A response to John Nagl’s “Empires Rise and Fall. Will Ours?” published in Small Wars Journal, 02 April 2026
John Nagl is a serious man who has earned the right to write about empire. A Rhodes Scholar, a combat veteran of both Iraq wars, the George C. Marshall Award winner at the Command and General Staff College, the co-author of the counterinsurgency field manual that rewrote doctrine in the middle of two land wars, and now the General John J. Pershing Chair at the Army War College—Nagl is not a pundit. He is a practitioner who has bled for the ideas he publishes. His new essay uses the Roman city of Trier as a lens to examine whether Pax Americana is following Pax Romana into the dark. The historical architecture is elegant. The Hegemonic Stability Theory lineage—Kindleberger through Gilpin through Krasner through Keohane—is accurate. The human cost of Trier’s collapse from one hundred thousand souls to five thousand is the kind of image that lands in a briefing room and does not leave.
But Nagl’s essay diagnoses the wrong pathology. And his own metaphor—the Porta Nigra—proves it.
What Nagl Gets Right
The core premise of Hegemonic Stability Theory is that international order requires a dominant power willing to provide public goods—security, trade architecture, rules enforcement—at disproportionate cost. When that power withdraws, the system does not self-organize into an elegant balance. It fragments into violence. Nagl marshals the evidence honestly. The millennium between Rome’s fall and Europe’s slow recovery is not a metaphor. It is a data set. The interwar period—American tariff walls, the League of Nations without American commitment, the straight line from Smoot-Hawley to Stalingrad—is a second data set. Both support the argument that hegemonic retreat produces not multipolarity but chaos.
Nagl is also correct that the postwar American institutional build was extraordinary. NATO, GATT, the Bretton Woods architecture, the Marshall Plan—these were not accidents. They were strategic investments by a country that produced half the world’s GDP in 1946 and chose to spend down that advantage building systems that would outlast the moment. The Romans would have recognized the ambition. Whether they would have recognized the execution is another question.
The Misdiagnosis: Barbarians at the Gate
Nagl frames the current threat as external. China aspires to remake the system. The “Axis of Upheaval” opposes American-led order. Scholars propose withdrawing troops from Europe. The Porta Nigra stands as a warning against lowering defenses.
This framing misreads the Roman analogy Nagl himself invokes. Rome did not fall because the Huns were strong. Rome fell because the institutions that maintained cohesion had already hollowed out from within. The legions were staffed with foederati who had no stake in Roman identity. The civil administration was captured by competing interests that prioritized extraction over maintenance. The currency was debased. The Senate was theater. The latifundia had consumed the smallholding class that once formed the backbone of military recruitment. By the time Attila reached Trier, the garrison was already gone. The gate was already unmanned. The wall was already a çade.
If you map this honestly onto the United States in 2026, the threat is not that someone will sack the gate. The threat is that the people who built the gate no longer believe in what it protects—or no longer control the institutions that are supposed to protect it.
What the Convergence Data Shows
I track the current Iran war—Operation Epic Fury, initiated February 28, 2026—across seventy domains simultaneously: kinetic operations, maritime chokepoints, energy markets, humanitarian indicators, economic signals, diplomatic channels, information terrain, environmental data, social and cultural dynamics, nuclear indicators, and intelligence sensing. Not twenty domains. Not the five that make the evening news. Seventy, organized into eleven functional webs that interact with each other in ways no single-domain analyst can see.
The pattern that emerges is not one of external pressure on a functioning system. It is a pattern of institutional inability to process convergence. The signals are there. The data is published, briefed, and discussed. What does not exist is an institution, a desk, or a single analyst charged with assembling it. Western governments produce world-class expertise inside silos that are architecturally prevented from seeing one another. The hydrologist publishes her findings. The defense analyst publishes his. The pharmacologist publishes hers. Each is rigorous. Each is accurate. Each, alone, is blind—because the weapon they collectively describe cannot be seen from inside any single silo.
