Thursday, March 6, 2025

Trump Mistakes Weakness for Strength

By Christian Schneider

Thursday, March 06, 2025

 

Just after President Ronald Reagan finished delivering a speech in Florida on March 8, 1983, the media had their headline. Reagan had called the Soviet Union an “evil empire,” describing the Cold War arms race as the “struggle between right and wrong and good and evil.”

 

Earlier in the speech, Reagan’s rhetoric was even tougher. He noted that while the Soviets “preach the supremacy of the State, declare its omnipotence over individual man, and predict its eventual domination of all peoples on the earth, they are the focus of evil in the modern world.”

 

Warning against capitulation to the Soviets, he went on: “If history teaches anything, it teaches that simpleminded appeasement or wishful thinking about our adversaries is folly. It means the betrayal of our past, the squandering of our freedom.”

 

One of the favorite parlor games within MAGA Nation is comparing Donald Trump to Reagan, hoping to launder Trump’s weakness through a prism of morally unambiguous Reaganism. This week, Trump’s first-term deputy national security adviser K. T. McFarland, who might want to check that her house is properly ventilated, argued that Trump is doing the “exact same thing” as Reagan regarding negotiations with Russia.

 

These arguments target gullible people on the right who are also prone to believe that nobody out-pizzas the Hut. Of course, Reagan brought about the collapse of the Soviet Union through strength, moral determination, and courage. Trump’s pathetic stance toward Russia in its war of aggression against Ukraine hardly demonstrates the same fortitude.

 

Trump is a weak man, as he reminds us every time he stands in front of a microphone. During his address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, he opened by complaining that his “astronomical accomplishments” weren’t being sufficiently cheered by Democrats. When discussing an anti-revenge-porn bill he wants to see passed, he took the time to remind America that “nobody gets treated worse than I do online, nobody.”

 

One thing is true: Trump’s victim act works for him. When he lost the 2020 presidential election, he claimed that voter fraud was the only possible explanation for his loss. When he faced criminal charges for attempting to overturn the election results, he spun them into a “deep state” conspiracy to get him. And yet a conservative political movement that spent decades decrying the victimization culture sown by groups on the left is now animated by an inveterate Republican whiner.

 

Trump is a man who has been elected to the world’s most important office twice and never stops litigating his grievances against people whom he believes to be insufficiently deferential. At the same time that he claims to be a champion of free speech, Trump has filed a lawsuit against a newspaper that published an unflattering poll about him before the 2024 election. In a petty attempt to punish a news organization, the White House has barred the AP from press conferences because it won’t use “Gulf of America” to refer to the Gulf of Mexico. When addressing the unfavorable media he receives, Trump has said he’s been treated worse than Abraham Lincoln.

 

Trump’s weakness further manifests itself through the lies he tells, specifically those fired off as a pretext for abandoning Ukraine. Strong people do not need to buttress their arguments with falsehoods, yet Trump said it was Ukraine that started the war with Russia (only to sarcastically deny having said the preposterous thing that everyone heard him say). He has called Volodymyr Zelensky a “dictator” while refusing to apply that label to Vladimir Putin. Trump continues to claim that the U.S. has sent Ukraine $350 billion to fight the war, around twice the actual number.

 

Further, Trump conditions aid to Ukraine not on any philosophy or strategy but on whether Zelensky has sufficiently groveled to him. This was the theme of the disastrous Oval Office press conference last week, in which Trump and his substance double, Vice President JD Vance, berated Zelensky for not having said “thank you” for all the assistance the U.S. has provided. (The Ukrainian president has thanked the U.S. for aid dozens of times.)

 

Trump harassed Zelensky, in a scene that had all the markings of having been premeditated to make Trump look tough on an international issue. Unlike Reagan, though, Trump believes berating our allies and not the “evil empire” is the essence of toughness. In castigating Ukraine (while scoffing at our European NATO allies), Trump is blaming the gazelle for being caught and eaten by the leopard. It just shouldn’t have been so delicious.

 

In fact, he has spent his career massaging Putin in public, such as when he sided with the murderous Russian dictator over U.S. intelligence agencies during a public appearance in Helsinki in 2018. On social media this week, Trump said that Americans should “spend less time worrying about Putin, and more time worrying about migrant rape gangs, drug lords, murderers, and people from mental institutions entering our Country.” Trump has been less publicly critical of Putin than of actress Kristen Stewart.

 

Of course, Trump’s weakness has permeated his entire circle of influence, as he hires only sycophants who are forced to become entirely new people to work for him. Many of Trump’s poodles in the administration and on cable TV news spent years dunking on former President Barack Obama for dismissing Mitt Romney’s contention that Russia was America’s No. 1 geopolitical foe. They spent decades ridiculing the argument that vaccines cause autism. Now, they are all willing to lay at Trump’s feet as long as he scratches their belly.

 

Take Fox host Sean Hannity, who dutifully offered his opinion that the Trump–Zelensky showdown in the Oval Office reminded him of Reagan’s 1986 summit with Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavík.

 

“If you recall, Reagan was a staunch believer in strategic defense. The media mocked him, ‘Star Wars, hahaha,’” said Hannity, noting that Reagan walked away from the table only to hammer out a treaty in 1987.

 

But if Trump is under fire now, it is not because he wants to protect America from Russian missiles. He is under fire because he behaved like a buffoon in castigating a democratic ally that Russia attacked. By Hannity’s logic, if Trump had poured a vat of maple syrup on Zelensky’s head and tried to eat him like a waffle, Trump would be just like Reagan solely because the media mocked them both.

 

In writing about racial groups and victimization in America, Shelby Steele has noted that being on your knees is not a position of strength. While someone claiming victimization may realize a short-term benefit, he wrote, “It is a formula that binds the victim to his victimization by linking his power to his status as a victim.”

 

Those who compare Trump to Reagan should be forced to wash their mouths out with battery acid. Trump is an emotional child without the personal strength to control his actions, thoughts, and public statements. He is a weak person’s version of a strong man, a poor person’s notion of a rich man, and a thickheaded person’s idea of a smart man.

How Abandoning Ukraine Could Harm U.S.-European Relations

By John Gustavsson

Thursday, March 06, 2025

 

The last few weeks have made it abundantly clear that the Trump administration is turning away not just from Ukraine but the European continent. Vice President J.D. Vance told leaders at the Munich Security Conference that they should prepare to “step up in a big way” to handle their own security, Ukraine was excluded from U.S.-Russian negotiations to end the war, and the U.S. refused to vote for a European-backed U.N. resolution that condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and called for Russia to withdraw its forces. And that was before the entire world witnessed Vance and President Donald Trump bicker openly with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office, accusing him of “gambling with the lives of millions of people.”

 

To say that this has sent shock waves across Europe would be an understatement. What might surprise the Trump administration is the reaction not just from liberal European powers but backlash from populist leaders such as Nigel Farage, who said the spat would “make Putin feel like the winner” and added that Ukraine needed security guarantees. Jimmie Åkesson, leader of the national conservative Sweden Democrats, criticized Trump directly, calling his behavior “very serious” and reiterating that the Sweden Democrats would support Ukraine for however long it takes. Giorgia Meloni, the only European leader to attend Trump’s inauguration, also expressed concern, calling for a new summit including the U.S., Europe, and Ukraine and saying any division only benefited those who wish to weaken the West. Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Rally in France, on Tuesday called the U.S. suspension of military aid “cruel” and “inhuman.” A meeting last weekend that included the leaders of more than a dozen European leaders, as well as representatives from Turkey and Canada, made clear that support for Ukraine would continue with or without the United States. What most Americans don’t realize, however, is that Europe can and will make the United States regret the Trump administration’s actions.

