levitan said.
With that, the deadliest war in history, which caused the deaths of tens of millions of people, and left countless towns, cities and entire nations in ruins, was over.The leaders of the ‘Big Three’ Allied powers – the USSR, the USA and the UK, began planning for the post-world order in late 1943 at the Tehran Conference, with Stalin, Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt meeting in the Iranian capital to discuss wartime cooperation and the opening of a Second Front. A second meeting of the Big Three, the Yalta Conference, took place in Crimea in February 1945, on the eve of the European Axis Powers’ defeat.The Yalta Conference was the most important meeting of the Second World War, and arguably the most significant gathering of world leaders of the second half of the 20th century. In addition to European border issues, plans for the Allied occupation of Germany, and a pledge to “destroy the last traces of Nazism and fascism” in the liberated territories, the conference led to a Soviet commitment to start a military operation against Japan two to three months after the end of fighting in Europe.CC0 / / Yalta Conference, February 1945. Seated are: Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Josef Stalin
‘Crossing the Rubicon Into Ukraine’
The principles of the UN and the Helsinki Agreements successfully governed East-West relations until the end of the Cold War, and continued to function, albeit in fits and starts, until the start of the Ukrainian crisis in February 2014.”The US and the EU supported a coup in Ukraine and began to blindly justify any actions by the self-proclaimed authorities in Kiev, who embarked on a course of putting down by force that part of the Ukrainian people which rejected attempts to impose an unconstitutional order on the whole country, which wanted to defend their right to their native language, culture and history,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said at a session of the UN General Assembly in September 2014, referring to the conflict raging in the Donbass.The coup in Kiev, and the West’s attempts to split Ukraine off from cooperation with Russia and strip it of non-aligned status in favor of a push for NATO membership, was unacceptable to Moscow, Lavrov warned."Our Western partners did not heed our numerous warnings on the unacceptability of the violation of the principles of the UN Charter and the Helsinki Final Act, and time and again avoided serious cooperative work to establish a common space of equal and indivisible security and cooperation from the Atlantic to the Pacific," the foreign minister said.

"There is no alternative to creating a consensus on the rules of sustainable global governance under new historical circumstances – with full respect for the cultural and civilizational diversity in the world and the multiplicity of models of development. Achieving such a consensus across the board will be difficult and perhaps tiresome,” but “there is no other way," Lavrov stressed.
From Post-1991 US ‘New World Order’ to 21st Century ‘Rise of the Global Majority’
“After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States and its allies ruled the world based on ‘liberal rules’; there was no competition for such predominance,” Dr. Marco Marsili, a research associate at the Center for Strategic Research and Analysis – an international relations think tank, told Sputnik."Western institutions – NATO and the EU – have pushed forward their eastward enlargement to the extent that Moscow considered unacceptable and reacted (2008 in Georgia, 2014 and 2022 in Ukraine). It took two powers – a resurrected Russia and a rising China – to counter the US ambition to get NATO ballistic missiles to the Russian border," Marsili said.
Professor Wang Dehua, director of the Institute of South-Central Asian Studies at the Shanghai Municipal Center for International Studies, characterizes the state of the world today as the period of the “Rise of the Global Majority” – saying changes in the international order referred to by Presidents Putin and Xi during their summit in Moscow in March “involve the declining roles of the United States and Europe in world affairs and the rise of the ‘Global South.'”"As President Xi Jinping put it when bidding farewell to President Putin, 'right now there are changes the likes of which we have not seen for a hundred years'. He added, 'And we are the ones driving these changes together'," Wang recalled.