I have named this condition The Institutional Blind—the architectural inability of Western intelligence production to see the war it is fighting. It is not a failure of talent. It is not a failure of funding. It is a failure of structure. The architecture itself prevents the seeing. And no amount of hegemonic will can compensate for an intelligence system that is designed to miss the convergence.
Consider what is happening right now, while Nagl writes about Trier. The Strait of Hormuz is under effective kinetic interdiction. Maritime insurance rates have made the passage commercially unviable for most carriers. Energy markets have decoupled from spot pricing and are now responding to chokepoint contagion—a cascade where disruption in one strait raises risk premiums in another. The Iranian rial has collapsed past every historical threshold. Pharmaceutical supply chains into Iran have been severed, not by sanctions but by the physical destruction of logistics infrastructure. Water treatment systems are failing. The humanitarian web is at catastrophic levels. And the nuclear question—the one that keeps the three-star generals awake—is not whether Iran can build a weapon, but whether the decapitation of Iran’s nuclear leadership has destroyed the command structure that restrains individual actors with access to enriched material.
That last point is the one I documented in The Kingpin Fallacy and The Orphan Protocol: America built a fifty-year strategy around killing leaders who are designed to be replaced, and in doing so activated what command can no longer restrain. The decapitation campaign did not eliminate the threat. It orphaned it. An orphaned threat with access to fissile material is not a problem that Hegemonic Stability Theory can address, because the hegemon’s own doctrine created it.
What Nagl Leaves Out
Nagl’s description of the postwar order as an “extraordinary accomplishment” that “did so much for so many” is historically incomplete. That extraordinary decade of institution-building also included Bretton Woods structured to guarantee dollar hegemony, GATT rules written to favor American industrial exports, NATO as a mechanism to keep American boots on European soil permanently, and a security architecture that required client states to subordinate their foreign policy to Washington’s preferences. The system worked—but it worked for us first. The claim that it benefited everyone elides the coups in Guatemala, Iran, Chile, and Indonesia; the proxy wars in Korea, Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia; the structural adjustment programs that gutted public services across the Global South; and the countries that got ground up inside the machinery of “stability.”
A War College professor knows this history. Leaving it out does not strengthen the argument for preserving the order—it weakens it, because it hands adversaries a legitimate critique that defenders of the system refuse to acknowledge. The strongest case for Pax Americana is not that it was generous. It is that the alternatives are catastrophically worse. Nagl could make that case. He chooses nostalgia instead.
The Missing Doctrine
“We should do all that we can to delay, not hasten, the destruction of such good work that has done so much for so many.”
This is a bumper sticker, not a strategy. What, specifically? Recommit to NATO at what force levels and with what burden-sharing formula? Reverse the tariff posture through what mechanism? Counter the Axis of Upheaval with what doctrine—containment, engagement, competitive coexistence, or something that has not yet been named? Address the convergence of maritime, energy, cyber, and information threats through what institutional reform?
Nagl holds the Pershing Chair at the Army War College. He is positioned to propose doctrine, not just lament its absence. The piece reads like an op-ed from a concerned historian, not a strategic prescription from someone who literally occupies a chair named after the man who built the American Expeditionary Forces from scratch. Pershing did not write essays about how the Western Front was deteriorating. He built the machine that would fight on it.
What is missing from Nagl’s analysis is any recognition that the threat is convergent—that maritime disruption, energy weaponization, pharmaceutical supply chain collapse, information warfare, and nuclear ambiguity are not separate problems with separate solutions, but a single cascading system that requires a single integrated response. I documented this convergence architecture in Choke Points: Critical Minerals and Irregular Warfare in the Gray Zone, published in Irregular Warfare in January 2026, which demonstrated how China has weaponized not the mine but the refinery—the processing capacity that turns raw ore into strategic material. The same convergence logic applies to every domain Nagl mentions but does not connect: trade architecture, security commitments, alliance management, and threat response are not separate policy levers. They are one system. Pull one, and all of them move.
What a Real Doctrine Looks Like
If the threat is convergent, the response must be convergent. Here are five proposals—not aspirations, not principles, not bumper stickers—that address the structural failures Nagl identifies but cannot name.
