The World Is Voting With Its Opinion — And Washington Won’t Like the Results
For decades, U.S. leaders spoke as if history had already been settled. The Soviet Union had fallen, American power was unmatched, and the world would eventually follow Washington’s political and economic model. But a remarkable new international survey suggests that era may be ending — and ending far faster than many in the West are willing to admit.
According to the 2026 Democracy Perception Index, which surveyed tens of thousands of people across 84 countries, a majority of respondents now view the United States as the greatest threat to global peace and stability. Even more striking, people in most surveyed nations say they view China more favorably than the United States.
These findings do not come from Beijing or Moscow. The survey was conducted by the Alliance of Democracies, a Western organization backed by European institutions, major corporations, and figures closely associated with NATO. Yet the results paint a picture of a rapidly changing world order in which America’s endless wars, military footprint, economic coercion, and support for controversial foreign interventions have severely damaged its global standing.
As Washington escalates confrontations abroad—from Iran and China to renewed military tensions across multiple regions—the rest of the world appears increasingly skeptical of U.S. claims to moral leadership. The survey also reveals a growing divide between how Western elites define democracy and how much of the world understands it. While American political discourse often emphasizes electoral procedures and individual rights, many respondents defined democracy more simply: a government that improves people’s lives, delivers economic security, and promotes social well-being.
Whether one agrees with these conclusions or not, the message is difficult to ignore. The unipolar moment that followed the Cold War is fading. The assumption that the United States would remain the unquestioned center of global power is being challenged not only by rival governments but by public opinion itself.
The real question may no longer be whether the world is changing, but whether Washington is capable of recognizing that change before its credibility erodes even further.
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