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Is the United States Becoming a Hollow Maritime Power?

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Is the United States Becoming a Hollow Maritime Power?

U.S. maritime power increasingly risks projecting strength without the institutional agility to sustain it.

Is the United States Becoming a Hollow Maritime Power?

Ships assigned to the Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group, Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force and Republic of Korea Navy with aircraft assigned to Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 11 sail and fly in formation during a trilateral exercise, April 11, 2024.

Credit: U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Andrew Benvie)

“Civilizations die by suicide, not by murder.”
—Arnold Toynbee

This observation by historian Arnold Toynbee encapsulates the strategic risk now facing U.S. power in the Indo-Pacific. While U.S. naval vessels continue their patrols and military hardware flows to allies, a dangerous pattern has emerged: the institutional foundations that translate military presence into strategic effect are being systematically weakened. 

This decoupling creates what can only be described as a “hollow maritime power” – outwardly impressive in ships and deployments, but internally weakened in the decision-making apparatus, diplomatic corps, and alliance management capabilities that translate hardware into strategic effect. 

For Indo-Pacific allies watching this transformation, the question is increasingly not whether U.S. ships will be present in a crisis, but whether Washington’s institutions can transform that presence into coherent action.

Maritime Power Depends on Institutions

Dr. Sarah C. M. Paine’s 2022 George C. Marshall Lecture provides a framework for understanding the United States’ current predicament. Maritime powers, she argues, follow fundamentally different security paradigms than continental powers, with institutional strength being the foundational factor in their success. Unlike land-based empires focused on territorial control, maritime powers derive their strength from stable institutions that enable commerce, alliance management, and global power projection. 

The Indo-Pacific region represents the ultimate test of maritime power projection. Distances are vast, allies are diverse, and adversaries are formidable. The U.S. ability to maintain freedom of navigation and respond to crises depends on what Paine terms the “coupling” of military capability with institutional capacity – the ability to make decisions swiftly, coordinate with allies, and deploy multiple instruments of national power in concert. 

This is why the current decoupling is so dangerous for Indo-Pacific security. Without the coordination mechanisms, diplomatic relationships, and policy consistency that has underpinned U.S. power, even the most advanced carrier battle groups risk becoming expensive but strategically ineffective symbols – impressive in appearance but hollow in substance.

The Unprecedented Decoupling

While the United States has experienced periods of military buildup and institutional reform throughout its history, the current situation represents something unprecedented: a deliberate expansion of military commitments alongside the systematic dismantling of the institutions needed to sustain them. This isn’t the familiar pattern of imperial overstretch, but a form of strategic contradiction.

On one hand, the U.S. military presence in the Indo-Pacific continues unabated. The Biden administration expanded access to bases in the Philippines, placing U.S. forces closer to potential flashpoints. Major weapons systems continue flowing to the region, with allies like Japan and Australia purchasing advanced U.S. hardware. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, during his confirmation hearing, vowed to maintain a robust presence, explicitly framing China as the United States’ primary strategic competitor.

Simultaneously, the institutional foundations supporting this military presence face unprecedented disruption. The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), though not an official government department, has implemented directives aimed at radically reshaping federal agencies. The planned elimination of 90 percent of foreign aid contracts, totaling $60 billion, will eviscerate soft power tools that complement military presence.

The State Department’s Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs – the nerve center for alliance management in the region – faces particular uncertainty. Project 2025’s blueprint explicitly targets the diplomatic corps, arguing that career diplomats often resist conservative presidents’ agendas. It urges the next administration to “reforge the department into a lean and functional diplomatic machine that serves the president.

What makes this decoupling unprecedented is its deliberate nature. While entrenched bureaucratic systems and military-to-military relationships may provide some resilience, preserving critical functions temporarily, the overall trajectory remains clear: a maritime power whose outward appearance of strength increasingly masks a growing internal hollowness.

