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AI Militarization, Authoritarian International, Corporate State Fusion, Deep State Politics, Democratic Backsliding, Digital Repression, Elite Impunity, Epstein Files, Fascist Tendencies, Global Police State, Neoliberal Globalization, Oligarchic Power Structures, Organized Crime Nexus, Platform Sovereignty, Political Economy Of Control, Security State Apparatus, State Capture, Surveillance Capitalism, Techno-Feudalism, Transnational Elites

How oligarchs, security services, and tech platforms quietly fused into a transnational regime of control
For years, “deep state” sounded like the fever dream of message‑board conspiracists, a catch‑all phrase for everything people sensed but could not name. The irony is that while they ranted about secret cabals of civil‑service liberals and shadowy bureaucrats, a very different kind of deep state was hardening in plain sight. It did not look like a cabal of socialist planners tucked away in government basements. It looked like lawyers, private‑equity partners, intelligence veterans, tech founders, arms dealers, royal families, and security chiefs quietly learning to treat whole countries the way corporations treat “emerging markets”: as assets to be monetized, populations to be managed, and threats to be neutralized or bought off.
This is the authoritarian international: a loose, evolving network of oligarchs, political operatives, security services, and organized criminals who cooperate across borders to turn state power itself into a profit center while shielding one another from scrutiny. It is not a single organization with a membership card. It is a set of habits and incentives that, over the past few decades, have turned the old idea of sovereignty inside out.
The old deep state was a national creature. The new one is transnational, plugged into fiber‑optic cables and tax havens, happy to swap techniques between dictatorships, “flawed democracies,” and outright mafia states. If you zoom in on any one node—Moscow, Riyadh, Washington, London, Shanghai—you see local histories and rivalries. Zoom out, and a pattern appears: concentrated economic power, fused with surveillance technologies and security institutions, hardening into a planetary architecture of control.
The depressing part is that this did not come out of nowhere. The seed was planted decades ago, in the overlapping stories of neoliberal globalization, post‑Cold War triumphalism, and what Shoshana Zuboff has called “surveillance capitalism.” The hopeful part, thin as it is, is that once you see the wiring, you can at least stop mistaking it for the weather.
The authoritarian international did not spring fully formed from the head of Vladimir Putin or Xi Jinping. It grew out of a set of choices made in supposedly triumphant liberal democracies after the Cold War: deregulate finance, privatize public assets, offshore industry, and treat markets as the main mechanism for solving political problems. In that world, corporations and investors gained freedom of movement that ordinary citizens never did. Money could cross borders in milliseconds, while people drowned in the Mediterranean.
Yanis Varoufakis and others have described this as a shift from “democratic capitalism” to something closer to techno‑feudalism: a landscape where giant platforms, energy companies, and financial institutions resemble private fiefdoms extracting rent, rather than firms competing in level markets. States still exist, but they increasingly act like property managers for global capital. They enforce the rules on workers, debtors, tenants, and dissidents, while remaining strangely helpless when confronted with a too‑big‑to‑fail bank or platform.
At the same time, the hard apparatus of surveillance and security deepened. The expansion of the U.S. national security state after September 11, the global intelligence‑sharing frameworks pioneered by the Five Eyes, and the quiet proliferation of “lawful intercept” tools gave both democratic and authoritarian governments unprecedented visibility into communication and movement. Edward Snowden’s disclosures made a tiny corner of that architecture visible to the public, but the story was larger than any one program. Governments learned that they could monitor entire populations with the help of telecoms and tech firms; tech firms learned that the data they collected for advertising were also valuable to intelligence and law enforcement.
Then came the platforms. Facebook, Google, Amazon, Tencent, Alibaba, and their cousins learned to harvest behavioral data at scale, profile users, and subtly steer attention and emotion. This was not initially sold as a tool of control; it was sold as relevance, personalization, and growth. But the same instruments that could optimize click‑through rates could also optimize political messaging, nudge voter turnout, and detect emerging social movements in real time.
What emerged from this stew of privatization, surveillance, and data extraction was not quite the liberal fantasy of “global governance” but something colder: a system where economic and security interests could find one another across borders, trade favors, and quietly rewrite the rules.
Oligarchs, Security Services, and Organized Crime
If you want to see the authoritarian international in miniature, you could do worse than study Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The 1990s “shock therapy” privatizations created a generation of oligarchs who acquired vast state assets at fire‑sale prices. Many of them had direct ties to the old security services or were quickly brought to heel by them. Under Putin, the fusion of the FSB (successor to the KGB), state bureaucracy, and select oligarchs produced a system where wealth and political loyalty were two sides of the same coin. The line between mafia, state, and business blurred.