 

The global financial crisis of 2008, which originated in the United States, prompted speculation that European countries might “decouple” from the U.S. economy. But the U.S. staged a relatively strong recovery and adopted regulatory reforms aimed at preventing a repeat. Yet the current political instability could cause such a decoupling in the form of a trade war. While the EU would suffer, so would the U.S. and its manufacturing industries, such as aerospace and automobiles, that export significant quantities to Europe. The agricultural and energy sectors would also see serious losses, for the same reason.

 

While it is true that America imports more from the EU than it exports, its exports are still significant: The EU and U.K. account for 22 percent of American exports. A few weeks ago it seemed plausible that the U.S. might be able to take advantage of the U.K.’s free trade agreement with the EU to play them against one another: The U.S. could apply tariffs on imports from the EU while avoiding them on exports to the EU by directing them through the U.K.

 

Don’t count on that happening now. No country in Western Europe is as strongly pro-Ukraine as the U.K. It began to aid Ukraine immediately after the occupation of Crimea in 2014, efforts that ramped up in the months preceding the invasion in 2022. Without these efforts, it’s possible that Ukraine might have been overrun in the early days of the war. A February YouGov poll indicated that British voters, by a more than 2-to-1 margin, would prefer the U.K. support Ukraine than that it maintain good relations with the U.S. That was before the Oval Office blowup, for which 67 percent of Britons blamed Trump and 7 percent blamed Zelensky.

 

Vance’s statement that EU nations should prepare to shoulder more of their own defense could indeed goad them into building up their militaries, but that could turn that into a Pyrrhic victory. European members of NATO import vast quantities of arms and defense technologies from the U.S. While NATO members are not formally required to buy American, the U.S. exports more than $300 billion worth of arms and defense technologies each year, most of it to Europe and other NATO countries. European defense companies have been left languishing as a result. If and when Europe remilitarizes, it only makes sense for them to revitalize their own industries. The European Commission has already announced that it will seek to boost its own defense industry at the expense of the U.S., which has proven itself far too erratic and disloyal to be relied on for such a critical need.

 

Internally, within Europe, the main effect will be a strengthening of the European Union. We’ve already seen this in the London meeting with Zelensky and the leaders of 18 European countries this past weekend, from which British Prime Minister Keir Starmer declared that a “coalition of the willing” would continue to support Ukraine. By abandoning Europe and befriending Vladimir Putin, Trump has sent the message that “America first” actually means “Europe last.”

 

Among eurofederalists, whose goal is to turn the EU into a “United States of Europe,” a common European military has long topped their political wish list. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and French President Emmanuel Macron have expressed support for the idea several times over the past decade. But it has never gained widespread support, and has always been strongly opposed by the Eastern European members of the Union. NATO already exists, opponents have argued, with most EU states as members, so why should the EU form its own military coalition?

 

With NATO faltering, this argument no longer holds up. Nervous Eastern European nations, unable to turn to the U.S. and too small to hold their own against Russia, will now have to turn to Brussels for protection. These are the same countries that have not only opposed the formation of a European army, but have also been the bulwark against all kinds of power transfers, helping to safeguard the sovereignty of the member states. If they have to rely on the EU for defense, they will never be able to stand up to the Union’s overreaches. The path to a centralized union will be wide open.

 

How does this concern the U.S? Since the end of World War II, the U.S. dollar has been the undisputed global reserve currency. This has always been much to the chagrin of European leaders, forced to trade in American dollars even in commodities they don’t buy from the U.S. With the dollar as global reserve currency, in any transaction, the non-American party carries nearly all of the currency risk. In any transaction that is denominated in dollars, which is over half of all global trade, a non-U.S. buyer risks the dollar strengthening relative to their own currency, making the purchase more expensive. Likewise, a non-U.S. seller forced to denominate the sale in U.S. dollars risks the dollar weakening relative to their own currency, which would mean they get paid less than they expected.

 

Present and past European leaders including Macron, president of the European Central Bank Christine Lagarde, and former European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker have all expressed their hope that the euro will one day be able to knock the dollar down from its dominant position.

 

While the euro might not be able to fully replace the dollar as a reserve currency, a multipolar currency system is not implausible. Since the Eurozone crisis, which started in 2009 and dogged the union for over half a decade, the EU has worked to “fix” the euro by granting itself greater power over member states’ fiscal policies.

 

What would this mean for the U.S.? First, and most importantly for U.S. consumers, it would mean higher borrowing costs. The dollar’s status as reserve currency creates an artificial demand for U.S. Treasury notes, allowing the U.S. to borrow money at rates that are far lower than any similarly indebted country could ever dream of. Higher federal borrowing costs subsequently trickle down into higher mortgage rates for ordinary American households, and higher rates for businesses, reducing investment.

 

The U.S. is already on an unsustainable fiscal path, especially without entitlement reform. Without reserve currency status, the U.S. will have even less time to fix its problems as borrowing costs skyrocket. Tax hikes are all but inevitable in that scenario.

 

Furthermore, the U.S.’s ability to contain hostile nations such as Iran through sanctions instead of warfare would be drastically reduced without the dollar’s reserve currency status. Many transactions that do not even involve U.S. parties still clear through U.S. banks, ensuring U.S. sanctions are effective even when levied against countries the U.S. does little to no trading with.

 

Up until now, beyond eurofederalist think tanks and policymakers, there has been little public appetite for rocking the boat and attempting a serious challenge against the dollar’s dominance. Trump’s antics are changing this.

 

Donald Trump has claimed that the U.S. has provided more funding for Ukraine than Europe collectively has, but that’s not true. European nations have also suffered through even higher inflation than the U.S. due in no small part to having to replace relatively cheap Russian fuel imports (especially natural gas) with other options as the EU and U.K. took drastic measures to cut off the Russian economy. The U.S., which never had much trade with Russia, did not have to make this sacrifice.

 

When Donald Trump justifies his pulling of support for Ukraine by arguing that Europe can’t expect the United States to carry the full load, he is adding insult to injury. The U.S. has claimed the role of leader of the free world for the past 80 years. If America is unable to continue to provide leadership, Europe will have to turn inward and focus on trying to claim the leadership mantle for itself. Whether it succeeds or not, Europe and the United States both will be worse off. To quote one of my favorite fictional villains, Ramsay Bolton: “If you think this has a happy ending, you have not been paying attention.”

The Rise of the Brutal American

By Anne Applebaum

Wednesday, March 05, 2025

 

A book festival in Vilnius, meetings with friends in Warsaw, a dinner in Berlin: I happened to be at gatherings in three European cities over the past several days, and everywhere I went, everyone wanted to talk about the Oval Office performance last Friday. Europeans needed some time to process this event, not just because of what it told them about the war in Ukraine, but because of what it told them about America, a country they thought they knew well.