Crisis Response Failure: How Hollow Power Manifests

The dangers of the United States’ hollow maritime power become most evident in crisis scenarios, where institutional capacity – not just military hardware – determines outcomes. Three critical vulnerabilities are emerging that could prove disastrous in a regional confrontation: collapsing diplomatic channels, strategic planning paralysis, and and the unraveling of alliance frameworks.

Diplomatic capacity is eroding precisely when it’s most needed. The State Department’s Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs traditionally serves as the United States’ first line of crisis management in the region. During the 2016 Scarborough Shoal standoff, for instance, U.S. diplomats worked around the clock to prevent escalation between China and the Philippines. Today, however, the bureau faces an exodus of senior personnel amid DOGE’s efficiency directives. Experienced diplomats who maintained direct lines to counterparts in Beijing, Tokyo, and Manila are departing, taking with them institutional memory of previous crises and relationships built over decades.

This loss of expertise creates a dangerous gap in U.S. crisis response capabilities. Without seasoned diplomats who understand regional dynamics, past negotiations, and the nuances of high-stakes diplomacy, Washington will not be able to de-escalate conflicts, effectively coordinate with allies, and signal deterrence in ways that prevent miscalculations. In a moment of crisis, hesitation, miscommunication, or a lack of clear diplomatic strategy will mean the difference between containment and full-scale conflict.

In addition, military planning capabilities face a dangerous degradation. INDOPACOM depends on complex interagency coordination to develop contingency plans for regional flashpoints. This planning process integrates intelligence assessments, diplomatic constraints, and military capabilities into coherent response options. However, the mass exodus of civil servants from defense planning offices and intelligence fusion centers creates dangerous gaps in this process. The purge of “deep state” experts means fewer analysts tracking Chinese naval movements, fewer planners gaming out response scenarios, and fewer coordination mechanisms to align military operations with diplomatic initiatives.

Finally, alliance implementation mechanisms are fraying. U.S. security guarantees in Asia depend on military presence and on institutionalized consultation mechanisms. The U.S.-Japan 2+2 Security Consultative Committee, the Extended Deterrence Dialogue with South Korea, and the various working groups under the U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty all require deep institutional knowledge and consistent participation. These forums coordinate joint military planning, establish crisis communication protocols, and determine response thresholds.

Yet these alliance mechanisms face unprecedented disruption. Project 2025 explicitly prioritizes bilateral dealmaking over alliance maintenance. Political appointees without regional expertise are replacing career officials who staffed these dialogues. Trump’s first term saw cost-sharing disputes nearly rupture the South Korea-U.S. alliance, and his return has allies questioning whether formal security commitments will be honored. The Pacific Deterrence Initiative – designed to bolster allied military capabilities – requires complex coordination across multiple agencies to implement effectively. As these coordinating mechanisms weaken, the United States’ forward military presence becomes increasingly disconnected from the alliance frameworks that give it purpose.

Institutional decay isn’t immediately visible. Ships remain on station, exercises continue, and military hardware looks impressive. But beneath this surface appearance, the United States’ ability to respond cohesively to fast-moving crises is eroding. When China probes for weaknesses or tests gray-zone tactics against the Philippines, the U.S. response increasingly risks being slow, contradictory, or absent altogether – not for lack of military capability, but for lack of institutional capacity to deploy it effectively.

Strategic Implications for Indo-Pacific Security

The emergence of the U.S. as a hollow maritime power creates profound strategic implications for the Indo-Pacific region. Unlike a clear military withdrawal, which would trigger immediate recalibration among regional powers, institutional hollowing produces a more insidious and dangerous dynamic.

For China, U.S. institutional decay presents a strategic opportunity unlike any in recent decades. Beijing has long sought to undermine U.S. alliances through its “salami-slicing” approach – testing commitments through incremental provocations without triggering military responses. Now, Chinese strategists can exploit the growing gap between U.S. military hardware and its institutional software. Rather than confronting U.S. naval vessels directly, China will probe areas where institutional response would be required: complex gray-zone operations, diplomatic intimidation of smaller states, or economic coercion requiring coordinated pushback. The timeline for Chinese opportunism accelerates when U.S. institutions falter, even as warships remain on station.