But it would be a mistake to treat this as an exclusively Russian pathology. Post‑Soviet oligarchs laundered money through Western banks, bought London real estate, hired American and European lawyers, and parked their yachts under flags of convenience. Western financial centers eagerly acted as enablers and beneficiaries. The City of London, New York, and various offshore jurisdictions became laundromats for loot from Russia, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, China, and beyond. The “rules‑based order” had a side hustle: sheltering stolen wealth.
In country after country, similar patterns emerged. In Ukraine, before and after the Maidan, oligarchic clans wielded media, private security, and political parties as tools of self‑protection. In many Middle Eastern states, royal families and intelligence chiefs controlled sovereign wealth funds, arms deals, and giant infrastructure projects, often in close cooperation with Western defense contractors and banks. In Latin America, from Mexico to Brazil, cartels and organized crime groups wove themselves into local police forces, judiciaries, and political parties.
Call it the criminalization of the state, or the statization of crime. Either way, the direction of travel was clear: the same networks that trafficked drugs, weapons, and people also trafficked influence, contracts, and votes. “Anti‑corruption” campaigns became tools for one faction of the elite to discipline another, rather than genuine efforts to clean house.
The authoritarian international thrives in these spaces where legality, illegality, and quasi‑legality mingle. A private military contractor hired to “secure” a mine in Africa, a lobbyist arranging a meeting between a Gulf sovereign wealth fund and a Silicon Valley unicorn, a shell company routing payments through the Caribbean: all of these are part of the same ecosystem.
The Epstein Cabal as a Microcosm
If you want to see the authoritarian international in its most grotesque, intimate form, you end up back in Jeffrey Epstein’s living rooms and on his planes. The newly released Epstein files do not just document the crimes of one prolific predator; they sketch the outlines of a social world where heads of state, princes, billionaires, academics, diplomats, media figures, and fixers moved easily in and out of the orbit of a man already convicted of trafficking children. It is less a “conspiracy” in the cinematic sense than a portrait of how a certain layer of the global elite actually lives: shielded, networked, and sure that rules are for other people.
The documents and investigative reporting make three things brutally clear. First, Epstein functioned as a broker and facilitator inside an overlapping cluster of political, financial, and cultural elites that spanned the US, UK, Europe, the Gulf monarchies, Israel, and beyond. He moved money, introduced powerful people to one another, brokered deals, massaged reputations, and traded in access and information, even after his 2008 conviction. Second, sexual exploitation of minors was not an unfortunate side‑hustle; it was woven into the fabric of his operations, a form of entertainment, leverage, and bonding for people who imagined themselves unaccountable. Third, the system around him worked very hard to minimize consequences: implausible plea deals, kid‑glove treatment from prosecutors, and years of continued contact with elite institutions and individuals who had every reason to know exactly who he was.
In other words, Epstein’s “cabal” is not separate from the authoritarian international; it is one of the places where its financial, political, and cultural strands knotted together. Epstein cultivated ties with royals, cabinet ministers, intelligence‑adjacent figures, central bankers, tech founders, Ivy League scientists, and global NGOs, often using philanthropy, invitations, and “networking” as the official cover. The files suggest that, alongside the abuse itself, there were other exchanges taking place: insider information about markets and regulatory cases, introductions that smoothed over legal problems for banks and firms, quiet favors for officials who could make things go away. The point is not that there was a single master blackmail file controlling everyone. It is that Epstein was a trusted node in a culture where mutual silence, status protection, and “taking care of our own” were the default settings.
That culture is exactly what allows an authoritarian international to flourish. It depends on people who feel more loyalty to their transnational peer group than to any public, who are confident that their peers will close ranks when something ugly surfaces. Researchers who have gone through the files describe a classic “boy’s club” dynamic, in which mostly men use their wealth and positions to convert status into immunity, shifting seamlessly between government, finance, academia, and media while quietly solving one another’s problems. When those are the people designing trade deals, overseeing intelligence budgets, funding think tanks, and sitting on university boards, it is not hard to see how law and regulation bend around them.
The Epstein saga also shows how hard it is for ordinary people to get real accountability out of such a network. It took years of investigative work, multiple lawsuits, and the eventual death of the central figure in custody before the US Department of Justice even began complying with a law demanding full release of federal Epstein‑related documents—and even then, millions of pages were withheld or heavily redacted. The slow‑motion drip of revelations, combined with the lack of high‑level prosecutions beyond Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, has done exactly what you would expect in an age already saturated with conspiracy thinking: confirm that something is deeply wrong at the top while encouraging people to reach for the wildest possible stories to explain it.
