Source Notes
United States Geopolitical Profile: Source Notes
An intermediate note for organizing research material, evidence links, issue structure, and inclusion decisions before the reader-facing article is written.
United States Geopolitical Profile: Source Notes
Source Map
Primary
- The White House
- USA.gov, Branches of government
- House of Representatives Leadership
- AI.Gov
- NATO, NATO’s support for Ukraine
- OFAC, Sanctions Programs and Country Information
Authoritative data
- BLS, Consumer Price Index Summary - 2026 M05 Results
- BLS, Employment Situation Summary - 2026 M05 Results
Secondary context
- No secondary context sources were central to the article. The profile is intentionally built on public institutional pages and current official data.
Evidence Notes
- The White House homepage identifies President Donald J. Trump and Vice President JD Vance and lists AI, the economy, national security, the border, and energy as top priorities.
- House leadership shows Speaker Mike Johnson and Republican leadership, which matters for budgets, oversight, and foreign spending.
- USA.gov explains the constitutional separation of powers and checks and balances, which is the institutional reason foreign policy is not made by the President alone.
- The May 2026 BLS releases show CPI at 4.2 percent year over year and unemployment at 4.3 percent, which helps explain why domestic price and job pressure still matter for foreign policy.
- AI.Gov places AI inside national security and industrial competition, and explicitly mentions American AI technology stack exports and faster data center permitting.
- NATO’s Ukraine support page explains PURL and NSATU, which shows that allied burden-sharing, not just United States spending, is the real support model.
- OFAC’s sanctions programs page shows that sanctions are used through asset blocking and trade restrictions and currently cover Russia, Iran, cyber, North Korea, and other programs.
Downgraded Material
- Detailed Senate composition was not central because the selected source set did not fully pin it down.
- Daily or monthly border encounter counts were not central because they change too quickly for a structural country profile.
- Dollar centrality was discussed qualitatively rather than with a separate quantitative table.
- Fine-grained tariff and export-control details were left out because they would add noise to the broader geopolitical profile.
Open Questions
- Future executive orders and sanctions changes could alter the current baseline quickly.
- The 2026 congressional cycle could change the budget and oversight environment.
- AI and semiconductor export control rules may tighten further.
- If inflation or unemployment worsens, the relative weight of alliances, border control, and foreign spending will likely shift again.