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on February 10, 2026, 1:13 pm
To the Grand Area and Beyond: The Sudden Transformation of the United States’ Strategic Space
Stephen Wertheim
August 23, 2023
[Might be worth a look]
The story of the United States’ rise to global power is inadequately understood in part because its contours are so familiar. The most prominent narrative, reiterated in the country’s political discourse, holds that the United States oscillated between “isolationism” and “internationalism” until the latter prevailed around the middle of the twentieth century. Many scholars question that dichotomy; instead, they see the United States as constantly expanding its power, vaulting thirteen backwater colonies into a globe-spanning superpower. Yet both lines of interpretation assume that most, if not almost all, U.S. policymakers consistently intended to enlarge the United States’ strategic space until it spanned the world. These interpretations overlook that the very people who made U.S. ambitions global had long planned to do nothing of the sort until unanticipated events shocked them into changing their minds.
This essay asks how and why the United States reversed course and made a decision for dominance. Building on my book Tomorrow, the World: The Birth of U.S. Global Supremacy (2020), it shows how U.S. planners leapt from a hemispheric to a global mental map of U.S. interests and responsibilities within a period of five months in 1940. Then it assesses the drivers of the shift, which has proved enduring in the eight decades since.
Empire without Entanglement
Prior to World War II, the United States enlarged its strategic space through three distinct, albeit overlapping, modalities. The first was the process of so-called westward expansion across North America through the conquest and settlement of contiguous territory incorporated into the federal union as states. The second was formal colonialism: the United States acquired noncontiguous territories—Guam, the Guano Islands, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands—and ruled them without intending to grant them statehood. Third, the United States claimed a sphere of influence in the Western Hemisphere, announced in the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, and policed the greater Caribbean region from the late nineteenth century onward. It is not for nothing that scholars have deemed the United States to be a relentlessly expansionist nation.
Yet narratives of untrammeled enlargement often obscure countervailing sources of U.S. restraint. While seeking ascendancy over what it styled as the “new world,” the United States also resolved to avoid political-military entanglements in the “old world,” especially on the Eurasian landmass and even more particularly in Europe. This traditional consensus did not erode over time in a linear fashion. In fact, it deepened in the two decades following World War I, as regretful Americans sought to stay out of any new war. So when World War II began in Europe in September 1939, there was little appetite to enter. Officials in Washington assumed not only that the United States would decline to join the conflict, but also that after the war it would and should assume no obligations to use military force outside U.S. territory and the Western Hemisphere.
Until May 1940, an essentially hemispheric mental map of the U.S. defense perimeter was widely shared in the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. It also guided the conduct of postwar planning by a group of nearly one hundred experts who gathered in the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), receiving direction from the U.S. Department of State and funding from the Rockefeller Foundation. The experts convened by CFR were the country’s foremost postwar planners before the attack on Pearl Harbor drew the country into the war. Their specific plans were overtaken by events, but they devised a global conceptualization of U.S. interests and responsibilities that would form the premise for the State Department’s official postwar planning committee, established in 1942, with CFR experts providing its backbone.
The ranks of CFR planners included Cold Warriors to-be such as the future CIA director Allen Dulles, who led a group of military experts. Yet Dulles and company were not gearing up for cold or hot wars even as the Nazis made advances during the spring of 1940. Instead, they catalogued schemes for universal disarmament stretching all the way back to the ancient Greeks’ prohibition on poisoning wells. Dulles and his fellow planners still hoped that peaceful, liberal modes of interaction—such as trade, mediation, and law—would tame the system of power politics that bedeviled Europe and Asia. At any rate, U.S. interests overseas warranted little more.
The Grand Recalculation
Then Nazi Germany shocked the world and conquered France within a six-week period during May and June 1940. The collapse of the Third Republic, formerly boasting the world’s strongest army, destroyed the European balance of power. American observers projected that Germany would control the continent for the foreseeable future and might even seize Britain and its empire. The fall of France spurred U.S. elites to recalculate the United States’ strategic space. At the State Department’s request, CFR planners began assessing how much of the world the United States needed to defend now that liberal forms of international exchange, far from being able to tame power politics, had to be defended by armed force in order to survive. As France was falling, geographer Isaiah Bowman told the group that all postwar planning must proceed from the following assumption: “Only force will make and keep a good peace.”1
Led by a pair of economists, including Alvin Hansen (known as the “American Keynes”) and Jacob Viner, the planners got to work. At first, anticipating that Adolf Hitler’s forces might swiftly capture Britain, the planners assumed that the United States would henceforth be confined in all of its international interactions to what they called a “quarter-sphere,” extending from North America down to where Brazil juts into the Atlantic. A quarter-spheric future was hardly desirable to the planners. But they also concluded that it was far from catastrophic. If the United States traded only within the quarter-sphere, its economy would perform adequately. Although the country would lose two-thirds of its foreign trade, the U.S. economy was overwhelmingly self-contained, exporting less than 3% of its GNP outside North America during the 1930s.2
Hansen judged the quarter-sphere to be an “excellent economic unit for the essential defense of the United States,” and one that the United States possessed the naval power to protect.3 In short, the United States could remain remarkably safe and prosperous regardless of what happened in Europe and Asia.