 

In just a few minutes, the behavior of Donald Trump and J. D. Vance created a brand-new stereotype for America: not the quiet American, not the ugly American, but the brutal American. Whatever illusions Europeans ever had about Americans—whatever images lingered from old American movies, the ones where the good guys win, the bad guys lose, and honor defeats treachery—those are shattered. Whatever fond memories remain of the smiling GIs who marched into European cities in 1945, of the speeches that John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan made at the Berlin Wall, or of the crowds that once welcomed Barack Obama, those are also fading fast.

 

Quite apart from their politics, Trump and Vance are rude. They are cruel. They berated and mistreated a guest on camera, and then boasted about it afterward, as if their ugly behavior achieved some kind of macho “win.” They announced that they would halt transfers of military equipment to Ukraine, and hinted at ending sanctions on Russia, the aggressor state. In his speech to Congress last night, Trump once again declared that America would “get” Greenland, which is a part of Denmark—a sign that he intends to run roughshod over other allies too.

 

These are the actions not of the good guys in old Hollywood movies, but of the bad guys. If Reagan was a white-hatted cowboy, Trump and Vance are Mafia dons. The chorus of Republican political leaders defending them seems both sinister and surprising to Europeans too. “I never thought Americans would kowtow like that,” one friend told me, marveling.

 

The Oval Office meeting, the subsequent announcements, and the speech to Congress also clarified something else: Trump, Vance, and many of the people around them now fully inhabit an alternative reality, one composed entirely of things they see and hear in the ether. Part of the Oval Office altercation was provoked by Zelensky’s insistence on telling the truth, as the full video clearly shows. His mistake was to point out that Russia and Ukraine have reached many cease-fires and made many agreements since 2014, and that Vladimir Putin has broken most of them, including during Trump’s first term.

 

It’s precisely because they remember these broken truces that the Ukrainians keep asking what happens after a cease-fire, what kind of security guarantees will be put in place, how Trump plans to prevent Putin from breaking them once more and, above all, what price the Russians are willing to pay for peace in Ukraine. Will they even give up their claims to territory they don’t control? Will they agree that Ukraine can be a sovereign democracy?

 

But Trump and Vance are not interested in the truth about the war in Ukraine. Trump seemed angered by the suggestion that Putin might break deals with him, refused to acknowledge that it’s happened before, falsely insisted, again, that the U.S. had given Ukraine $350 billion. Vance—who had refused to meet Zelensky when offered the opportunity before the election last year—told the Ukrainian president that he didn’t need to go to Ukraine to understand what is going on in his country: “I’ve actually watched and seen the stories,” he said, meaning that he has seen the “stories” curated for him by the people he follows on YouTube or X.

 

Europeans can also see that this alternative reality is directly and profoundly shaped by Russian propaganda. I don’t know whether the American president absorbs Russian narratives online, from proxies, or from Putin himself. Either way, he has thoroughly adopted the Russian view of the world, as has Vance. This is not new. Back in 2016, at the height of the election campaign, Trump frequently repeated false stories launched by Russia’s Sputnik news agency, declaring that Hillary Clinton and Obama had “founded ISIS,” or that “the Google search engine is suppressing the bad news about Hillary Clinton.” At the time, Trump also imitated Russian talk about Clinton starting World War III, another Russian meme. He produced a new version of that in the Oval Office on Friday. “You’re gambling with World War III. You’re gambling with World War III,” he shouted at Zelensky.

 

But what was ominous in 2016 is dangerous in 2025, especially in Europe. Russian military aggression is more damaging, Russian sabotage across Europe more frequent, and Russian cyberattacks almost constant. In truth, it is Putin, not Zelensky, who started this conflict, Putin who has brought North Korean troops and Iranian drones to Europe, Putin who instructs his propagandists to talk about nuking London, Putin who keeps raising the stakes and scope of the war. Most Europeans live in this reality, not in the fictional world inhabited by Trump, and the contrast is making them think differently about Americans. According to pollsters, nearly three-quarters of French people now think that the U.S. is not an ally of France. A majority in Britain and a very large majority in Denmark, both historically pro-American countries, now have unfavorable views of the U.S. as well.

 

In reality, the Russians have said nothing publicly about leaving Ukrainian territory or stopping the war. In reality, they have spent the past decade building a cult of cruelty at home. Now they have exported that cult not just to Europe, not just to Africa, but to Washington too. This administration abruptly canceled billions of dollars of food aid and health-care programs for the poorest people on the planet, a vicious act that the president and vice president have not acknowledged but that millions of people can see. Their use of tariffs as random punishment, not for enemies but for allies, seems not just brutal but inexplicable.

 

And in the Oval Office, Trump and Vance behaved like imperial rulers chastising a subjugated colony, vocalizing the same disgust and disdain that Russian propagandists use when they talk about Ukraine. Europeans know, everyone knows, that if Trump and Vance can talk that way to the president of Ukraine, then they might eventually talk that way to their country’s leader next.

Ukraine: Another Blow (from Washington)

By Andrew Stuttaford

Thursday, March 06, 2025

 

The latest move by the administration to “encourage” Ukraine to accept some sort of peace deal with its Russian invaders is a brutal and low blow.

 

The Financial Times:

 

The US has cut off intelligence sharing with Kyiv in a move that could seriously hamper the Ukrainian military’s ability to target Russian forces.

 

The ban on intelligence sharing also extended to Washington prohibiting America’s allies from sharing any Ukraine-related intelligence they have received from the U.S. with Kyiv.

 

The step follows the decision on Monday by Donald Trump’s administration to suspend military aid deliveries to Ukraine and comes after a dramatic breakdown in relations between the US president and Ukraine’s leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy. US intelligence co-operation has been essential for Ukraine’s ability to identify and strike Russian military targets.

 

This has meant that Ukraine’s powerful American-made wheeled HIMARS rocket launchers are not getting the coordinates they need to hit Russian targets more than 40 miles away, cutting their maximum effective range by about a third.

 

On top of that, American intelligence has played an important part in Ukraine’s efforts to protect its cities from missile and drone attacks.

 

According to some officials, the ban on intelligence-sharing is temporary, and the information flow will resume once Trump is satisfied that Ukraine’s President Zelensky is serious about entering into peace negotiations, something that CIA Director John Ratcliffe has appeared to back up.

 

CNN:

 

CIA Director John Ratcliffe in an interview on Fox Business on Wednesday also suggested that the pause on intelligence sharing may soon be ended.

 

“You saw the response that President Zelensky put out,” Ratcliffe said, referring to recent statements from the Ukrainian president that the country was ready to negotiate. “So I think on the military front and the intelligence front, the pause that allowed that to happen, I think will go away.”

 

Let’s hope. Nevertheless, the extent to which the termination of this “pause” is contingent on Zelensky showing his willingness to talk gives Moscow a good reason to make such a demonstration of intent more difficult: Every day that Ukraine is deprived of U.S. intelligence support hands Moscow an extra advantage, particularly on the ground. Every mile Russia’s army can take now is, in all probability, a mile that it will not return to Kyiv in the event of a peace. It also would not be a surprise if the Russians made maintaining the ban on intelligence-sharing a condition of starting talks.

