Install
openclaw skills install @deciqai/thucydides-trapActivate when: user asks about US-China war risk or great-power rivalry; someone says 'can they avoid conflict' or 'is escalation inevitable'; analyzing geopolitical risk in supply chains, FDI, or market entry; a new market entrant threatens an incumbent's core identity or platform control. Do NOT activate when: the conflict is primarily values/ideology without a power-displacement trajectory; both parties are roughly equal with no fast-growing challenger.
openclaw skills install @deciqai/thucydides-trapThucydides's Trap is the structural danger that emerges when a rising power threatens to displace a ruling power — producing fear in the established power that makes conflict more likely even when neither side wants it. Graham Allison surveyed 16 historical cases over 500 years: 12 of 16 ended in war. The 4 peaceful cases required costly, credible accommodation by the established power — not just better diplomacy. The trap is not a law; it is a structural tendency with known escape paths.
Compose with neighbors: Use prisoners-dilemma to map payoff choices at each decision point. Use second-order-thinking to trace escalation cascades. Use repeated-games-reputation to assess whether credible non-escalatory signaling exists.
When NOT to use: conflict is primarily values/ideology (not power displacement); parties are roughly equal with no trajectory gap; purely bilateral commercial disputes without hegemonic stakes → use batna-zopa.
In Coach mode, respond one step at a time. Each [WAIT] is a hard stop — output only that step's question, then stop.
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
Five steps producing a Trap Diagnosis — structured assessment of structural conflict risk, escape path availability, and decision-relevant implications.
Stop rule: If Step 2 reveals the power trajectory gap is small or uncertain, the Trap dynamic is weak. Name the ambiguity and do not force a Trap analysis.
Trap Diagnosis: <rivalry>
Structural Roles: Rising power <...> | Ruling power <...> | Domain <...> | Trajectory gap <...>
Fear Response: Domestic pressure <...> | Observable signals <...> | Intensity <H/M/L>
Structural Accelerants: Third-party risks <...> | Domestic constraints <...> | Tripwires <...>
Escape Paths: Accommodation <Y/N/P — requires ...> | Deterrence+comms <...> | Institutions <...> | Reframing <...>
Decision Implications: Escalation probability <H/M/L> | Trigger points <...> | Scenario planning <...>
→ Method in Action: The US-UK Transition (1895–1906)
Great-power (US-China): Accelerants: Taiwan tripwire, tech decoupling, Indo-Pacific alliance commitments. Best escape path: institution-based competition. Key trigger: Taiwan Strait incident.
Platform competition: Fear response: regulatory lobbying, API closures, copy-and-acquire. Escape: open-standard interoperability or vertical market reframing.
Corporate M&A: Fear response: internal resistance from threatened legacy unit. Escape: structural separation with clear P&L independence.
→ Primary sources: references/sources.md
[D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "Both sides are rational actors, so they'll find a deal." | The Trap shows that rationality is insufficient: domestic political constraints, third-party actors, and credibility commitments can make de-escalation rational but politically impossible for individual leaders. |
| [D] "This time is different because of nuclear weapons / economic interdependence." | Economic interdependence was at a historic high in 1914. Nuclear deterrence is real but also produces escalation risks via "escalate to de-escalate" doctrines. |
| [D] "The Trap is just about great-power wars — it doesn't apply to business." | The structural mechanism (rising challenger → fear response in incumbent → escalation dynamic) operates identically in platform competition, M&A, and organizational dynamics. |
| [D] "China/the challenger is not strong enough yet to trigger the Trap." | The Trap fires on the trajectory that makes displacement plausible, not after displacement occurs. |
| [D] "Better diplomacy will solve it." | Diplomacy is necessary but not sufficient. Peaceful cases required costly structural concessions, not just better communication. |
| [D] "The 12/16 statistic is historical coincidence." | 500 years, different political systems and military technologies. The consistency of the fear-response mechanism is the finding. |
| [D] Focusing only on the rising power's actions. | The ruling power's fear-driven preemptive moves often accelerate the dynamic more than the rising power's growth itself. |
| [D] Treating the Trap as fate. | Four cases escaped. The Trap is not deterministic — it requires active, costly intervention to interrupt. |
| → Add [O] entries here after each real use — paste the actual failure pattern | What went wrong and why |
Part of deciqAI Knowledge Skills — 163 open-source thinking skills that make rigor executable for AI agents. The same skills power every deciqAI agent, which runs them autonomously to operate your company. See it run → https://www.deciqai.com/skills/thucydides-trap?utm_source=clawhub&utm_medium=marketplace&utm_campaign=knowledge-skills&utm_content=thucydides-trap · ⭐ Star the repo → https://github.com/deciqAI/knowledge-skills · Contributions welcome.