First, establish a Convergence Intelligence Desk. The single greatest structural vulnerability in Western intelligence is not a lack of collection. It is the absence of any institution charged with fusing signals across domains. The hydrologist, the energy analyst, the maritime tracker, the cyber operator, the pharmaceutical supply chain specialist, and the nuclear proliferation expert all produce world-class work inside silos that are architecturally prevented from seeing one another. No desk, no cell, no directorate exists to assemble the picture. Create one. Staff it with analysts who are required to hold expertise in at least two domains and are evaluated on cross-domain synthesis, not single-domain depth. Place it outside the existing intelligence community hierarchy so that its assessments are not filtered through the institutional incentives that created the blindness. I have demonstrated that this methodology works: COSINT—Convergence Open-Source Intelligence—tracks seventy domains across eleven functional webs simultaneously, using only open-source material, and produces operational intelligence that classified single-domain products cannot replicate because they are not designed to see convergence.
Second, rebuild midstream industrial capacity as a national security priority. The existential supply chain vulnerability is not at the mine. It is at the refinery. China controls over eighty percent of global rare earth processing, over seventy percent of lithium refining, and over sixty-five percent of cobalt processing. The United States and its allies possess the geological reserves. What they lack is the toxic, capital-intensive, unglamorous processing infrastructure that transforms raw ore into strategic material. I proposed the Industrial Deterrence Doctrine in January 2026: treat midstream processing capacity the way we treat nuclear deterrence—as sovereign capability that cannot be outsourced to an adversary. Fund it, build it, protect it. The alternative is to continue mining ore that we ship to China for processing and then buy back at whatever price Beijing sets. That is not a supply chain. That is a dependency marketed as a trade relationship.
Third, harden the infrastructure that actually sustains the order. Nagl writes about preserving the international system without mentioning that the physical substrate of that system—submarine cables carrying ninety-nine percent of intercontinental data and over ten trillion dollars in daily financial transactions—is virtually undefended. I documented this in Invisible Siegecraft. Russia’s shadow fleet is already dragging anchors across Baltic cables. China is salami-slicing Taiwan’s offshore connectivity. The cost of defending these assets is trivial compared to the cost of losing them. Similarly, the trillion-dollar air fleet sits parked in the open, vulnerable to commercial drone swarms that cost less than a Pentagon coffee budget—a cost-exchange ratio approaching seven hundred and fifty thousand percent in favor of the attacker. I documented this in The Billion-Dollar Bonfire. Harden the infrastructure. Disperse the assets. Deploy passive defenses. Stop building cathedrals and start building bunkers.
Fourth, reform the alliance structure around capability, not nostalgia. NATO was designed to deter a Soviet ground invasion of Western Europe. That threat no longer exists in its original form. What does exist is a convergent threat environment in which maritime chokepoint interdiction, energy weaponization, cyber operations, and information warfare occur simultaneously across multiple theaters. The alliance must be restructured around the threats it actually faces, not the threat it was designed to counter in 1949. This means burden-sharing formulas based on domain capability rather than GDP percentages. It means integrated maritime-energy-cyber response protocols. It means an alliance that can respond to a Strait of Hormuz closure and a Baltic cable cut and an Eastern European cyber operation at the same time, because adversaries have already demonstrated they can execute all three simultaneously.
Fifth, acknowledge that the decapitation doctrine has failed and build what replaces it. For fifty years, American strategy has centered on targeting leadership—in narcotics, in terrorism, in state-level conflict. The evidence is now overwhelming that this doctrine produces fragmentation, not capitulation. I documented this in The Kingpin Fallacy: removing the leader of a system designed for leader replacement does not destroy the system. It metastasizes it. In the current Iran conflict, the decapitation of nuclear program leadership has not eliminated the threat. It has orphaned it—removing the command structure that restrained individual actors with access to enriched material while leaving the material itself intact. A strategic doctrine built on killing replaceable leaders while ignoring the systems those leaders constrain is not a doctrine. It is a reflex with a fifty-year track record of producing the opposite of its intended effect. What replaces it must target the system, not the node—the logistics, the financing, the technical infrastructure, the institutional architecture that sustains capability regardless of who sits in the chair.