Seen through the lens of this essay, the Epstein files are not proof that “the lizard people” secretly run everything. They are something more mundane and more damning: evidence that a transnational layer of power exists, that it protects its own even in the face of monstrous crimes, and that the mechanisms of democratic accountability barely scratch its surface. That is the authoritarian international in miniature: not an all‑controlling central brain, but a dense mesh of relationships in which money, status, sex, information, and impunity circulate freely among those invited inside, while everyone else is told to trust the system.
The twentieth‑century authoritarian international was built on cash, arms deals, and intelligence liaisons. The twenty‑first‑century version adds a powerful new layer: data and digital infrastructure.
Companies like NSO Group, which sells Pegasus spyware, show how this works. A firm domiciled in a formally democratic country develops tools that can compromise smartphones globally. Authoritarian and hybrid regimes buy those tools, ostensibly for “counterterrorism,” then deploy them against journalists, opposition figures, lawyers, and activists. The line between state surveillance and private enterprise dissolves. Regulators look the other way because these tools also serve their own intelligence services.
Similarly, social media platforms become both battleground and weapon. Authoritarian regimes hire troll farms and bot networks to shape online discourse, harass opponents, and flood the zone with disinformation. Democracies are hardly innocent; political campaigns and dark‑money outfits eagerly exploit microtargeting and algorithmic amplification. What matters is not who invented the tools, but who can afford to weaponize them.
In recent years, a new front has opened: the AI boom. Large language models and other AI systems are touted as productivity tools, but they also centralize power in the hands of a few firms deeply entangled with states. Governments fund AI research, demand access to models and data, and see in these systems not just economic potential but surveillance and control capabilities. Defense departments court AI labs; AI labs court defense contracts. Behind the buzzwords of “safety” and “alignment” lies a more basic question: who will own and govern the infrastructure that increasingly mediates how people see the world?
Here the authoritarian international shows its adaptive genius. It does not care whether a company’s branding leans “democratic” or “authoritarian,” “Western” or “Eastern.” What matters is whether the tools and flows of data can be brought into a larger bargain: we will protect your property rights and market position; you will help us monitor, manage, or manipulate populations when asked.
If you want to see how this abstract machinery shows up in day‑to‑day politics, look at the Trump administration’s confrontation with Anthropic. In February 2026, Trump ordered every federal agency to “immediately cease” using Anthropic’s AI systems, with a six‑month phase‑out even for the Pentagon and other security agencies already running Anthropic’s models on classified networks. Within hours, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced that he was designating Anthropic a “supply‑chain risk to national security,” a label historically reserved for foreign adversaries and hostile vendors, not American firms under contract.
The trigger was not that Anthropic had sold out to a rival power. It was that the company tried to draw two red lines: no use of its models for fully autonomous weapons, and no use for mass domestic surveillance of Americans. Anthropic had signed a $200 million Pentagon deal in 2025 but sought contractual assurances that its systems would not be turned into engines for automated killing or blanket monitoring of the U.S. population. The Pentagon responded by insisting on the right to use the technology for “all lawful purposes” and set a hard deadline for Anthropic to give in. When the company refused, Hegseth moved to blacklist it across defense supply chains, and Trump ordered the rest of the state to fall in line.
Trump’s intervention did not challenge this logic; it reinforced it. By publicly ordering the state to tear out Anthropic’s systems and hinting at “major civil and criminal consequences” if the company did not “get their act together,” he signaled that in his administration’s view, the real danger did not lie in autonomous weapons or dragnet surveillance. The danger lay in any private actor claiming the right to constrain them. The message to the rest of the tech sector was simple: align your models with the security state’s broadest interpretation of “all lawful purposes,” or risk being treated as an enemy.
What makes this a textbook authoritarian‑international moment is not just the bullying of one firm. It is the choreography. Within hours of Anthropic’s blacklisting, OpenAI announced a new Pentagon deal to bring its models onto classified systems, promising “guardrails” negotiated behind closed doors. The state flexes its power to punish a company that tries to draw public red lines; another, more compliant firm steps forward to fill the gap. Lawyers and lobbyists will now work to launder this episode into a story about “national security,” “supply‑chain integrity,” and “contracting norms.” Meanwhile, the underlying bargain tightens: AI for war and surveillance is normal; attempts to condition or slow that fusion are treated as subversive.