 

But even if the flow of intelligence is restored quickly, its absence will almost certainly have led to Ukrainian losses on the front and in its battered cities.

 

And for what?

 

Meanwhile other countries, perhaps some of those undecided between the U.S. and the Beijing/Moscow bloc, may watch this move and decide to lean a little closer to that nice, reliable Mr. Putin. And it’s not hard to see how actions such as this erode the confidence in the U.S. felt by other NATO allies, who must be wondering how much they can depend on the American guarantee still supposedly underwriting the mutual defense obligations contained in Article 5 of the NATO treaty. And if NATO allies ask that question, so will the alliance’s enemies. A deterrent must be credible to deter.

 

Treating Ukraine in the way that Washington is now doing inevitably weakens the broader credibility of the American deterrent — and not just in Europe — with possible consequences that no one — not least Americans — should want to see

The Simple Explanation for Why Trump Turned Against Ukraine

By Jonathan Chait

Wednesday, March 05, 2025

 

Donald Trump’s highly public schism with Volodymyr Zelensky has yielded the kind of doublethink that is common in personality cults. Those believers who approve of the policy hail the great leader’s strategic genius. And those who oppose it cast the blame elsewhere, constructing ever more elaborate accounts of Trump’s strategy to avoid acknowledging the obvious: Trump has an affinity for Vladimir Putin.

 

In the first category, you can find members of the so-called national-conservative movement, who have long rationalized Russia’s aggression and opposed American support for Ukraine. “Trump understands what establishment figures do not: that U.S. voters are no longer willing to allow Washington to write checks on the American people’s account,” the national-conservative intellectual Rod Dreher wrote exultantly after Zelensky’s Oval Office browbeating. Christopher Caldwell, another natcon writer, argued in The Free Press that Trump’s posture toward Ukraine “is a deeper and more historically grounded view than the one that prevailed in the Biden administration,” rejecting Joe Biden’s view of the war as a “barbaric” invasion. (Perhaps unsurprisingly, Trump’s admirers include the Russian government itself, which has congratulated him for “rapidly changing foreign policy configurations,” which “largely coincides with our vision.”)

 

In the second category, you have Trump defenders who support Ukraine, and reacted to Friday’s events with dismay. To resolve their cognitive dissonance, or perhaps to retain their influence, they do not blame Trump for initiating the breach with Zelensky. Instead, they blame Zelensky.

 

The Ukrainian president’s responsibility for the crisis includes such actions as failing to dress properly. “I mean, all Zelensky had to do today was put on a tie, show up, smile, say ‘Thank you,’ sign the papers, and have lunch,” complained Scott Jennings, who had reportedly been considered for White House spokesperson and performs essentially the same function for CNN. “That’s it. And he couldn’t do that.”

 

Ah yes, the tie. Apparently Trump and his supporters care deeply about the tie. If we take this line of argument seriously, it posits that the United States reversed its foreign policy based on an outfit choice—and this argument is being made as a defense of Trump’s judgment.

 

A related and only slightly less damning defense is that Zelensky erred by arguing with Trump and Vice President J. D. Vance when they presented him with a series of pro-Russian positions during their photo op. Trump insisted, falsely, that security guarantees for Ukraine were unnecessary because Putin would never violate one. (He praised Putin’s character and spoke wistfully of how the two men had to endure the “Russia hoax” together.) “Why on earth did Zelensky choose to fact-check Trump in front of the entire world rather than debate the wisdom of a ceasefire behind closed doors?” demands conservative columnist Marc Thiessen, a foreign-policy hawk who has sought to steer Trump toward his own view.

 

This viewpoint has influenced some mainstream media coverage of the fateful White House meeting. A recent Politico story filled with inside-Trump-world reporting, for example, suggests that Trump was eager to cut a deal, if only Zelensky had flattered him sufficiently: The Ukrainian president “infuriated Trump last week with his public suggestion he was swallowing Putin’s disinformation—a response to Trump’s suggestion that Ukraine started the war.” Or perhaps the source of Trump’s split with Ukraine is revealed by him regurgitating Russian propaganda blaming Ukraine for the war, rather than Zelensky correcting him.

 

Trump may be vain and childish, but he does have some substantive beliefs. Lindsey Graham, another Trump-worshipping Republican hawk, told The New York Times that he had warned Zelensky before the meeting, “Don’t take the bait,” and publicly criticized the Ukrainian president for not following his advice. But how did Graham know there would be bait? Perhaps because Trump has spent years expressing sympathy for Russia and contempt for its enemies, including Ukraine and the Western alliance.

 

Trump’s Russophilia used to stand almost unique within the Republican Party. But he has brought large segments of the right around to his position, and many of them have turned Zelensky into a hate figure. The enthusiastically anti-Ukraine conservatives are happy to credit Trump for reversing the Biden administration’s support for Kyiv. Say what you want about the tenets of national conservatism; at least it’s an ethos. The more traditionally anti-Russian conservatives, by contrast, need to find a way to disagree with the outcome of the Oval Office meeting without seeming to criticize Trump. That is how authoritarian political cultures operate: The only permissible way to express disapproval of the leader’s choices is to pretend they were someone else’s.

 

This leads to absurd logical contortions. Anti-Russia conservatives treat their putative objections to Zelenky’s conduct as legitimate standards that he could have met, as if this is a game with fixed rules. Presented with the obvious objection —that Elon Musk had dressed even more slovenly in the Oval Office and a Cabinet meeting just a few days before—the National Review editor in chief, Rich Lowry, retorted, “When Zelensky is named the head of DOGE, he can do the same and get away with it.” Yet no principle of decorum says that a head of state can’t wear a military uniform in the White House but “the head of DOGE” can wear a T-shirt and baseball cap. Everything about this solemn rule is made up, including the position “head of DOGE.” If you have ever watched a school bully, you may recall that accusing their victim of violating some rule or standard, and then flouting the standard themselves, is part of the abuse, a way of signaling that they hold all the power.

 

Trump’s base was poised to explode at Zelensky—for his shirt, for his alleged lack of gratitude—because Trump has signaled that he is their enemy. In their desperation, anti-Russian conservatives have reversed the obvious causation.

 

During Trump’s first term, the theory that he loved Putin was complicated by his inability to overcome resistance by bureaucrats and his own hawkish advisers. This created room for analysts to accept explanations for Trump’s stance other than simple affinity for Putin. Now, however, he is able to quickly carry out such steps as cutting off weapons to Ukraine without sneaking around or being slow-walked by mid-level staff. Meanwhile, he publicly blames Ukraine for the ongoing war and accuses Zelensky of being a dictator who spreads hatred against Russia. The theory that Trump trusts and wants to help Putin can parsimoniously explain his rhetoric and actions.

 

It is the alternative theory, that Trump is playing a clever geopolitical game, that relies on whispered conversations and intricate double-meaning interpretations of his public positions. A Wall Street Journal reporter deduces from “nearly a year of Trumpworld chatter and (sometimes secret) talks with foreign officials” that Trump’s real strategy is to “split Russia from China” and that “there is no way the US will sell Ukraine down the river.” In some foreign-policy circles, analyses discerning a far-reaching plan from wisps of buried evidence are considered sophisticated, while positing that Trump simply believes the things he says almost daily on camera is considered slightly nutty.