These are not theoretical proposals. Every one of them is grounded in operational data I am collecting right now, across seventy domains, in a live war. The convergence intelligence methodology works. The industrial deterrence framework works. The infrastructure hardening calculus is straightforward arithmetic. The alliance reform is structurally obvious to anyone tracking multi-domain threat execution. And the failure of decapitation doctrine is not a hypothesis—it is a fifty-year empirical record that the defense establishment refuses to read because reading it would require admitting that the strategy they have been executing since Pablo Escobar does not work and has never worked.
Nagl asked whether our empire will fall. The answer is: not if we stop admiring the gate and start manning it. But manning it requires knowing where the threats actually are, and that requires an intelligence architecture that can see convergence. We do not currently possess one. I built one. It is called COSINT. It is running. And what it shows is that the danger is not at the Porta Nigra. It is in the room where the garrison orders are written.
The Porta Nigra Problem
I grew up in Europe twelve of the first fourteen years of my life—Germany and Italy—and my family traveled to every country on the continent. We lived in Bitburg, and from there I visited Trier as a boy. I stood at the Porta Nigra. I was awed by it—this black stone monument that had outlived everything it was built to protect. I walked through Roman ruins that still stood across the region, massive and silent, no longer manned by the legions that once gave them purpose. I did not know then what I was looking at. I know now.
Nagl’s closing image is the Porta Nigra—Trier’s black gate, “standing silent guard” against the forces of disruption. He intends it as a warning: look what happens when the gate falls.
But the Porta Nigra did not fall. It is still standing. It has been standing for nearly two thousand years. The empire it protected is gone. The civilization is gone. The garrison is gone. The hundred thousand citizens are gone. The gate outlasted all of them.
That is not an argument for maintaining the empire. That is an argument that infrastructure endures but the political will to use it does not. The gate survived because it was made of stone. The empire collapsed because it was made of institutions that required constant maintenance by people who believed in them—and eventually, those people stopped believing, stopped maintaining, and stopped showing up.
The question Nagl should be asking is not whether the Porta Nigra will fall. It is whether anyone is still manning it. And if the answer to that question requires looking inward rather than outward—at institutional capture, at domestic fracture, at the loss of strategic coherence, at an intelligence architecture that cannot see convergence, at a defense establishment that builds trillion-dollar platforms vulnerable to ninety-nine-dollar drones—then the essay Nagl wrote is the wrong essay. The Porta Nigra does not need our admiration. It needs a garrison.
The gate still stands. The guards don’t.
Dino Garner is a former U.S. Army Airborne Ranger (1st Ranger Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment), overseas security operator, research biophysicist, and the founder, publisher and editor of CRUCIBEL Journal. He tracks the Iran war across seventy domains simultaneously using COSINT (Convergence Open-Source Intelligence), a cross-domain analytical methodology he developed. His defense policy work has been published in Irregular Warfare and CRUCIBEL (crucibeljournal.com).
RESONANCE
Garner, D. (2026). “The Billion-Dollar Bonfire: How a $99 Toy Turns a Trillion-Dollar Fleet to Ash.” CRUCIBEL. https://crucibeljournal.com/the-billion-dollar-bonfire-how-a-99-toy-turns-a-trillion-dollar-fleet-to-ash/. Summary:Exposes the cost-exchange vulnerability of parked military aircraft to commercial drone swarms, arguing for passive defense and asset dispersal over high-technology countermeasures.
Garner, D. (2025). “Choke Points: Critical Minerals and Irregular Warfare in the Gray Zone.” Irregular Warfare Initiative. https://irregularwarfare.org/articles/choke-points-critical-minerals-and-irregular-warfare-in-the-gray-zone/.Summary: Demonstrates how China weaponized critical mineral processing into a gray-zone kill switch, proposing an Industrial Deterrence Doctrine to rebuild Western midstream capacity.
