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The alliance between autocracies (Russia, China, Iran, etc.) is not based on shared ideologies like communism or nationalism. Instead, their common ground is a mutual fear and rejection of liberal democratic concepts such as individual rights, rule of law, and separation of powers.

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The various factions united under Trump lack a cohesive ideology. Their single common thread is opposition to progressivism. When that external threat recedes, their internal disagreements, such as on foreign interventionism, cause the coalition to fracture.

The strengthening diplomatic, economic, and military ties between Russia and China since the Ukraine invasion have created a powerful "axis of authoritarianism." This bloc, combining China's economic might with Russia's resources, represents a formidable and unified adversary to the US and Europe.

The conflict is not just regional but a proxy war between two ideologies: Western democracies versus an alliance of totalitarian states (Russia, Iran, North Korea, China). Non-aligned nations like India and Brazil are watching to see which system proves more resilient before choosing a side.

The popular narrative of NATO expansion is a red herring. The true existential threat to Putin was a successful, democratizing, Western-oriented Slavic nation on his border. This provided a dangerous example that could inspire Russia's populace to demand similar freedoms, undermining his autocratic rule.

The analysis posits that the strengthening diplomatic, economic, and military alliance between Russia and China post-Ukraine invasion is not just another event, but the single most significant global power realignment in ten years. This partnership of two nuclear-armed major powers creates a formidable bloc.

Despite differing systems—communism in China, nationalism in Russia, theocracy in Iran—modern authoritarian regimes form alliances based on a common enemy. Their unifying principle is a shared dislike and fear of liberal democratic values like the rule of law and individual rights.

The core national anxieties of Russia and China are opposites, shaping their strategic cultures. Russia's history of devastating invasions fuels its fear of external threats (the "Mongol yoke"). China, haunted by centuries of civil war, fears internal chaos and the collapse of the state above all else.

For a dictator, concepts like free speech and rule of law are an existential threat that can ignite street revolutions. This is why Russia invaded Ukraine: to crush a neighboring democratic movement before its contagious ideas could spread.

The USSR's relatively peaceful end was possible because many elites wanted to join the West. This created an internal pull towards capitulation. In contrast, regimes in China and Iran are built on anti-Western ideologies, making their elites far less likely to be co-opted and their regimes much harder to influence or change.

Trump is not an isolated phenomenon but a vessel for a broader, international right-wing movement. His talking points on immigration and 'special operations' mirror the language used by authoritarians like Viktor Orbán in Hungary and Vladimir Putin in Russia. This global playbook is tested in 'laboratories of autocracy' worldwide before being deployed in the U.S.