TSATS Архив
DOI: https://doi.org/10.65902/tsats.2026.02.001

The Indo-Pacific and Trump 2.0: implications for Mongolia

Tsogtgerel Nyamtseren 1 (Corresponding Author) Mongolian National Defense University, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Baasankhuu Suren 2 Mongolian National Defense University, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Abstract

This article examines the evolution of U.S. grand strategy through the lens of the Indo-Pacific and assesses how the strategic logic of Trump 2.0 may affect Mongolia. It argues that the Indo-Pacific has become the principal arena in which Washington’s larger debate over liberal internationalism, primacy, and offshore balancing is being translated into policy. The Biden administration treated the region as the central theater of long-term competition with China, emphasizing alliances, institutional coordination, economic frameworks, and resilience against transnational threats1. By contrast, Trump 2.0 has not abandoned the Indo-Pacific, but it has reordered the hierarchy of priorities. The new emphasis on “core national interests,” homeland security, Western Hemisphere preeminence, economic nationalism, technology protection, and burden-shifting to allies suggests a more selective, transactional, and resource- conscious strategy. The result is not a complete strategic rupture, but a reweighting of U.S. commitments2. For Mongolia, this shift has a double meaning. On the one hand, it reduces the likelihood that Mongolia will occupy a prominent place in official circles. Indo-Pacific…

Keywords

U.S. grand strategy, Indo- Pacific, Trump 2.0, Mongolia, China, offshore balancing, strategic competition, regional order

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