logo
Warren Hammond's Personal View: The Thucydides trap, war cometh

Warren Hammond's Personal View: The Thucydides trap, war cometh

In early March 2025, before volatility accelerated and turmoil engulfed the investing world, Warren Hammond's issued a warning in The Personal View: Positioning for the Market Turmoil Ahead, 2025–2028, saying, 'Iran's escalating conflicts in mid-April 2025 highlight global energy security risks. Oil supply disruptions could spike prices.'
It's now mid-April. This moment echoes a theme he has long discussed. In 2021, he had published Investment Themes for the Next Decade . One institutional investor, Boston-based, long-only, recently revisited that note, reaching out to discuss one idea now rising with urgency: systemic confrontation.
A minor transgression, regional or symbolic, can spiral into global conflict. Asia and the West drawn in. This is the Thucydidean Trap: when a rising power threatens to displace a dominant one. Harvard's Graham Allison revived this idea in 2015 and expanded it in his 2017 book Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides' Trap?
Warren Hammond's Personal View: Megatrends & The future of capital
Today's war isn't always kinetic. The tech and tariff wars are structural conflicts, global powers contesting the boundaries of a new world order. The status quo is being washed away (forecast in 2016: The USA – The next 18 years ). In its place, a fiery, disruptive, and transformational era led increasingly by China and Asia.
Taiwan is the obvious flashpoint in a hotter war scenario. Since 2016, Warren Hammond wrote about its strategic and symbolic weight in China's national psyche. But escalation could just as likely come from the Middle East or Ukraine.
More important than the geography is the underlying structural stress between a rising China and an incumbent US. This is no longer about bilateral competition, it's about global reordering. Lessons from History
Since January 2016, he has consistently highlighted that history has given us clues. In the context of the Thucydidean Trap, Allison studied 16 cases where rising powers confronted established ones. In 12 of them, war followed. Only 4 resolved peacefully. Key examples include:
• Sparta vs. Athens (5th c. BCE)• Germany vs. Britain (early 20th c.)• France vs. Habsburg Spain (16th c.)• Japan vs. U.S. (early 20th c.)• Napoleonic France vs. Britain (early 19th c.)• US vs. British Empire (late 19th c.) – a peaceful transition
• Germany vs. Russia (late 19th–early 20th c.)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

KZN logistics company owner, drivers arrested in raid on undocumented foreigners
KZN logistics company owner, drivers arrested in raid on undocumented foreigners

TimesLIVE

time3 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

KZN logistics company owner, drivers arrested in raid on undocumented foreigners

KwaZulu-Natal premier Thami Ntuli has vowed to continue a clampdown on businesses that flout labour laws by employing undocumented foreigners. He was speaking after a raid at Westmead Mining, a Durban-based logistics company where law enforcement officials arrested several workers without documentation. 'We will not tolerate the employment of undocumented nationals or anyone employed without due processes. It must be legal, ' said Ntuli. The visit follows an outcry from local drivers who complain undocumented workers accept lower wages, he said. An informer put the number of truck drivers working at the company at 85, said Ntuli. The owner was arrested More than 135 people were arrested in a crackdown by police for a wide range of crimes in the past two days, he said.

Honda-backed Helm.ai unveils vision system for self-driving cars
Honda-backed Helm.ai unveils vision system for self-driving cars

TimesLIVE

time8 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Honda-backed Helm.ai unveils vision system for self-driving cars

Honda Motor-backed on Thursday unveiled its camera-based system to interpret urban environments, dubbed Vision, and said it was in talks with other carmakers to deploy its self-driving technology in mass market vehicles. is working with the Japanese carmaker to integrate its technology in the upcoming 2026 Honda Zero electric vehicles, which will allow users to drive hands-free and take their eyes off the road. "We're definitely in talks with many OEMs and we're on track for deploying our technology in production," CEO and founder Vladislav Voroninski told Reuters. "Our business model is essentially licensing this kind of software and also foundation model software to the carmakers." The California-based startup's vision-first approach aligns with Elon Musk's Tesla, which also relies on camera-based systems as alternate sensors such as lidar and radar can increase costs. However, Voroninski said while has foundation models that work with other sensors, its primary offering remains vision-focused. Industry experts said other sensors are critical to safety as they can act as backup for cameras, which are known to underperform in low-visibility conditions. Robotaxi companies such as Alphabet's Waymo and May Mobility use a combination of radar, lidar and cameras to perceive their surroundings. has raised $102m (R1,839,466,847) to date and counts Goodyear Ventures, Korean car parts maker Sungwoo HiTech and Amplo among its investors. Vision combines images from many cameras to create a bird's-eye view map, which helps improve the vehicle's planning and control systems, the company said. The system is optimised for several hardware platforms made by Nvidia and Qualcomm. This enables carmakers to incorporate Vision into their existing vehicle systems, which include their own technologies for predicting and planning vehicle movements.