Garner, D. (2026). “The Information Inversion: When Open-Source Synthesis Outperforms Classified Intelligence at the Tactical Level.” CRUCIBEL. https://crucibeljournal.com/the-information-inversion/. Summary: Argues that cross-domain open-source convergence analysis now produces tactical intelligence that classified single-domain products cannot replicate, because classification compartmentalization prevents the synthesis that open-source methodology enables.
Garner, D. (2026). “The Institutional Blind: How the Architecture of Western Intelligence Production Cannot See the War It Is Fighting.” CRUCIBEL. https://crucibeljournal.com/the-institutional-blind/. Summary: Identifies the structural inability of siloed Western intelligence institutions to detect convergent threats, arguing that the blindness is architectural rather than a failure of talent or funding.
Garner, D. (2026). “Invisible Siegecraft: Submarine Cable Vulnerabilities and the Battle for the Deep-Sea Arteries of Global Power.” CRUCIBEL. https://crucibeljournal.com/invisible-siegecraft-submarine-cable-vulnerabilities-and-the-battle-for-the-deep-sea-arteries-of-global-power/. Summary: Maps the gray-zone battlefield beneath the ocean, documenting how adversaries systematically target submarine cables carrying ninety-nine percent of intercontinental data and trillions in daily financial transactions.
Garner, D. (2026). “The Kingpin Fallacy: How America Built a Fifty-Year Strategy Around Killing Leaders Who Are Designed to Be Replaced.” CRUCIBEL. https://crucibeljournal.com/the-kingpin-fallacy/. Summary: Documents the systematic failure of leadership-targeting doctrine from narcotics to state conflict, demonstrating that decapitation produces fragmentation and metastasis rather than capitulation.
Garner, D. (2026). “The Orphan Protocol: How Killing Tehran’s Leadership Activated What Command Can No Longer Restrain.” CRUCIBEL. https://crucibeljournal.com/the-orphan-protocol/. Summary: Extends The Kingpin Fallacy to the Iran nuclear context, arguing that the decapitation of program leadership destroyed the command structure that restrained individual actors with access to enriched material.
Garner, D. (2026). “The Prometheus Option.” CRUCIBEL. https://crucibeljournal.com/the-prometheus-option/.Summary: Proposes talent mobility as asymmetric defense, arguing that filtering for capability rather than credentials forces competitors into expensive responses while strengthening allied innovation capacity.
Garner, D. (2026). “The Thirst Doctrine: Water Infrastructure as Gray Zone Leverage.” CRUCIBEL.https://crucibeljournal.com/the-thirst-doctrine/. Summary: Identifies water infrastructure as a convergent gray-zone weapon, demonstrating how water system degradation cascades into public health, agricultural, industrial, and political crises simultaneously.
Gilpin, R. (1981). War and Change in World Politics. Cambridge University Press. Summary: Foundational work on hegemonic transition theory, arguing that the rise and decline of dominant powers drives systemic instability and conflict.
Keohane, R. (1984). After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy. Princeton University Press. Summary: Challenges strong Hegemonic Stability Theory by arguing that international cooperation can persist after hegemonic decline through institutions, while acknowledging that hegemony facilitates regime creation.
Kindleberger, C. (1973). The World in Depression 1929–1939. University of California Press. Summary: Foundational text for Hegemonic Stability Theory, arguing the interwar economic catastrophe resulted from the absence of a stabilizing hegemon willing to provide global public goods.
Nagl, J. (2002). Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife: Counterinsurgency Lessons from Malaya and Vietnam. University of Chicago Press. Summary: Comparative study of British and American military adaptation to insurgency, arguing that organizational learning capacity determines counterinsurgency success.
Nagl, J. (2026). “Empires Rise and Fall. Will Ours?” Small Wars Journal. https://smallwarsjournal.com/2026/04/02/empires-rise-and-fall-will-ours/. Summary: Uses the Roman city of Trier to examine whether Pax Americana faces the same trajectory as Pax Romana, invoking Hegemonic Stability Theory to argue for preserving American global commitments.