The Global War in Ukraine: An Essay on the Changing Global Order

12/18/2025

On February 15, 2026, we are publishing the first of two books on the Global War in Ukraine.

The first one is written as an essay which leverages the much larger and more comprehensive one to be published on March 15, 2026.

The Global War in Ukraine: An Essay on the Changing World Order is not a book about a single front or a single war. It is a forensic examination of how one conflict has become the decisive crucible for a new international order. Ukraine is not a peripheral battlefield; it is “the furnace in which the international order is being reforged,” where alliance choices, industrial bets, and software updates collide with geography, memory, and nuclear shadow.

Robbin Laird traces how unresolved tensions from the 1990s, misread signals, and strategic amnesia set the stage for what one foreword calls “a system‑defining war” rather than a regional aberration. The post–Cold War hope that economics and institutions would dissolve spheres of influence runs headlong into the hard facts of power politics. The book reconstructs the road to 2022 as an escalatory script hiding in plain sight and shows how Western illusions about Russia, deterrence, and military power made catastrophe more likely, not less.

This is also a book about how war reorganizes societies. Laird explores Russia’s turn to permanent mobilization and a wartime political economy in which ending the conflict threatens the very system it sustains. He analyzes how “weakness itself constitutes a provocation,” and how Europe’s long strategic holiday ended in a crash course on rearmament, industrial policy, and coalition warfare. The reader sees a continent racing to relearn scale, stockpiles, and staying power under the pressure of a grinding war of attrition.

At the same time, The Global War in Ukraine shows how this conflict has broken traditional east–west and north–south frames. As one foreword notes, “traditional alignment models have been broken.” Asian powers are on the European battlefield in ways unseen since the age of empires: North Korean artillery and troops, Iranian drones, Chinese economic lifelines and technicians, Japanese and South Korean support to Kyiv. Middle powers—from India and Brazil to Turkey and the Gulf States—maneuver for advantage in a geopolitical landscape that no longer fits Cold War templates.

Technology in these pages is not scenery but protagonist. Laird details how Ukraine, under fire, has become a war laboratory where “cycles of innovation and counter‑innovation compress to weeks.” Drone swarms, AI‑assisted targeting, EW‑saturated battlespaces, and software‑driven upgrades redefine what mass, precision, and deterrence mean in practice. A state that began as a recipient of foreign systems becomes, in Laird’s telling, a doctrinal pioneer and co‑producer, demonstrating how democratic societies can adapt their industrial base and command system at wartime speed.

Running through the analysis is a sober engagement with nuclear coercion and the second nuclear age. The book examines how nuclear weapons now function less as apocalyptic endpoints and more as tools of pressure, sanctuary, and risk manipulation. It asks hard questions about thresholds, escalation ladders, and the credibility of security guarantees in a world where “the global nature of the war in Ukraine is further evidence that we are living in a new geopolitical age.”

Above all, The Global War in Ukraine is a book about agency and choice. It shows Ukraine’s transformation from passive object to active shaper of doctrine, industry, and alliance behavior. It charts how Europe begins to act as if its security were its own responsibility, how coalitions of the willing supplement formal alliances, and how industrial policy becomes strategy. And it insists that memory—of experiments like Partnership for Peace, of past resets and failures—is a strategic resource, not a footnote.

Combining strategic history, operational insight, and global perspective, Robbin Laird offers a map of how we reached this dangerous moment and a mirror that forces readers to confront what will be required to shape a more stable future. For policymakers, military professionals, and serious citizens alike, this book is essential reading for understanding the war that is remaking our world.

Lt General Preziosa underscores: “Ukraine is not at the periphery of the international order; it is the furnace in which that order is being reforged, one alliance choice, one industrial line, one software update, and one strategic decision at a time. In drawing these lines together, this volume does more than recount events; it frames a lens for the future. For that, gratitude is owed to Robbin Laird. He has not only captured a piece of history with clarity and rigor but has also offered a vision of how democratic societies might navigate the trials ahead.  His work reminds us that history is not merely about the past, it is a compass for the future, if we choose to read it.”

Brian Morra, noted political analyst and novelist adds: “In Washington, D.C., the foreign policy establishment has struggled to understand the global nature of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Fundamental misunderstandings have hamstrung efforts to reinforce Ukraine with weaponry in a timely way and have derailed efforts to influence the numerous countries that provide support either directly or indirectly to Moscow’s war effort. To remedy this, Robbin Laird’s new book provides insights that ought to be required reading at the State Department, the National Security Council, the Pentagon, the Congress, and in the Intelligence Community. It will be of equal value to America’s allies. The global nature of the war in Ukraine is further evidence that we are living in a new geopolitical age.”

And the noted German analyst, Dr.Holger Mey underscores: “Laird brings decades of experience analyzing military transformation, alliance politics, and strategic competition to bear on questions that will define our era. His work challenges comfortable assumptions and forces readers to confront difficult realities about power, deterrence, and the limits of diplomatic solutions when core interests collide.”