Summit hears Pretoria company's small nuclear reactor offers independence
Summit hears Pretoria company's small nuclear reactor offers independence

The Citizen

time10 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Summit hears Pretoria company's small nuclear reactor offers independence

As South African cities confront load-shedding and economic stagnation, the search for energy independence has never been more urgent. For the Tshwane metro and other municipalities, a new option has emerged in the form of a locally developed small modular reactor, designed by Pretoria engineers, that promises to change how cities generate and control their electricity. This option was recently discussed and caught a lot of attention at the Energy Summit 2025 held at the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR). The summit aimed to build a smarter energy system focused on powering a sustainable and inclusive future. It drew all stakeholders grappling with growing energy demands and pressure to transition towards clean, reliable energy sources, where Tshwane's energy future was the main theme. Developed by Pretoria-based company Stratek Global, the reactor offers a combination of safety, cost-efficiency, and energy security, making it an ideal fit for municipal deployment. Rekord spoke to a nuclear physicist and Stratek chairperson from Pretoria east, Dr Kelvin Kemm. He is confident that it can help municipalities. 'The reactor is designed specifically to be deployable at the municipal level. With this system, a municipality like Tshwane can own and operate its own nuclear power facility, independent of Eskom and free of geographic limitations.' He told Rekord that it is ideal for the metro, as unlike large-scale nuclear power plants, which require vast infrastructure and access to significant water sources, the reactor is self-contained and highly adaptable. He explained that gravity, natural cooling paths, and other physics functions have been used in design such that safety devices will fall into place naturally, under gravity, as cooling paths exist without active pumps running. When it comes to whether the metro would be able to use such a reactor if interested parties decide to commission the construction, he said, once the teams start building, it will take about five years to build the first reactor. 'This first one will take a year to 18 months for all the legal compliance, testing, and certification. From the second one onwards, construction will go faster.' He explained that the costs for such a reactor should be measured by how much the electricity will cost the customer. 'The electricity from the reactor will cost about the same as coal-fired electricity now. It is completely untrue that nuclear electricity will cost a huge amount,' stressed Kemm. He said there are huge economic benefits for the metro. During construction, hundreds of people will be employed in good-quality jobs, like any industrial construction. Construction materials will also be purchased from local suppliers. Tasks like forming metal parts, cutting, machining and high-integrity welding, and so on, all need to be performed and sourced. 'When the reactor is running, it will employ a couple of hundred people on a full-time basis. These range from engineers to skilled technicians to react to operators to draft craftsmen, such as plumbers and electricians. Many private companies will be involved, supplying goods and services on a regular basis.' According to Kemm, a representative from their Pretoria branch has twice travelled to a country in the Middle East to explain their proposal and architectural designs were carried out for that country, by Pretoria east architects JKDA. To him, it is a positive factor that South Africa has one of the oldest and most experienced nuclear regulators in the world. He said Stratek Global has an impressive building in Centurion, and there is a staff of some 150 people. 'They check and certify all issues concerning the design and construction of any nuclear system, to ensure the safety and protection of people and the environment.' He added that the principle of private or municipal ownership of electricity has already been established by the government for wind and solar systems. 'There is no reason why nuclear will be different. So, the metro, or groups of companies in Rosslyn, could install their own nuclear power. One reactor complex will fit easily on a piece of land the size of a football field. Such ownership is perfectly feasible. In fact, it is possible to have your own private grid,' he concluded. Do you have more information about the story? Please send us an email to bennittb@ or phone us on 083 625 4114. For free breaking and community news, visit Rekord's websites: Rekord East For more news and interesting articles, like Rekord on Facebook, follow us on Twitter or Instagram or TikTok. At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading! Stay in the know. Download the Caxton Local News Network App Stay in the know. Download the Caxton Local News Network App here

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store