Quinn Slobodian has a good review in the New York Review of Books of Edward Fishman’s Chokepoints: American Power in the Age of Economic Warfare. Fishman’s book, as discussed by Slobodian, suggests that the old geography of imperial power, associated with control over maritime chokepoints, has been displaced, or at least supplemented, by a new kind of geopolitical chokepoint embedded in the infrastructure of globalization itself.
The old strategic passages, Suez, Hormuz, Malacca, have not ceased to matter, of course. But the new chokepoints are less visible. They are located in dollar payment systems, correspondent banking networks, shipping lists, insurance, transaction data, export controls, semiconductor supply chains, and the legal mechanisms that allow American sanctions to reach firms and governments well beyond U.S. territory. The empire is not only in the fleet, but also in the spreadsheet, the compliance office, the server, and the bank account.
Slobodian’s central point, a moral or ethical one, is that Fishman is too complacent about the American use of these instruments. Sanctions and export controls are presented too easily as clever instruments of policy, when in fact they are instruments of economic warfare. They often miss ruling elites and impose enormous costs on ordinary people. They restrict access to medicines, raise the cost of living, reduce growth, and produce humanitarian consequences that rarely enter the calculations of the sanctioning power. No surprise there. Fishman is an insider of the US bureaucracy.
More importantly, he notes that there is also a paradox. Sanctions and economic warfare reveal American power and erode it at the same time. In the short run, they demonstrate the extraordinary coercive capacity of the United States. Washington can freeze assets, cut access to dollar payments, block technology transfers, threaten third-party firms, and punish countries that do business with the wrong partners. In the longer run, however, the repeated use of these instruments encourages both adversaries and allies to search for alternatives. Russia, China, Iran, and even European firms and governments learn that dependence on US-controlled networks is a vulnerability (The Chinese already knew that; see Jake Sullivan’s piece in the last issue of Foreign Affairs).
That is certainly right. But it is also incomplete. Slobodian’s critique captures the self-undermining logic of financial and technological chokepoints, but it underplays the military dimension that makes those chokepoints effective in the first place. The dollar system, the control over payment systems, the ability to impose secondary sanctions, and the capacity to define who can and cannot participate in global markets are not simply instruments of market power or legal jurisdiction. They are embedded in a broader imperial architecture.
That architecture includes US military reach, naval dominance, intelligence capabilities, alliance systems, bases surrounding potential rivals, and the capacity to enforce rules globally. The chokepoint is not only financial or technological. It is also geopolitical and military. The old geography of power has not disappeared. It has been internalized into the institutional and technological infrastructure of globalization. This is important because otherwise one ends up with an overly pessimistic view of American hegemony.
It is true that the strength of the system creates vulnerabilities. The more the United States weaponizes interdependence, the more other countries have incentives to escape from it. China’s efforts to build technological autonomy, Russia’s attempts to find payment alternatives, and the search for non-dollar channels of trade all reflect this dynamic. However, as Tim Barker notes in a recent piece in Phenomenal World, American declinism has often been less a description of terminal weakness than a political language for imperial renewal.
Further, hegemony also reproduces American power. The dollar is not simply a convenient currency that survives because markets trust it. Nor is its dominance ultimately explained by gold, credibility, or some spontaneous market convention. The willingness of agents across the world to accept dollars, to denominate contracts in dollars, to hold reserves in dollars, and to organize their calculations around the dollar rests on power. More precisely, it rests on the capacity of the United States to enforce the rules of the global system.
Monetary hegemony (the role of key currency) depends on military technology, which in turn depends on access to key commodities (mostly energy) and technological dominance (mostly in sectors related to the military), but then access to commodities and military power depend on the ability to spend without significant limits, which is based on monetary hegemony, in a circular and self-reinforcing way.
In a simplified way, since the transition to capitalism, there have been essentially three monetary standards. A silver standard, dominated by the Spanish silver peso (which anchored global trade), and was mostly managed by Italian (Genoese) and then Dutch bankers (Bank of Amsterdam), a gold standard, dominated by British pound (that anchored the Industrial Revolution, 1st and 2nd), and was managed by the Bank of England, and a fiat standard, dominated by the dollar, and managed by the Federal Reserve and the multilateral organizations (IMF, World Bank, BIS, etc.).