At the same time that Trump is using procurement blacklists and security designations to discipline a single AI firm, his administration is busy hollowing out the parts of the state that once served as weak antibodies against the authoritarian international. New rules modeled on “Schedule F” strip job protections from tens of thousands of civil servants in policy roles, turning them into at‑will employees who can be fired for disloyalty and replaced with movement cadres. Inspectors general and heads of watchdog agencies are sacked, hiring is quietly rewritten around ideology tests and “favorite Trump policies,” and allied organizations openly promise to “bend or break the bureaucracy to the presidential will.”
This is what “destroying the deep state” looks like in practice: not tearing down the fusion of money, security, and data that actually runs things, but purging the remaining pockets of professional autonomy and replacing them with loyal managers. The international oligarchic‑security complex does not fear that kind of state. It needs it. A loyalist bureaucracy is simply an on‑shore franchise, a local operating company for a larger authoritarian order.
In that sense, the Trump administration is not an outlier standing outside the authoritarian international. It is one of its political expressions. The same White House that rants about the “deep state” and “tyranny of bureaucrats” has no problem wielding the real deep state—security designations, procurement blacklists, informal threats—to discipline anyone who resists folding their technology into the emerging global police architecture. The rhetoric is anti‑establishment; the practice is the consolidation of a new establishment in which the fusion of platform power and state violence is taken for granted.
Manufacturing Legitimacy, Neutralizing Democracy
The authoritarian international does not only work through brute force. It also manufactures legitimacy. That is part of what makes it so hard to see.
Think tanks, consultancy firms, and elite universities play a quiet role here. They frame austerity measures, privatizations, and “labor market reforms” as painful but necessary. They write white papers explaining why infrastructure must be financed through public‑private partnerships, why security requires expanded surveillance powers, why “disruptive innovation” should be lightly regulated. The language is dry, technocratic, and ostensibly non‑ideological. It presents choices as inevitabilities.
Media ecosystems also shape perception. In some countries, oligarchs directly own major newspapers and TV stations. In others, platform algorithms and advertising incentives reward outrage, distraction, and the depoliticization of economic questions. It becomes easier to fight over culture‑war symbols than to examine who actually owns what and how decisions are made.
Meanwhile, formal democratic mechanisms are quietly hollowed out. Political parties become fundraising machines more than vehicles for membership‑based representation. Lobbyists and “policy entrepreneurs” shuttle between government and industry. Regulatory agencies are captured by the sectors they are supposed to oversee. Courts, where they remain independent at all, are increasingly asked to adjudicate questions that should have been settled democratically, which in turn invites political counter‑attacks on judicial independence.
None of this means elections cease to matter. They matter a great deal, especially for those most exposed to policy swings. But the authoritarian international ensures that many of the deepest decisions—the parameters of financialization, the offshoring of production, the architecture of surveillance—remain off the table, insulated from majoritarian challenge.
In that world, the term “deep state” is not entirely wrong, but the subject is. The threat is not a cabal of social workers and schoolteachers secretly running the show. It is an informal but highly effective coalition of economic, security, and informational power centers that can outlast particular governments and bend policy in its favor regardless of who nominally wins.
Case Snapshots: From Project States to Client States
The pattern becomes clearer if we look at a few stylized snapshots.
In one, a small resource‑rich country discovers new mineral deposits vital for green‑tech supply chains. International mining conglomerates arrive, each backed by their home states’ diplomats and development agencies. Local elites see an opportunity; they negotiate contracts that favor the companies, skim rents through offshore entities, and use a portion of the windfall to fund patronage networks. When local communities resist environmental destruction, state security forces crack down, often with training and equipment provided under “counterterrorism” or “stability” programs. Western NGOs issue reports; nothing fundamental changes.
In another, a formally democratic country becomes dependent on a handful of global tech platforms for everything from communication to logistics. Those platforms develop intimate knowledge of the population’s behavior, beliefs, and networks. Political campaigns hire platform‑adjacent data firms to microtarget voters. Intelligence agencies quietly demand “lawful access” or exploit zero‑day vulnerabilities. When a scandal breaks about misuse of data, the result is a round of hearings, a mild fine, and a few new disclosure rules. The underlying power asymmetry remains intact.
In a third, a rising authoritarian power invests heavily in digital infrastructure abroad: telecom networks, data centers, “safe city” surveillance packages. These projects come with turnkey censorship and monitoring capabilities baked in. Local regimes adopt them because they promise security and modernity on the cheap. The exporting state gains leverage: in a crisis, it can threaten to withdraw maintenance, deny software updates, or quietly surveil dissidents using the same systems.
