The Infinite Game: Why Global Powers Always Want ‘Eight More’
POLICY WIRE — Washington, D.C. — Empires, by their very nature, don’t often stop to tally their present spoils. There’s a relentless hum—a perpetual appetite—for whatever lies just beyond the...
POLICY WIRE — Washington, D.C. — Empires, by their very nature, don’t often stop to tally their present spoils. There’s a relentless hum—a perpetual appetite—for whatever lies just beyond the horizon. It’s not about mere survival for many state actors; it’s a high-stakes, ceaseless contest for leverage, for positioning, for what amounts to an indeterminate number of additional ‘wins’. It’s a mentality often observed in the cutthroat arenas of professional sports, then strangely echoed in the quiet backrooms where national policy gets drawn up. Sometimes, the clearest articulation of grand geopolitical strategy comes from an unexpected corner, proving that even a simple observation from an athlete can distill a complex global truth.
“I’m not thinking about how I could’ve ate more,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, a noted basketball star, was heard saying, his words buzzing across social media feeds, “I’m thinking about how I could win eight more.” A seemingly innocent sentiment, but one that’s remarkably, unsettlingly applicable to the geopolitical stage. Nations don’t usually pat themselves on the back for yesterday’s GDP figures or last month’s diplomatic victories. Instead, they’re meticulously charting courses for next quarter’s trade deal, next year’s regional security pact, or the next decade’s technological dominance. It’s a vision that rarely fixates on satiety; it’s always focused on the next gain. And that ‘eight more’ could mean anything from securing a disputed territory to signing away drilling rights, or even just shifting global perception.
Consider the recent flurry of bilateral agreements — and regional power plays. It’s clear many actors are less concerned with maintaining the status quo — and more about pushing new boundaries. “It’s a matter of looking past what we’ve already secured and asking how we can strategically expand our influence,” remarked Ambassador Anya Sharma, a seasoned diplomat often seen advising the Ministry of External Affairs in Delhi. “Diplomacy isn’t just about preserving what’s ours; it’s about claiming what’s necessary for our future prosperity.” That sort of hawkish pragmatism, it’s becoming the default setting for many.
But there’s a flip side, a necessary counterweight to this perpetual chase. Because this isn’t a game without consequences, especially in volatile regions. “The instinct for ‘more’ is always there, but sustainable progress, particularly in nations like ours facing myriad challenges, hinges on consolidating gains, ensuring stability for our people first,” countered Dr. Amir Iqbal, a prominent economic advisor to Pakistan’s Planning Commission, speaking from Islamabad. His point is clear: while ambition drives progress, unchecked ambition can — and often does — lead to instability, creating ripple effects that spread far beyond borders. We’ve seen it play out before. And we’ll see it again.
The pursuit of ‘eight more’ in resource-scarce environments, for instance, ignites fierce competition. Pakistan, a nation often grappling with chronic energy deficits and a burgeoning population, constantly weighs its options for new trade routes and resource access points, frequently looking east and west. It’s a dynamic tension, trying to ‘win more’ on the energy front without ceding too much sovereign control or inviting undue external influence. That’s a tightrope walk for any developing economy, isn’t it?
In fact, recent data indicates that global defense spending rose to a record $2.44 trillion in 2023, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). That’s not a number driven by contentment; it’s driven by the unwavering belief that more is better—more security, more leverage, more capability to secure those ‘eight more’ gains in a world where everyone else is trying to do the same. It suggests a zero-sum calculation for some nations, a brutal efficiency for others, or simply a hedging strategy against an uncertain future.
What This Means
This widespread ‘eight more’ mentality, detached from any actual tally, forces policymakers to recalibrate. It suggests that declarations of ‘peak power’ or ‘spheres of influence’ are increasingly quaint. For the U.S. and its allies, it means continuous engagement — and adaptability; you can’t simply rest on past triumphs. For burgeoning economies like Pakistan’s, it implies an even more complex negotiation of global dependencies and internal pressures. You’re trying to win on multiple fronts – economic growth, social stability, and regional security – often with limited capital and enduring rivalries.
Because the quest for ‘more’ is inherently destabilizing. If every nation is solely focused on expanding its piece of the pie, then collaborative solutions, which are desperately needed for climate change or global health, become secondary. This isn’t about satiating immediate needs anymore. It’s about creating buffer zones, economic dependencies, strategic chokepoints—anything that can contribute to that ever-elusive ‘eight more’. What you’re seeing is a fundamental shift from securing present interests to continuously preempting future ones. And that’s a dangerous game with high, unknown costs for everyone involved.


