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        World Reset or Survival of the Fittest?

        World Reset or Survival of the Fittest? Kredit Foto: Reuters
        Warta Ekonomi, Jakarta -

        A World on Edge

        Across Asia, riots and unrest are spreading like wildfire. Governments stumble under the weight of economic pressure, social fragmentation, and political distrust. Meanwhile, Europe battles declining competitiveness, and the United States finds itself trapped in internal division and overstretch abroad. At first glance, it seems that everyone is losing. But is this chaos the sign of a total world reset—or simply the survival of the fittest in a new global order?

        The Erosion of Certainty

        The post–Cold War order, once dominated by Western hegemony, is fraying. The rise of China promised an alternative, but it too now faces slowing growth, demographic strain, and political pushback across Asia and beyond.

        Instead of one dominant center, the world is witnessing the erosion of certainty everywhere.

        • Europe struggles with energy insecurity and the cost of sustaining its welfare model.
        • The United States bears the burden of being a global policeman, even as its society fractures at home.
        • Asia’s great powers—China, India, Japan—are consumed with domestic fragilities while navigating border tensions. This universal weakening has created a vacuum. And in geopolitics, vacuums do not last.


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        Who Benefits from Chaos?

        1. Energy and Commodity States – Producers of oil, gas, and rare earths find their leverage amplified as disruptions heighten global dependence.
        2. Defense and Security Industries – Rising instability drives governments to spend more on arms, surveillance, and security services.
        3. Non-State Networks – From extremist movements to decentralized finance communities, the breakdown of state authority creates room for actors outside formal structures to expand influence. Yet, these beneficiaries operate in fragments. There is no singular winner—only actors capable of adapting rapidly.

        Reset or Rebalancing?

        The word “reset” suggests an intentional global redesign. In reality, what we are witnessing is an organic rebalancing. The age of a unipolar world is gone, but no single power has the resilience to replace it. Instead, we are entering a period of:

        • Multipolar competition, where power is dispersed across many regional hubs.
        • Fragmented globalization, with supply chains regionalized for security.
        • Adaptive survival, where resilience—more than size—decides who thrives. This is not a reset engineered by elites; it is the outcome of systems cracking under accumulated strain.

        Indonesia’s Role as a Middle Power

        In this turbulence, middle powers are uniquely positioned to survive and even lead. Indonesia, as the world’s fourth most populous country and a pivotal maritime hub, carries natural advantages:

        • Strategic Geography – Sitting astride key global sea lanes, Indonesia is indispensable to global trade and energy flows.
        • Economic Resilience – With a large domestic market and growing digital economy, Indonesia has buffers against external shocks.
        • Bridge-builder Diplomacy – Indonesia has historically thrived as a consensus-builder, from ASEAN leadership to active roles in the G20 and now BRICS.

        In a fragmented world, Indonesia can act as a stabilizer, offering connectivity, neutral ground, and a voice for the Global South. By investing in food security, energy transition, and digital transformation, Indonesia positions itself not merely as a survivor but as a shaper of the new order.

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        Survival of the Fittest

        Ultimately, the question is not whether the world undergoes a grand reset, but who adapts fastest to the unraveling of the old system. Survival now depends on:

        • Building resilience at home.
        • Cultivating flexible alliances abroad.
        • Leveraging strategic assets without overextending.

        For Indonesia, this is both a challenge and an opportunity. In a world where great powers falter, middle powers that act decisively may prove to be the true “fittest.”

        World reset or survival of the fittest? The answer may lie not in the capitals of Washington, Brussels, or Beijing, but in how nations like Indonesia seize the moment.

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        Editor: Amry Nur Hidayat

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