Each of these vignettes looks different on the surface, but they share a logic: state power, corporate power, and sometimes outright criminal power cooperating to organize society from above, with minimal democratic input. That is the authoritarian international in practice.
Why the Old Categories Fail Us
One of the reasons it is so hard to think about this coherently is that our inherited political categories are not designed for it. We tend to imagine a spectrum from “democracy” to “authoritarianism,” with clear‑cut types like liberal democracies, military juntas, one‑party states, and so on. We also tend to separate “public” and “private,” as if the state were one thing and markets another.
The authoritarian international cuts across these lines. It can operate in constitutional democracies and one‑man dictatorships alike. It uses private finance to capture public institutions, and public institutions to protect private fortunes. It is perfectly comfortable with elections, so long as those elections do not threaten its core interests.
That is why the argument over whether a specific leader or government is “really fascist” can sometimes miss the point. Classic fascism in the interwar sense was a particular type of mass movement and regime: openly anti‑liberal, violently nationalist, corporatist, and committed to mobilizing the population in service of the state. Today, you can have regimes that borrow fascist aesthetics and techniques without fully reproducing that model. You can also have a global order that incorporates authoritarian elements without marching under a single banner.
This is not to say that words do not matter. They do. There is value in being precise about what constitutes fascism, what counts as mere authoritarian populism, what is “only” oligarchic drift. But at a certain level, the authoritarian international does not care what we name it. It cares whether we can disrupt its flows of money, data, and force.
Resistance in a Captured World
If this sounds bleak, that is because it is. But bleak is not the same as hopeless. Systems like this are powerful, yet fragile. They depend on a steady supply of legitimacy, data, and labor from the very people they marginalize.
One line of resistance is obviously institutional: rebuilding unions, professional associations, and grassroots movements that can challenge corporate and security power from below. Historically, the rare moments when oligarchic orders were forced to concede—whether in the New Deal era, post‑war social democracy, or anti‑colonial struggles—came when mass movements made elites fear loss of control more than loss of profit. Those moments were messy, violent, and compromised, but they changed what was possible.
Another line runs through the infrastructure itself. Engineers, designers, and workers inside tech and security institutions still possess leverage, however limited. Whistleblowers, unionization efforts within tech, and internal revolts against certain contracts (for example, with military or border agencies) can slow or complicate the authoritarian international’s plans. These acts will not topple the system on their own, but they can create fissures.
A third line is cultural and narrative. One of the authoritarian international’s greatest advantages is that it has made its existence boring. Tax havens, escrow accounts, data brokers, revolving doors, memorandum of understanding: these are not the stuff of thrilling stories. Yet behind them lie decisions that shape who eats, who drowns, who is watched, and who disappears. Writers, journalists, artists, and educators who patiently connect the dots—who show how a server farm in Iowa connects to a drone strike in Yemen, or how a housing crisis in London connects to capital flight from kleptocracies—help make the invisible visible.
None of this guarantees victory, whatever that might mean. The authoritarian international is not going to vanish because a few people write sharply worded essays. But visibility is a precondition for any meaningful response. You cannot fight what you cannot name, and you cannot name what you refuse to see.
The Deep State We Were Warned About
The strangest twist in this story is how badly the term “deep state” was mis‑aimed. For years, right‑wing media in the United States trained people to imagine a deep state made up of mid‑level bureaucrats, epidemiologists, and school officials, as if the real danger came from public‑health guidance rather than a revolving door between Wall Street, Silicon Valley, the Pentagon, and intelligence services. Q‑style conspiracies fixated on satanic cabals and secret pedophile rings, all while very public networks of billionaires, generals, and spooks were busily writing the terms of our future.
The result is tragic. People who sense, correctly, that the surface of politics is not the whole story are offered cartoons instead of analysis. They are encouraged to hate the people below them—teachers, nurses, civil servants—rather than the systems above them. Meanwhile, the authoritarian international keeps doing what it does best: turning states into investment vehicles, turning security into a growth industry, and turning human beings into data profiles to be sorted and monetized.
The authoritarians of the twenty‑first century are not, for the most part, men in uniforms shouting from balconies. They are board members and ministers, tech founders and hedge‑fund managers, sheikhs and security chiefs, who have learned that governing is easier when the boundaries between state, market, and mafia are porous. They are perfectly happy to let us rage at phantoms, so long as the servers stay on, the contracts are honored, and the profits keep flowing.
Seeing them clearly will not, by itself, bring them down. But it at least allows us to stop mistaking the stage for the backstage, the puppets for the strings.
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