The rise of the pound was associated to the demonetization of silver, and the end of Bretton Woods to the demonetization of gold. The end of Breton Woods, in this sense, did not represent the beginning of the end of dollar hegemony. Quite the opposite. The collapse of the dollar-gold link created the first genuinely global fiat standard and enlarged the policy space of the United States. Freed from the gold constraint, the United States could use its currency, its public debt, and its central bank in ways unavailable to other countries. The dollar standard allowed the United States to spend, borrow, and sustain its military and technological capacities on a scale that others could not replicate.
This is the fiscal-military side of dollar hegemony. The hegemonic currency allows the state to spend without the same external constraint faced by peripheral countries. That spending supports the military-industrial complex, government procurement, research & development, and the hidden developmental state. In turn, military power sustains the international order in which the dollar remains central. Monetary power and military power are not separate. They are mutually reinforcing.
This is why the rise of China must be analyzed carefully. China has changed the geography of global production. It is no longer simply a low-wage assembler of cheap consumer goods. It is now a central actor in high-tech manufacturing, electric vehicles, batteries, solar panels, telecommunications, and other strategic sectors. The old complacent view that the United States would innovate and design while China assembled is gone. That was one of the illusions of the pro-globalization cheerleaders.
There is an argument, the energy-hegemony argument,, we may call it, made recently by Danny Bessner in David Sirota’s podcast, and in a more systematic way by Helen Thompson in her book Disorder,* that suggest that China is to become dominant because of its control of clean energy sources. Bessner said that “the country that is the leader in new energy technologies is the country that is going to dominate global economics,” and he frames the present as a possible hinge point in which countries begin shifting toward a different energy base. Britain with coal, the United States with oil, and perhaps China with batteries, solar panels, electric vehicles, and the supply chains required for electrification.
There is something to this. Energy transitions are never merely technical, and they reorganize production, finance, and geopolitics. But one should be cautious about moving too quickly from China’s lead in renewables to the end of American hegemony. Energy leadership matters, but monetary and military power have their own inertia. The dollar system, the Treasury market, US military reach, and the legal-financial architecture of sanctions do not disappear because China sells more electric vehicles.
In other words, China’s productive rise has not displaced the financial and military architecture centered on the United States. The geography of production has changed much more than the geography of money. China remains deeply constrained by the dollar system, while the United States does not need to hold renminbi reserves. The United States has military bases around China’s neighborhood and China does not have anything comparable around the United States. China has become a great manufacturing power, but it has not become the issuer of the world’s hegemonic currency.
This asymmetry is central for understanding the current world order as I suggested in my Jacobin piece. In that sense, the discussion of chokepoints should not lead to the conclusion that American hegemony is disappearing. It should lead to a better understanding of how that hegemony operates. The United States no longer relies only on the direct control of territorial routes, although naval power remains essential. It also controls the institutional and technological circuits through which trade, finance, and production are organized. The sea is supplemented by the payment system, the microchip, the export license, and the sanctions list. In a sense, the notion that finance was central to hegemony not just trade, was true (with technological differences) about the pound centered world of the 19th century.**
The overuse of these instruments may indeed generate resistance. But resistance is not the same thing as successful displacement. Alternatives to the dollar system are costly, partial, and difficult to build. Technological autonomy takes time. Financial autonomy requires deep markets, political power, and geopolitical protection. The capacity to escape American chokepoints is unevenly distributed, and most countries remain trapped in the networks they would like to avoid.
The danger, then, is not that American hegemony is about to vanish. The danger is that it becomes more openly coercive as its legitimacy declines. The veneer of politeness associated to the liberal rhetoric of a rules-based order gives way to the crass use of direct interventions, sanctions, export controls, industrial policy for the center, and austerity for the periphery. The old ideology of globalization promised interdependence and efficiency, gives way to more openly nationalist discourses. The reality of coercive interdependence is the same.
* On the energy-hegemony nexus Thompson says: “Geopolitically, an energy change will necessarily result in upheaval. If Britain were the power that climbed to dominance during the age of coal and the United States the power that ascended during the age of oil and coal, the spectre haunting Washington is that without a decisive American strategic turn to renewables and electrification, the new energy age that depends on metals and minerals will belong to China.” Her statement is more nuanced than Bessner, and less categorical about the rise of China, but certainly linked to the energy transition.
** See my article on the use of central banks as weapons of hegemony, and why Ha-Joon Chang's kicking away the ladder was also monetary and financial in nature.










