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Episode Summary:

In this episode of Explaining History, Nick explores the historical processes of anti-colonial struggle in the 20th century and how they illuminate the geopolitical crises of 2026.

We examine the “imperial boomerang”—how the techniques of colonial violence return to the metropole—and the shift from the age of imperial civil war (1914-1945) to the age of imperial decline. Nick discusses the recent, shocking speech by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the Munich Security Conference, where he urged European leaders to reclaim their “civilizational confidence” and reject the “global welfare state.”

From the Indian National Army to the Viet MinhViet Minh Full Description:The Viet Minh (League for the Independence of Vietnam) was the primary political and military organization resisting French colonial return. Unlike a standard political party, it operated as a “united front,” prioritizing national liberation over class struggle during the early stages of the conflict. This strategy allowed them to rally peasants, intellectuals, and workers alike under the banner of patriotism. Critical Perspective:The success of the Viet Minh challenged the Western narrative that the war was merely a proxy battle of the Cold War. It demonstrated the power of a “people’s war,” where political education and mass mobilization proved more decisive than superior military technology. However, critics note that as the war progressed, the leadership ruthlessly eliminated non-communist nationalist rivals to consolidate absolute power., we look at how national liberation movements shattered the old empires. Nick argues that the current attempts by the US to reassert hegemony through force—in Venezuela and Nigeria—are doomed to fail against a Global SouthGlobal South Full Description:The Global South is a term that has largely replaced “Third World” to describe the nations of Africa, Latin America, and developing Asia. It is less a geographical designator (as it includes countries in the northern hemisphere) and more a political grouping of nations that share a history of colonialism, economic marginalization, and a peripheral position in the world financial system. Bandung is often cited as the birth of the Global South as a self-aware political consciousness. Critical Perspective:While the term implies solidarity, critics argue it acts as a “flattening” concept. It lumps together economic superpowers like China and India with some of the world’s poorest nations, obscuring the vast power imbalances and divergent interests within this bloc. It risks creating a binary worldview that ignores the internal class exploitations within developing nations by focusing solely on their external exploitation by the North.
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that has fundamentally changed. Is the West trying to fight 19th-century colonial wars in a 21st-century world?


Key Topics:

  • The Munich Speech: Marco Rubio’s call for a return to “civilizational” power.
  • National Liberation: How India and Vietnam broke the British and French empires.
  • The American Empire: From the “Pax Americana” to the transactional gangster state.
  • The Global South: Why the new non-aligned world will not submit t

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