The quarter sphere, June-July 1940. In the aftermath of the Nazi conquest of France, postwar planners in the Council on Foreign Relations anticipated that for the foreseeable future the Axis powers would dominate Europe and parts of the Middle East and North Africa. They thought the United States should respond by economically integrating and militarily defending a “quarter sphere” postwar area extending into Brazil.
But the quarter-sphere construct was superseded within a matter of months. Across the Atlantic, Britain did not succumb to France’s fate, showing instead that it might survive the Nazi onslaught. This enabled the United States to envision forming a wartime and postwar alliance with a capable but weakened Britain, in which Washington would be the senior partner to London. At home, quarter-spheric perimeters had few political supporters. Even the antiwar figures who gathered in the America First Committee wanted to keep the Axis powers out of the Western Hemisphere in accordance with the Monroe Doctrine. For more forward-leaning elites, including President Roosevelt, defense of the hemisphere was the baseline minimum.
Starting in July 1940, CFR planners began to enlarge the United States’ strategic space, at first to the whole hemisphere. Alas, they deemed the Western Hemisphere an insufficient unit. It could not absorb large surpluses of agricultural goods that South America typically exported to Europe. Those surpluses mattered chiefly for geopolitical reasons, not because the planners were stringent free-marketeers and economic maximizers. Their basic aim was to map a postwar area that would be more economically self-sufficient than a projected Nazi-led greater Europe, meaning that the U.S.-led area would be less dependent on external trade. That way, the United States would possess superior bargaining power and keep its area cohesive during the indefinite armed truce expected to follow the war. Moreover, the planners, seeking to preserve liberal capitalism, wished to avoid regimenting the economy as a means of resolving trade imbalances. That left only one way to get rid of surplus goods: expand the area under U.S. protection.
The Western Hemisphere, July-August 1940. Toward the end of the summer, the planners expanded the quarter sphere to the full Western Hemisphere but found it would be less self-sufficient than the Axis-led area.
In September, the planners did just that. Breaching hemispheric boundaries, they added in a massive Indo-Pacific region. Entering the U.S.-led area were Australia, India, Southeast Asia, and Japan (which the planners hoped to integrate even as Tokyo was joining the Tripartite Pact with Berlin and Rome). Yet these ample additions were still insufficient. Although they would help the U.S. economy, they offered no relief for the agricultural surpluses in South America. The Axis-led area would be more economically self-sufficient than the U.S.-led area and so would hold the geopolitical advantage.
The Western Hemisphere and Pacific basin, September 1940. In September the planners breached the historic hemispheric limitation on U.S. military commitments and considered enlarging the American-led postwar area to encompass a vast section of Asia, including Japan.
In October, therefore, the CFR planners added everything else they could, namely the rest of the British Empire and the British Isles, which could absorb Western Hemisphere trade surpluses. Finally the planners had found an area—the Grand Area, as they dubbed it—that they calculated to be “substantially” more self-sufficient than a Nazi-led Europe. By their reckoning, the Grand Area could consume 86% of exports by its constituent countries and supply 79% of imports, compared with 79% and 69%, respectively, for Europe.4 In the span of five months, the planners had reached a startling conclusion: the United States must hold “unquestioned power” in the world. As they summarized, “The United States should use its military power to protect the maximum possible area of the non-German world from control by Germany in order to maintain for its sphere of interest a superiority of economic power over that of the German sphere.”5
Other Americans reached conclusions similar to those of the postwar planners, but without the need for maps and statistics. One of them was the publishing mogul Henry Luce, who in February 1941 announced the beginning of the “American century” in an instantly famous essay by that name: “Tyrannies may require a large amount of living space,” he wrote. “But Freedom requires and will require far greater living space than Tyranny.”6
Stephen Wertheim is a Senior Fellow in the American Statecraft Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He is also a Lecturer at Yale Law School and Catholic University.
The last working-class hero in England.
Clio the cat, ? July 1997 - 1 May 2016
Kira the cat, ? ? 2010 - 3 August 2018
Jasper the Ruffian cat ??? - 4 November 2021
Georgina the cat ???-4 December 2025![]()
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