 

Whatever you want to say about the anti-Ukraine right’s moral posture, it is at least able to grasp the reality of Trump’s position: He wants to leave Ukraine at Putin’s mercy. The anti-Russia Trumpers, with their missing-tie theory of Trump’s Russia strategy, and their convoluted efforts to explain away his plain wishes, are the ones who have drifted into the realm of fantasy.

The Supreme Court Should Not Encourage a One-Judge Constitutional Crisis

National Review Online

Thursday, March 06, 2025

 

The Supreme Court’s main job is to settle questions of law that arise in “cases or controversies.” But it also supervises the federal judiciary. Sometimes, that means getting outside of the Court’s comfort zone of an orderly appeals process when individual judges single-handedly provoke a separation-of-powers crisis.

 

On Wednesday, in Department of State v. AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, the Court fell down on that job. It issued a vague order doing little to rein in D.C. federal district Judge Amir Ali from inserting himself above the president in running the U.S. Agency for International Development. The Court’s 5–4 decision, with Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joining the three liberals, probably only delays the Court’s rendezvous with the USAID dispute.

 

One of Donald Trump’s first-day executive orders declared “that no further . . . foreign assistance shall be disbursed in a manner that is not fully aligned with the foreign policy of the President,” finding that much current aid was “not aligned with American interests and in many cases antithetical to American values.” These are decisions the president is uniquely empowered by Article II to make, involving judgments far outside the competence of the courts.

 

Some foreign aid is explicitly mandated by Congress, and some is committed by treaty. But much of USAID’s statutory mandate is vague and infected with serious mission creep that Congress did not authorize. Presidents are bound by contracts made in the past — but only up to a point. Presidents need not continue work that undermines their own foreign policy. If the government stops work, it must pay for what was done, and for what it agreed to pay for. In the words of Oliver Wendell Holmes, “The duty to keep a contract . . . means a prediction that you must pay damages if you do not keep it, and nothing else.” To require a president to continue a foreign aid program he opposes, which Congress never authorized, invades core Article II powers.

 

Moreover, the federal government enjoys sovereign immunity from lawsuits except where and how Congress authorizes suit. The statutory process for a breach-of-contract suit against the federal government requires filing in the Court of Federal Claims, which specializes in federal contract law — including the government’s legal defenses.

 

When the Trump executive order imposed a 90-day pause in disbursements to conduct an orderly review of existing USAID programs, recipients sued — not in the Court of Federal Claims but under the Administrative Procedure Act for an injunction before Judge Ali, a progressive Biden appointee rushed through the Senate 50–49 after the 2024 election on a day when one Republican was absent.

 

On February 13, Judge Ali ruled it “arbitrary and capricious” to issue a “blanket” funding pause without examining every contract one at a time — thus, delaying the termination of contracts that the administration considers to be against American foreign policy interests. His justification was not that the Constitution or a statute required continuing work but that the “reliance interests” of nongovernmental organization (NGOs) recipients — in other words, their interest in continuing to get paid — outweighs the executive’s interest in ensuring that our foreign policy advances the national interest. We could not ask for a better summary of D.C.’s upside-down priorities.

 

Judge Ali called this a “temporary restraining order” (TRO), but that’s a misnomer. A TRO is supposed to restrain one side of a case temporarily, so that nothing changes until the court can issue a final order changing things, which then can be appealed. But Judge Ali tried to force the government to pay money it can’t get back, including to NGOs that aren’t even parties to the lawsuit and that cannot be bound by the courts.

 

What money? That has never been quite clear. The February 13 TRO protects “any contracts, grants, cooperative agreements, loans, or other federal foreign assistance award that was in existence” before Trump was sworn in — i.e., every Biden administration policy. The administration says that it will pay for work already done, but it needs time to review to ensure it is actually paying money owed for services rendered. Judge Ali set the time frame too short for that review to happen — compelling the very sort of blanket, across-the-board response that he has already deemed irrational when the executive does it.

 

He doesn’t have jurisdiction over that — only the Court of Federal Claims does. Barring stop-work orders to extend programs into the future destroys the fig leaf of just ensuring that NGOs don’t get stiffed. When the government began reviewing and suspending contracts one at a time, Judge Ali accused the executive branch of using “pretexts” and issued a second TRO with an even shorter deadline commanding the government to blindly fork over $2 billion. He has made noises about allowing invasive discovery into the motives of the executive’s foreign policy decision-making.

 

After briefly pausing this second TRO, the Court lifted its stay. With the prior deadline now passed, the Court nudged Judge Ali to “clarify what obligations the Government must fulfill” with “due regard for the feasibility of any compliance timelines.” This is judge-speak for a do-over, but it gives Judge Ali time to make more mischief that can’t be undone on appeal.

 

We agree with Justice Samuel Alito and the dissenters that the Court had a duty to put a stop to this. Foreign aid programs exist to further the national interest, not those of NGOs. One judge, enforcing no written rule but simply balancing interests committed to another branch, is abusing the judicial power to invade the executive power while trying to insulate his decisions from appellate review. Rather than let the situation deteriorate into a direct conflict between the executive branch and the courts, the justices should have constrained Judge Ali instead of simply requesting that he be more responsible next time.

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

The End of NATO, or The Sixth Impossible Thing

By Adam Garfinkle

Saturday, March 01, 2025

 

As I absorbed the collected enormities disgorged by the second Trump administration on the topics of Ukraine and NATO over the last few weeks—first in Brussels, then in Munich, then in Washington, then in Riyadh, and finally in the Oval Office—I was reminded of the following exchange from Lewis Carroll’s 1871 novel Through the Looking-Glass:

 

“There’s no use trying,” Alice said to the White Queen: “One can’t believe impossible things.”

 

“I daresay you haven’t had much practice,” said the Queen. “When I was your age, I always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”

 

Reality can sometimes seem even stranger than fiction, and the second Trump administration has done what many people supposed to be six impossible things within the first month of its tenure. The upshot is that we are now living in a post-NATO world where black is white, up is down, friends are foes (and vice versa), and once-unthinkable impossibilities have become our new reality.

 

Six Impossibilities

 

The first impossibility accomplished by the new administration saw Donald J. Trump and J.D. Vance win the only two elected offices of the US executive branch with a campaign of wild lies about the November 2020 election and what happened at the Capitol on 6 January 2021. After the inauguration, they turned those lies into loyalty tests required of nominees to plum jobs in the administration, including on the National Security Council staff and the Policy Planning staff at the State Department.

 

Second, on his first day in office, the president used his pardon power to release a loyal and violence-prone cohort of 1,600 insurrectionists.

 

Third, the White House won Senate confirmation of manifestly unsuitable nominees to head executive-branch departments and agencies, many of whom are openly hostile to the stolidly apolitical missions of their own offices.

 

Fourth, the administration fomented a constitutional crisis by illegally impounding funds authorised by Congress, illegally firing senior civil-service employees without due notice or cause, and empowering a legally non-existent office—the DOGE—to carry out the most massive personal-information hack of the US government in history. The White House seeks a confrontation with the Supreme Court over this because it believes—perhaps correctly, perhaps not—that the 1 July 2024 SCOTUS decision on presidential immunity will cause Chief Justice John Roberts to back down. And if he does, the core checks-and-balances mechanism of US democracy—the separation of powers—will shatter. And if that happens, the US government will become a de facto autocracy.

