Halford Mackinder
Father of Geopolitics
In 1904 a British geographer argued whoever controls Central Eurasia controls the world. Mackinder's Heartland Theory invented geopolitics as a discipline.
Where geography meets power
Every alliance, every conflict, every trade route follows a logic older than the states themselves. We map that logic — from Mackinder to Malacca, from Westphalia to the present hour.
The theoretical frameworks that explain how geography shapes power, conflict, and international order.
Father of Geopolitics
In 1904 a British geographer argued whoever controls Central Eurasia controls the world. Mackinder's Heartland Theory invented geopolitics as a discipline.
The Master of Strategic Thought
Where Clausewitz saw war as politics by violence, Sun Tzu called violence strategic failure. His Art of War still shapes how China projects power today.
Prophet of Sea Power
A mediocre sailor who hated the sea wrote one book that launched a global naval arms race. Mahan's theory still drives strategy from DC to Beijing.
The Father of Political Realism
An exiled Athenian general wrote the first analysis of power politics 2,400 years ago. His Athens-vs-Sparta account still frames how we see US vs. China.
Architect of Structural Realism
Waltz stripped international relations to a single variable: the system's anarchic structure. His neorealism became the theory every rival had to answer.
Architect of American Grand Strategy
He died in 1943 before seeing the Cold War he predicted. Spykman's Rimland theory flipped Mackinder and became America's containment blueprint.
The Architect of Realpolitik
He opened China, pursued detente, and stands accused of war crimes. Kissinger's century-long career defined realpolitik and its moral contradictions.
Father of Modern Realism
A refugee from Nazi Germany who made power politics into a science. Morgenthau founded modern realism, then wielded it to oppose the Vietnam War.
The Supranational Experiment
Twenty-seven nations pooling sovereignty in history's boldest integration experiment. The EU fields the third-largest economy yet struggles to act as one.
Curated sequences that guide you from first principles to the present day. Six featured tracks below — or browse all 23.
Thucydides watched Athens and Sparta sleepwalk into war and wrote down why. Twenty-four centuries later, the logic hasn't changed. This track walks you from the oldest insight in international relations — that fear, honour, and interest drive states — through the security dilemma, the balance of power, and straight into the US-China standoff. You'll finish understanding not just that nations compete, but why they can't stop.
One power built the global order; the other wants to revise it. This is the rivalry that will define your lifetime, and most people understand it badly. Start with what America actually is — a maritime empire in denial — then look at what China is building, where the flashpoints are (Taiwan, semiconductors, the First Island Chain), and why Graham Allison thinks history is not on our side. Spoiler: it's not obvious who wins.
Sanctions, export controls, dollar weaponisation, rare-earth leverage — the 21st century discovered you can ruin a country without firing a shot. But economic warfare has blowback. This track traces how the Bretton Woods system created dollar dominance, how interdependence became a weapon, why adversaries are racing to de-dollarise, and what happens when the global economy splits into rival blocs. If you think economics and geopolitics are separate subjects, this will cure you.
Russia has no natural borders. Let that sink in. The North European Plain is a highway for invaders, and every Russian leader since Peter the Great has known it. This track starts with Mackinder's Heartland Theory, moves through the Great Game, the Bosphorus obsession, the Cold War, Kennan's containment doctrine, the Soviet collapse, and ends in the full-scale war that has remade European security. Every chapter is the same geographic anxiety on repeat. Russia isn't irrational — it's terrified.
Israel destroyed three Arab air forces in six days in 1967. The humiliation produced the 1973 war. The 1973 war produced the oil embargo. The oil embargo ended the postwar economic order and created the petrodollar. The petrodollar funded the Gulf states. The Gulf War put American troops on Arab soil. The troops produced Osama bin Laden. None of this was inevitable — but each event made the next one more likely. The modern Middle East is not a region of ancient hatreds and inexplicable violence. It is a causal chain, each link forged in a specific room by specific people making specific miscalculations. This track follows the chain.
The Strait of Hormuz is 21 miles wide at its narrowest. Twenty percent of the world's oil passes through it every day. The Taiwan Strait is 110 miles wide — a gap whose closure would collapse the global semiconductor industry within months. The GIUK Gap is where Russian submarines disappear into the Atlantic. The Cape of Good Hope is irrelevant, until it isn't, and then suddenly 15,000 container ships are adding two weeks to their journeys. Geography has never stopped mattering. It doesn't matter most of the time; it matters catastrophically some of the time. This track maps the physical pinch-points where every assumption about global trade, energy security, and naval power gets tested against the reality of water and land.
Added this month. The site keeps growing.
North Africa — Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco — forms the Mediterranean's southern shore, serving as a migration gateway, energy supplier, and contested theatre for European, Gulf, and great-power influence in the post-Arab Spring era.
Finland's 2023 and Sweden's 2024 NATO accession transformed the Nordic-Baltic region from a patchwork of neutral and alliance states into a unified security space, adding 1,340 kilometres of Finnish-Russian border to NATO's defensive perimeter and reshaping the strategic geography of northern Europe.
The Sahel — the semi-arid belt stretching from Senegal to Sudan — has become the world's fastest-growing jihadist theatre, with a cascade of military coups expelling French forces and welcoming Russian mercenaries in a dramatic realignment of African security politics.
The Horn of Africa — Ethiopia, Somalia, Djibouti, and Eritrea — controls the western approaches to the Red Sea and Bab-el-Mandeb Strait, making it one of the world's most strategically contested regions despite being among its most impoverished.
The Persian Gulf sits at the intersection of global energy supply and great-power rivalry, with nearly half the world's proven oil reserves concentrated along its shores and the Strait of Hormuz controlling the flow of a fifth of global oil trade.
Central Europe — Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary — occupies the geopolitical heart of the continent, where post-Communist transformation, NATO integration, and the shock of Russia's Ukraine invasion have exposed deep fault lines between Western-aligned Poland and Orbán's Hungary.
In 1904, a British geographer stood before the Royal Geographical Society and argued that whoever controlled the interior of Eurasia would command the world. A century later, NATO expansion, China's Belt and Road, and Russia's wars still trace the lines he drew.
This is not coincidence. It is geography.
Mountains dictate where armies stop. Straits determine which economies breathe. The distance between a capital and its coastline shapes whether a nation looks inward or outward, trades or fortifies, rises or fractures. These forces do not trend. They do not cycle. They persist.
GEOPOL.UK maps the permanent architecture of international order — the chokepoints, the doctrines, the rivalries, and the thinkers who first made them legible. Every article is built to be as useful in ten years as it is today.
This is the reference shelf for people who read the world structurally.