This article applies the signal-pattern analysis (SPA) framework developed in Tymoshenko (2026) to examine differentiated U.S. strategy toward contemporary autocracies. Rather than treating U.S. foreign policy as a uniform strategy, the analysis conceptualises it as a structured system of differentiated interaction models, where the type of strategy depends on the relative power of the actor, the level of threat, and the potential for integration into the international system.The study identifies three core models within this framework: competition (China), transformation through coercion and subsequent integration into managed competition (Russia), and constraint through iterative agreement-based pressure (Iran). These models are not isolated cases but components of a broader systemic strategy aimed at preventing the consolidation of autocracies into a unified counter-system.Using SPA, the article demonstrates how observable signalling patterns—such as coercion, negotiation, containment, and selective cooperation—form stable behavioural configurations that reveal the underlying strategic logic of U.S. policy. The analysis shows that the United States does not pursue direct confrontation with an “autocratic bloc,” but instead fragments potential alignment by assigning different interaction regimes to each actor.The findings suggest that contemporary international dynamics are best understood not as a transition to disorder, but as the construction of a managed, multi-layered system of competition, in which differentiated strategies function as a key mechanism for maintaining systemic control.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Natalia Tymoshenko
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Natalia Tymoshenko (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f04edc727298f751e72bcd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19792498