 

Fifth, the administration fomented that crisis by using the DOGE to destroy the regulatory capacities of the federal government, purporting that its activities were devoted to greater government efficiency. The real purpose of this project is the creation of a corporate oligarchy within and protected by a weaponised para-government itself.

 

And sixth, the administration has effectively liquidated the central US alliance of the postwar era, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), and then joined with Russia to enable the consolidation of a West-facing sphere of influence. That sphere of influence may expand or it may not; if it expands, it may expand slowly and modestly, or rapidly and immodestly. The Trump administration does not care either way. In return, the administration wants rights to invest in Russian energy industries and to partner in the colonisation of Ukraine. Presumably, given the stunted syntax of this logic, it also hopes to reach an understanding with Vladimir Putin that Russia will henceforth respect an expanded US sphere of influence.

 

Two strategic benefits seem to be expected to emerge from cutting that deal. First, it is supposed to assuage Russian fears of American enmity and disincentivise further aggression by Moscow against the West. Second, Russian cooperation with China is expected to diminish. Are these realistic expectations? The idea that the Russian regime will forgo easy pickings because its last bout of aggression was obviously just defensive in nature is, well, unpersuasive. Even less persuasive is the idea that Russia will moderate its relations with China because America offers the Russians more than the Chinese and insists that Putin choose between them.

 

Russia may well opt for a respite once Ukraine is Belarusised, but if it does, it will be a consequence of exhaustion and inherent weakness. Putin may moderate relations with China because he fears China getting the upper hand, and he may finally understand the utility of the West in balancing an Eastern threat—an obvious thought that seems to have escaped him these past years. But Putin will not do either of these things because the Trump administration has exercised any leverage over him, since it plainly has not.

 

Cravenly conceding the pot before the hand has played out is neither shrewd nor subtle. Effective deterrence requires strength not unforced displays of weakness. If this is Trump’s idea of peace through strength, it is hard to imagine what peace through weakness would look like. I am reminded of Robert S. Vansittart’s tart observation: “In diplomacy you can ‘solve’ anything by giving way.”

 

The Meaning of the Sixth Impossible Thing

 

The first five of these impossible things complement and pave the way for the sixth—the demolition of NATO. As anyone who has worked high enough in government knows, the foreign policy of a great power is always at least partly an extension of its domestic politics and a projection of its wider political culture. So, then, what of the particular projection we witnessed these past weeks?

 

NATO still exists on paper, but operationally, it has been killed in a four-act drama followed by a macabre after-party (ongoing). There will be those who insist that NATO’s Article V guarantee is still alive and well, and that Ukraine is an exception because NATO real-estate is not at risk. Should the Russians attack a NATO member-state, they claim, Article V will rise and shine. This argument is backwards.

 

How can a US Article V guarantee remain credible in the event of some theoretical future contingency when it has been disavowed in the context of an extant shooting war, more or less contained outside the alliance’s borders? The very essence of extended deterrence—which is what Article V is supposed to ensure—is that the alliance leader will credibly backstop risks in ways that reduce those risks. If it won’t do that when risks are modest, it is hardly likely to do it when the risks are much greater. Yes, on 12 February, US Defence Secretary Hegseth reaffirmed the “US commitment to NATO,” which presumably implied a commitment to Article V. But the US president then attached a condition; namely, that European members of NATO each fork out five percent of GDP to pull their weight. The implicit threat being that those who fail to do so will forfeit the guarantee of US protection.

 

This is absurd. The United States currently spends just 2.9 percent of its GDP on defence, and looks to be planning reductions, not increases, in that percentage. So Trump knows that his five percent demand will not be met, thereby providing him with a pretext to offload US responsibility for European security altogether, which is what he wants to do anyway. During his first term, Trump made no secret of his wish to destroy NATO, or at least to pull the United States out of the alliance. He was only prevented from doing so by the presence of wiser Republicans like H.R. McMaster, James Mattis, John Bolton, John Kelley, and a few others.

 

In any event, there is no fooling Friedrich Merz on this point. One of the first things Merz said after Germany’s 23 February election made him Bundeskanzler-apparent was that Europe must make itself independent of the United States, which Europeans increasingly see as not merely uninterested in continuing alliance relations but as a potential threat. He and they are correct, and any lingering doubts about the full-frontal nature of the US foreign-policy upheaval were dispelled by the UN General Assembly episode of 24 February. In a draft resolution on Ukraine, the US adopted the Russian position on the war, thereby putting America at odds with nearly every democracy on the planet.

 

The Play and the Afterparty

 

In the light of which, let’s review the aforementioned four-act performance with the benefit of a few weeks’ hindsight.

 

In Act I, Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth told the Ukraine Defence Contact Group in Brussels on 12 February that European members of NATO must lead from the front, that the United States would neither put troops on the ground nor apply an Article V guarantee with respect to anything the allies might do to help Ukraine. He added that NATO membership for Ukraine was off the table, and that Ukraine’s goal of reclaiming all its sovereign territory is unrealistic and is not supported by the US government. In return for these pre-emptive concessions to Russia, the United States asked for—and therefore received—nothing in return.

 

Why did the Trump administration do this? Hegseth explained that the national priority must be securing America’s own borders and deterring “communist China,” which he called “a peer competitor ... with the capability and intent to threaten our homeland and core national interests in the Indo-Pacific.” In short, European security is Europe’s obligation and problem, and the US government will not pledge its support should the continent’s deterrence or actual security be threatened. Hegseth’s subsequent reaffirmation of the US commitment to NATO meant nothing. For those not wilfully blind to the obvious, NATO without US security guarantees is not NATO at all. For the time being, at least, the alliance has been reduced to a coffee klatch able to bring little more than a butter knife to a gunfight.

 

In Act II, Vice President Vance appeared at the Munich Security Conference on 14 February, where he briefly repeated Secretary Hegseth’s points about security. But he spent most of his time at the dais channelling the spirit of fascist theorist Carl Schmitt. His audience might have wondered why they were listening to a sermon on democratic probity from a man who has sworn he would have done—and will do in future if necessary—what Vice President Mike Pence refused to do on 6 January 2021; namely, defy the law to void the results of a free and fair American election.

 

In Act III, no words were spoken in public, but they did not need to be. Hegseth and Vance brought a young demagogue and conspiracy crank named Jack Posobiec with them to Europe, presumably so that the assembled Europeans would not misunderstand Vance’s excessively tactful speech. During his appearance on a panel at last year’s Conservative Political Action Conference, Posobiec announced: “Welcome to the end of democracy. We are here to overthrow it completely. We didn’t get all the way there on January 6, but we will endeavor to get rid of it.” Vance, meanwhile, pointedly refused to meet with the German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, and met instead with Alice Weidel, the head of the aggressively pro-Russian Alternativ für Deutschland (AfD). This was not an oversight or a coincidence.

