By Andrew C. McCarthy
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
“What the hell happened to him?” That was President Trump’s
ostensibly nonplussed reaction to Russian dictator Vladimir Putin’s acting
exactly as Vladimir Putin has acted since coming to global attention over a
quarter century ago. “He’s killing a lot of people,” the president added. Well
. . . yeah.
I find it impossible to believe that the president is
surprised that a war criminal is committing war crimes. But hey, I also found it impossible to believe that the president
really thought that the Democrats’ Russiagate smear — i.e., that Trump was a
clandestine agent of the Kremlin — was this miserable bonding experience that
he and Putin went through together, as opposed to something that deeply divided
the American public and paralyzed Washington, much to the delight of Putin, a
committed enemy of the United States who thrives on our internal conflicts.
As I said in the weekend column, I don’t know what the
president thinks, and I believe he thinks different, contradictory things at
different times. But if he actually envisions himself and Putin as kindred
spirits mutually admiring of each other — as opposed to just spouting what he knows
is drivel to try (however ineffectively) to beguile Putin while making Trump
detractors nuts — then that would be scary.
I’d like to continue thinking that Trump doesn’t believe
what he says about Putin, even if the eight-dimensional chess rationalizations
of his commentary are risible. On the other hand, today the
president asserted, “What Vladimir Putin doesn’t realize is that if it
weren’t for me, lots of really bad things would have already happened to
Russia, and I mean REALLY BAD.” To the
contrary, Putin realizes this precisely.
Of course, the salient question is what President Trump
realizes. I have no idea what the answer is. Again, I can’t believe he’s this
obtuse, but some of his Putin commentary is so detached from reality that it’s
hard to fathom an American president’s believing its utterance is a helpful
part of some master plan.
While Trump has groused that Putin may have been “tapping
me along” regarding a cease-fire in Ukraine, I argued over the weekend that
Putin has never wavered about his intentions to conquer Ukraine; it’s been the
president who has tapped the American people along, claiming to have a plan to
end the war when, in fact, there has never been a plan. Much as I hate to say
this, that’s the best-case scenario. I can’t discount the far worse possibility
that President Trump has believed his Putin-sympathetic nonsense and is
genuinely surprised by how things have unfolded.
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