NDS 2026 and Malaysia’s Strategic Reality
The 2026 U.S. National Defense Strategy (NDS) signals a decisive shift in how Washington views both global order and the Indo-Pacific. No longer framed primarily as a space for managed competition, the region is now treated as the central theatre of potential great-power conflict. Anchored in President Trump’s “peace through strength” doctrine, the strategy prioritizes deterrence by denial, demands greater allied burden-sharing, and assumes a far higher risk of simultaneous wars. For Malaysia and its Southeast Asian neighbours, this recalibration will reshape the strategic environment in ways that cannot be ignored, even by states committed to non-alignment. At its core, NDS 2026 reflects a harsher assessment of China’s trajectory. Unlike earlier strategies that balanced rivalry with engagement, the new document assumes that China is approaching military parity with the United States in key Indo-Pacific contingencies. As a result, Washington’s focus is no longer on shaping Chin...