 

In Act IV, President Trump initiated a call with Vladimir Putin, and presumed to negotiate the fate of Ukraine without that embattled country’s approval or participation, and without the foreknowledge or participation of America’s NATO allies. Hegseth did not mention this call when he spoke and Vance made no reference to it either, which suggests they believed it was no one’s business but that of the United States alone. The blindsiding of the NATO allies delivered an unmistakable message: We don’t care about you, we don’t like you, and we enjoy it when you whine. The exclusion of Ukraine delivered an equally clear message: Your sovereignty is about to disappear and we would be happy to hear you whine about that too.

 

The same day, a package from Washington landed on the desk of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, in which President Trump demanded US$500 billion in what amounted to reparations from Ukraine, and first-right shares to Ukrainian minerals, oil and gas, port fees, and much else. Trump told US news sources that if Zelensky were unwise enough to reject this deal, his country would be delivered to Russia on a plate. This is just extortion, mafioso-style, with an extra dash of loan-sharking: a deal you cannot refuse without imperilling your own life and the lives of everyone you care about.

 

That document was prepared by private lawyers in New York, not by anyone in the US government in Washington. President Zelensky accurately pronounced it a colonial document. Trump then accused Ukraine (not Russia) of starting the war, described Zelensky (not Putin) as a dictator, and declared that Russians (not Ukrainians) are the conflict’s true victims. Ordinary observers gasped while the MAGA herd brayed its approval.

 

As to the afterparty, Trump’s erratic behaviour toward Zelensky has resembled that of a frenzied Adderall addict. Days after Trump called Zelensky a dictator, Trump appeared to withdraw the remark during a press conference with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Then, when Zelensky headed to Washington to sign a vastly watered-down version of the extortion demand he was originally given, he was yelled at by the US president and his deputy during a bizarre photo call in the Oval Office—ostensibly for failing to be sufficiently deferential to his hosts.

 

The new United States government only has use for servile partners willing to accept a strictly transactional relationship. In the MAGA political economy, things like cultural affinity, moral authority, and political values are now worthless. Even Niall Ferguson, who has leaned hard into MAGA in recent months, has taken exception to the spiteful humiliation of Ukraine. In response, Vice President Vance accused him of peddling “moralistic garbage.”

 

Like Putin, the Trump administration sees the world through a 19th-century lens. The US-wrought postwar order, it believes, has become harmful to US interests. It assumes and hopes that great powers will now pursue deal-making and advantage over the heads—and often at the expense—of smaller and weaker states. It knows but doesn’t care that this will almost certainly produce a proliferation of rapid WMD acquisition. In short, Trump and his crew have made Kissingerian realism—pilloried by the preening foreign-policy moralists of that day—look like a Cub Scout project.

 

Further Implications of the Sixth Impossible Thing

 

Is that all? Well, no. Some details need a light dusting. What, for instance, will happen to the Five Eyes, and to intelligence-sharing beyond the Anglosphere? That’s a dead letter. With Tulsi Gabbard now waved into DNI by a compliant Senate, no foreign intelligence service will share anything sensitive with the United States. This is common knowledge already.

 

What is not common knowledge—but ought to be—is that America’s European allies regularly provide the US with intelligence as valuable as anything the US provides to them. The US is very good at helping warfighters, so allies in a fight get more from America than America gets back on balance. But in everyday collections and analysis efforts, America benefits at least as much from intel reciprocation as its allies do. The Norwegians, for example, are in a sweet position to monitor the movement of Russian submarines at Murmansk. Radars in Iceland are excellent intelligence collectors. Fibre-optic cables that run through NATO-Europe eastward are critical to certain kinds of signal-intelligence collection. And all of this is now at risk because America’s allies are understandably worried that Tulsi Gabbard will send a digest of the best stuff straight to Moscow. This is one reason, rarely noted so far, why the Russians are so chipper these days.

 

What will now become of the fairly extensive US basing infrastructure in NATO countries? Most likely it will diminish and disappear over the next four years—from both ends. The Europeans will not wish to make offset payments to the United States for bases that are no longer linked to credible promises of US protection. Secretary Hegseth, meanwhile, has memoed the heads of all US combat arms services to inform them that they should expect eight percent cuts in their annual budgets for the next four years.

 

Most US bases and personnel in Europe are not there for Europe’s sake. Beyond their symbolic and tripwire functions, they furnish convenient and relatively inexpensive power-projection capabilities for the Near East and South Asia. But the administration does not seem to want to project its power into those places or even retain the capacity to do so. Wherever George McGovern’s spirit now abides, it must be dancing a jig: His “America, Come Home” plea from 1972 is finally being heeded.

 

Insofar as Israel is concerned—and a good number of Trump supporters claim to be fond of Israel despite a thick undertow of antisemitism in the MAGA periphery—the administration doesn’t seem to have made the connection between US naval facilities in the Mediterranean and Israeli security. When the guided-missile nuclear submarine USS Georgia—with its 154 Tomahawk Land-Attack Missiles with ranges of 1,600 kilometres, suitable for destroying every Iranian oil terminal structure on Kharg Island—showed up in the Eastern Med some months back to deter the Iranians, it worked. But if the administration closes Rota in Spain and other bases in Europe, the USS Georgia will not be able to show up quickly and stay put for long.

 

Trump likes to talk tough. But he doesn’t seem to understand that foreign competitors and potential adversaries don’t care about talk, they care about capabilities. “Speak softly and carry a big stick” is excellent advice but most of the time Trump does precisely the opposite. More’s the pity for everyone.

 

It is important to keep two truths in mind when assessing the significance of recent developments. First, NATO was never just a military alliance. It has always been, at least for its core members, a collective-security arrangement—albeit a lopsided one—with integrated military, economic, diplomatic, and normative dimensions. Donald Trump, zero-sum thinker that he is, has never understood this. Which is why he imagines that funding for NATO is just a kind of protection racket, just another part of his larger delusion that the US government ought to be a profit-making corporation of which he is CEO. He has never understood that allowing some European free-riding did not negate the net value of NATO to the United States.

 

Second, the extension of a US security umbrella to Europe was never an act of charity. It was the result of a studied conclusion that US national-security interests were best served by preventing European wars that dragged in the United States. NATO was not just about deterring the Soviet Union. It was as much about replacing historical European enmities with new habits of trust and cooperation. By guiding and supporting the creation of the European Union, postwar US policy has accomplished its goal with remarkable success.

 

That is why those who believe the Europeans are hopelessly squabbling tribes are living in an obsolete reality. Such people like to point out that, from the collapse of the Western Roman Empire until the advent of NATO, at least two—and usually more—centres of power in Europe were eternally at each other’s throats. That much is true. But thanks to US power and perseverance, and the pressure of circumstances, intra-European hostility has finally been laid to rest.

 

Today, no vestigial European rivalry that does not involve Russia (besides, perhaps, eternal Greco-Turkish enmity) is remotely likely to lead to a shooting war. The historically small Hungary of today, nationalist and autocratic though it is, might some day attack Slovakia to absorb the majority-ethnic Hungarian city of Bratislava (formerly Pressburg). But this is far-fetched so long as the European Union continues to exist. This historical novelty—no enmity great enough to cause a war within Europe and the shared threat of Russia—counsels measured optimism about Europe’s future security capacities.