The Taiwan Strait illustrates this danger most acutely. Successful deterrence of Chinese aggression against Taiwan has always rested on more than military capability. It requires clear political signaling, coordinated diplomatic messaging with Japan and Australia, and integrated planning across multiple agencies. When these mechanisms fail – when the National Security Council is consumed by domestic politics, the State Department lacks senior Taiwan experts, or alliance coordination breaks down – then deterrence becomes hollow regardless of carrier deployments. Beijing will calculate that institutional confusion in Washington creates a window where military intervention would be too disorganized to succeed.

For the United States’ treaty allies, the hollowing of U.S. maritime power presents an excruciating dilemma. Japan and Australia have built their security strategies around the assumption of coherent U.S. leadership. Now they observe continued U.S. military presence alongside institutional unraveling, uncertain which reality to prioritize in their planning. This ambiguity drives hedging behavior: Japan accelerates its own military buildup; South Korea contemplates nuclear weapons development; Southeast Asian nations tilt further toward accommodating Beijing. 

The Philippines faces perhaps the most acute vulnerability. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has realigned Manila with Washington after the Duterte years, opening bases to U.S. forces and taking a firmer stance on South China Sea disputes. But this policy assumes institutional continuity in Washington: that agreements made will be honored, that crisis coordination mechanisms will function, that maritime incidents will receive coherent U.S. backing. As these assumptions grow questionable, Philippine leaders must weigh whether confronting Chinese maritime militia vessels is worth the risk if U.S. support proves hollow when needed most.

The time dimension makes this problem particularly pernicious. Institutional decay doesn’t trigger an immediate crisis like a military withdrawal would. Instead, it creates a slow-motion vulnerability that will not be revealed until a critical moment: when crisis coordination fails during a Taiwan blockade, when diplomatic channels prove insufficient during a maritime collision, or when alliance consultation mechanisms break down during North Korean provocation. By then, the opportunity to rebuild institutional capacity will have passed.

For the broader Indo-Pacific security architecture, the United States’ hollow maritime power threatens to undermine decades of careful construction. The regional order has never rested solely on the U.S. military dominance; it has depended on the legitimacy of institutions like freedom of navigation principles, alliance consultation mechanisms, and economic frameworks. As these institutions weaken, the normative foundations of regional security erode, triggering cascading instability as states recalculate their interests and alignments. The implications extend beyond any single flashpoint to the fundamental question of whether rules-based order or power politics will govern the region’s future.

Conclusion

Arnold Toynbee’s warning that “civilizations die by suicide not by murder” has never seemed more relevant to the U.S. position in the Indo-Pacific. The United States stands at a critical juncture where military presence masks institutional hollowing that threatens regional stability.

Recent policy shifts have only accelerated this decay. What began as bureaucratic restructuring now manifests as strategic contradiction: expanding military commitments alongside the dismantling of diplomatic, planning, and alliance frameworks needed to make those commitments meaningful.

Indo-Pacific nations are already recalculating. Japan and Australia accelerate defense investments while exploring hedging strategies. Southeast Asian nations tilt toward Beijing. The Philippines faces the prospect that U.S. support may prove more symbolic than substantive. Taiwan watches as the institutional foundations of deterrence erode beneath continued arms sales.

What hangs in the balance is how effectively the rules-based order can adapt as U.S. institutional strength declines. China recognizes this inflection point and positions itself to fill the vacuum with its own vision of regional order centered on Beijing’s primacy.

U.S. maritime power increasingly risks projecting strength without the institutional agility to sustain it. While a degree of bureaucratic resilience exists – with career officials adapting systems to preserve core functions and military-to-military relationships potentially offsetting diplomatic channel degradation – these mechanisms only delay rather than prevent strategic deterioration. The question is no longer whether this hollowing can be reversed, but how quickly regional powers will adjust and at what cost to long-term stability.

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