"These coalitions would then work together to limit an overbearing hegemony. Examples of such alignments are found in those organized against Louis XIV, Napoleon, the German Kaiser, and Hitler. In light of balance of power theory, it is no surprise that China and Russia as major powers are cooperating to balance against the US and its NATO war machine in order that a new world order can be established. This order emphasizes peaceful coexistence, international law, justice and equality of states," Wang explained.
At the same time, the academic noted, the so-called ‘liberal rules-based international order’ talked about by Western politicians, academics and media is slowly fading into history, with the term itself “just a polite euphemism for US global hegemony,” with “the primary driver of modern imperialism [being], of course, finance capitalism which Hobson, Lenin and others described well.”
Ukrainian Trigger
Gradually, Wang stressed, the US is transforming from global hegemon to a global “rogue state spreading its empire across the world” in the eyes of other countries. The Ukrainian crisis is helping to speed this process along, the academic believes, with the conflict making clear to “the majority of the peoples of the world…that Washington’s malign Cold War mentality” is driving the Ukrainian crisis, and “preparations for a future war against China” as well.Fabio Massimo Parenti, an associate professor of international political economy at the Istituto Lorenzo de’ Medici, a prestigious international relations school based in Florence, Italy, agrees with this assessment.Even the creation and expansion of institutions like the BRICS and Shanghai Cooperation Organization shows that tectonic changes are afoot, Parenti said. "The biggest share of the world’s trade and GDP is driven by non-Western countries, and the imperial mafia-style neoliberal order has lost consensus (rarely authentic) among the majority of the world’s population and within the West as well."
Parenti agrees that the Ukrainian crisis has “accelerated the above-mentioned historical trends.””A new international order is already here to stay, under construction throughout the last decades of wars, financial crises and new emerging international arrangements to free the world population from said tyranny,” he said. “New cultural codes, a new media environment, and new regional and international institutional arrangements” will help “shape a real democratization of international relations, of people-to-people relations,” the observer suggested.
Empire in Decline
Thomas W. Pauken II, the author of ‘US vs China: From Trade War to Reciprocal Deal’ is a consultant on Asia-Pacific affairs and a geopolitical commentator, stressed to Sputnik that Washington’s imperious global policy is not an innate trait of the United States or its people, but rather the result of the corruption of its political and economic elites in recent decades.”It’s been my experience that most Americans are really good people. They love to help. They love to try their best to make a better world,” Pauken said. Unfortunately, US engagement with the world, particularly after the end of the Cold War and the dawn of the 21st century, gradually turned to attempts to establish a unipolar world order “in which basically Washington is in charge,” in search of control and dictating its terms to the rest of the world."There's been a corruption of the US government where instead of thinking about how to help others, it's about how to 'thank' their elites and the people who are in power in the Washington Beltway helping themselves. And so when that changes, when the motives change, that's when this so-called 'New Rules Order' became…harmful to our world," Pauken said.
“This is common for many great empires, no matter how ‘good and wonderful’ they are; eventually, there is going to be a decline of the empire. Because what happens in power is it becomes very addictive and suddenly people who [have it] become corrupted. And I think what we’re seeing right now is a corruption of America, along with that US foreign policy. It’s no longer about helping the world, but about making selfish changes for the US,” he said.

"What we can say is that the American global hegemony that characterized the last 30 years, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, that [it] is being severely tested and may well end in a matter of a few years, in all dimensions: militarily, economically, [and] the role of the dollar as the world's reserve currency. These things are changing with dramatic speed," the analyst pointed out.
When asked about the most significant geopolitical events taking place right now, he pointed to the conflict in Ukraine, which Doctorow said is “really a test of strength between Russia and the collective West led by the United States.”Touching upon other global trends that could help lead to the emergence of a new international order, he underscored that it was Russia, who “has broken the ice.”"Russia was compelled to come forward by American provocations, and it began its special military operation in Ukraine. Russia faced the 'sanctions from hell' that were coming out of Washington, and Russia survived it. And this astonishing development gave a lot of courage and emboldened countries that otherwise feel exactly the same way as Russia does about American global hegemony," the analyst added, referring to China and India.
In this context, he dwelt on “rampant” discussions about de-dollarization, a process that Doctorow recalled is dismissed by “all of the American financial experts and commentators in the leading financial newspapers.”Mentioning trade in oil, he said that “if it no longer is in dollars,” it will destroy “the dollar’s reserve position.””That is what we are witnessing today, and that is bringing about the change in global politics that heads us in the direction towards a multipolar world, a more democratic world governance. If the dollar loses its supreme position as a reserve currency, it loses its fists, its hammer for controlling global governance,” the analyst underlined.