 

Some years ago, I contended that the Zeitenwende—a European turning point—was real. I still believe that, and a hitherto glacial process may now accelerate, not least thanks to the results of the 23 February German election. Some defence functions will develop faster than others, and the process will be both affected by and have effects on each country’s domestic politics in ways that are hard to predict.

 

Of particular significance is that Germany’s postwar liberal-democratic ethos has been inseparable from post-bellicist and pacific security thinking. If Germany must now develop an extensive military industry and possibly even nuclear weapons, what will its postwar compact look like a generation hence?As things stand, Europe needs real leadership above all, and domestic politics in both Germany and France have been dicey in recent months. But the new CDU-SPD coalition under the leadership of Friedrich Merz is more likely to hasten a turning point than any other possible combination.

 

The Germans need to offload the Schuldenbremse—the obligation to balance annual budgets, first established in 2009 under Angela Merkel. This policy has depressed investment in infrastructure, contributed to the recessionary trends of the past two years, and helped to bring down the Scholz government. The Germans need to understand that higher spending on defence can stimulate their economy, especially the value-added parts the Germans excel at. The sooner it starts, the less time will need to pass for the benign economic and security effects to be felt. At which point, Germany can play its part as a leader in a new European concert.

 

If the United States really does want to urge and assist the construction of a unitary European security power, it isn’t especially productive to hurl the toddler into the lake yelling, “Swim, you idiot!” Will Europe have the time it needs to find its feet under currently re-wrought circumstances? The answer depends on cases and circumstances and these are complex.

 

The Sixth Impossible Thing and Russia’s Near Abroad

 

The US government has been providing useful satellite intel to the Ukrainians via the Starlink and other systems that Europeans cannot presently match. But Europe could match these systems in five years or perhaps as few as two. On the ground, the US has also been providing items the Europeans could not. Nevertheless, Europe has been providing about sixty percent of the Ukrainian order of battle to America’s forty percent. Europe could make up half of that forty percent—so, another twenty percent—in six months to two years.

 

What about getting Europe’s defence-industrial base integrated enough to produce the major platforms that America has provided? That is harder and will take much longer: most industry estimates fall between eight and ten years. But Swedish accession to NATO may help more than many realise, for the Swedes have managed to produce remarkable scientific-technical and engineering feats with a fairly small population. And if AI enables NATO members to skip a technological generation, the time curve could flatten down to between four and eight years. No one really knows, although that’s clearly much too long to matter in the current war.

 

All that changes if one looks at a hypothetical post-Ukraine-Belarusisation period, the dangers of which may be fairly modest in narrow military terms given Russia’s manifest military weaknesses, but also extremely politically sensitive. If I were Putin, what might I be thinking of doing next? Well, Russia could attack Latvia, kinetically and otherwise, especially if US tripwire troops are soon withdrawn, as rumours suggest they will be. Why Latvia? Because 35 percent of the population speaks Russian at home (compared to 27 percent in Estonia and five percent in Lithuania), and that’s high enough to tempt Putin’s urge to unite Russia into the “civilisation-state” he likes to talk about.

 

But invading Latvia would mean war with NATO (or what’s left of it). And if that’s the case, why go small beer? Putin is now 72 and looking at the clock, so he could reason that a new war should be over a strategically more worthy stake. What might that stake be? Connecting Russia’s land borders, perhaps, by pushing through the Suwalki corridor to link up Kaliningrad?

 

Kaliningrad is currently a vulnerability for Russia. It could be blockaded and choked by NATO-Europe as a pressure point. So it would be appealing, from a Russian military point of view, to eliminate that vulnerability. The map shows that Russian power would erupt out of Belarus, which is entirely under Putin’s control, and soak up either Lithuanian territory to the north or Polish territory to the south—or some of both. Either way, Lithuania’s land access to the rest of NATO to its south would be severed. That would be a big deal, obviously for Lithuania and Poland, but also for Latvia and Estonia to the north—and so therefore to all of NATO-Europe to one degree or another.

 

So, the farsighted military question to ask is: If the Russians burst toward Suwalki how does NATO-Europe—without the United States and without a US Article V backstop—repel and defeat them? Can they do so?

 

The answer is yes, probably, depending on when it happens. The longer Putin waits, the more likely and able the Europeans will be to resist and defeat his aggression. But it could get scary; the Russian military might, for example, detonate a tactical nuke high over the Baltic Sea, killing no one but terrifying people throughout Europe. Still, in a Suwalki-corridor scenario, the difference between what the United States has provided to Ukraine and what the Europeans have provided becomes less relevant. Near real-time satellite imagery would be nice to have in a contingency like that, but given the relatively small size of the battle area, air recon and other modalities could substitute well enough for most purposes, assuming European forces can muster the command, control, communications, and intelligence capabilities to enable them to fight together effectively.

 

On the larger point at issue, there is nothing wrong with wanting to improve relations with Russia, for doing so is in the US grand strategic interest in limiting the sway of Chinese power—even as misdescribed by Secretary Hegseth. But to do so in a way that rewards Russian aggression against a fledgling democratic polity is neither necessary nor in our interest, unless we disavow the value of democracy altogether, which is exactly what many MAGA entrepreneurs and supporters seem to want to do. Some of them really do sound a lot like Carl Schmitt, trying to substitute a mobocracy for a liberal democracybut instead of doing it in just one country they seem to want to do it in several. This is the Trump version of internationalism.

 

Specific circumstances matter. Yalta was a tragic but necessary case of spheres-of-influence diplomacy under the circumstances, since the Red Army already occupied eastern and central Europe. We need not repeat that now; there is no Russian army in those territories and the West is much stronger than the Russians as a result of the unity vouchsafed by postwar US policy. A principle-based security strategy has yielded highly practical benefits. As a result, the West—were it to remain in alliance—has options other than a balance-of-power, spheres-of-influence approach to strategy.

 

In this regard, it is worth remembering that, after the 1939 Soviet aggression against the Baltic States and their absorption into the USSR, the United States never recognised those annexations. Instead, it sat on a block of ice for more than 52 years as a matter of principle. It took the same position with respect to Crimea in 2014. This history needs pointing out, lest some think that rewarding aggression is standard US protocol in the face of a fait accompli emanating from Moscow. It never has been... at least, not until last week. Just as “Swim, you idiot!” is no way to encourage Europeans to put more skin in their own defence, rewarding naked aggression—and looking past all manner of other war crimes, as well—is no way to set up the kind of balance-of-power equilibrium with Russia that the Trump administration claims to want.

 

Unfortunately, the administration simply does not care about consequences of any shape in Europe, so they have rushed to forfeit a strong position in alliance with Europe for a weaker one without it. And it has done so for what are now revealed to be ideological reasons, or proto-ideological impulses based on motion-driven tics as opposed to actual thoughts. The emotional tics are dark and brutalist, like the kind of unfocussed angst that drives small boys to kill insects with magnifying glasses. The administration has confused complements and opposites. It is a zero-sum approach—besotted, angry, and replete with nihilistic effusions of self-harm projected outward as cruelty.

 

None of what we have seen in recent days is about strategy or even money. The same destructive shock-nihilism now prevalent in American domestic politics has extruded into the administration’s foreign and national-security policies. It is deep and it is dangerous. Indeed, it reeks of Lord of the Flies.