特朗普不能让欧洲拒绝的美国拖延美国 Trump Cannot Allow A Declining Europe To Drag The US Down

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/trump-cannot-allow-declining-europe-drag-us-down

特朗普政府通过挑战其政策引起了欧洲政府的紧张局势。国防部长赫格斯(Hegseth)质疑恢复2014年乌克兰 - 俄罗斯边界的可行性,并建议缩减美国军事存在。万斯副总统谴责欧洲违反民主原则的行为。特朗普总统与俄罗斯发起了直接的会谈,以结束乌克兰的冲突。 欧洲领导人对这些事态发展感到不安,期望美国继续支持而没有责任。特朗普政府旨在向欧洲施加压力,以增加自己的防御支出。从历史上看,欧洲的崛起是由权力下放和私有财产权推动的,但政府权力侵蚀了这些原则。大国导致战争保证和第一次世界大战和第二次世界大战的破坏。第二次世界大战后欧洲已变得越来越集中,并依赖于美国。 尽管特朗普呼吁结束美国参与乌克兰,但欧洲领导人仍致力于其有缺陷的安全政策。他们捍卫对异议的极权主义镇压,并在有助于冲突的安全体系上加倍。如果欧洲选择通过极权主义和战争下降,则不应要求美国协助。

The Trump administration has caused tension with European governments by challenging their policies. Defense Secretary Hegseth questioned the feasibility of restoring pre-2014 Ukraine-Russia borders and suggested scaling back US military presence. Vice President Vance condemned European violations of democratic principles. President Trump initiated direct talks with Russia to end the Ukraine conflict. European leaders are upset by these developments, expecting continued US support without accountability. The Trump administration aims to pressure Europe into increasing its own defense spending. Historically, Europe's rise was driven by decentralization and private property rights, but government power has eroded these principles. Large states led to war guarantees and the devastation of World Wars I and II. Post-WWII Europe has become increasingly centralized and dependent on the US. Despite Trump's calls to end US involvement in Ukraine, European leaders remain committed to their flawed security policies. They defend totalitarian crackdowns on dissent and double down on a security system that contributed to the conflict. If Europe chooses to decline through totalitarianism and war, the US should not be required to assist.


Trump Cannot Allow A Declining Europe To Drag The US Down

Authored by Connor O'Keefe via The Mises Institute,

Last week, leaders of European governments got very upset with the new Trump administration.

  • First, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said a return to pre-2014 Ukraine-Russia borders was an “unrealistic objective” in the coming peace negotiations and that European leaders shouldn’t assume American troops would be present on the continent forever.

  • Then, Vice President JD Vance gave a speech at a security conference in Germany in which he admonished European governments for repeatedly violating the liberal democratic principles they loudly proclaim to defend. He cited the recent reversal of an election in Romania after the result went against what the ruling regime and its Western European allies wanted, as well as a plethora of crackdowns on political dissent from some of Washington’s closest allies on the continent.

  • Finally, President Trump announced that the US government would begin direct talks with the Russian government to negotiate an end to the war in Ukraine. Those talks began on Tuesday without any involvement from other European governments, including Ukraine.

Needless to say, these statements and developments greatly angered European leaders who were evidently convinced the US would continue to station troops, send weapons, and provide funding for the continent’s security while letting the governments act however they wanted and while treating them as the primary parties in the proxy war we’ve been bankrolling.

By all indications, the Trump administration’s goal here is to pressure European governments to spend more of their own taxpayers’ money to fund NATO. 

Which is unfortunate, because Europe is deep in a self-inflicted decline right now, and US taxpayers should not be forced to take part in it at all.

From an American perspective, the decline of Europe is tragic as some of the best aspects of our institutions and culture can be drawn back to the period of Europe’s rise.

After the fall of the Roman Empire, Western Europe splintered into many small political units. The relatively small territories of these states, along with the presence of strong non-state institutions like the Church and an international merchant class, meant power was highly decentralized.

As scholars like Ralph RaicoNathan Rosenberg, and L.E. Birdzel Jr. have demonstrated, the highly decentralized set-up of Europe in the Middle Ages was the primary factor in generating the prosperity that went on to give the West more power and a safer, more comfortable standard of living than any other civilization in history. A respect for private property rights virtually unseen up to that point helped to create a justice system that only compounded the West’s success.

Unfortunately, the immense amount of wealth also allowed governments to siphon some of it off and grow very powerful. Chief among them was the British government, which used its people’s wealth to build the first truly globe-spanning empire. The British and other European ruling classes presented their lavish governments and foreign expansionism as a sign of national glory. But the rise of these large, powerful states represented the steady abandonment of the very institutions that had fueled Europe’s growth.

The astonishing productivity of the Industrial Revolution kept the party going through the 1800s. But, famously, a series of war guarantees pulled nearly all of Europe into the largest, bloodiest war the world had seen in 1914. The sheer brutality of the war and the decisive defeat of the Central Powers—brought about by the US’s unnecessary entrance—set the stage for the rise of the Nazis and the second world war. And WWII obliterated what remained of European power.

In the decades since, much of Western Europe has sunk to the level of becoming de facto vassals of Washington, DC while moving even further away from decentralized institutions and a respect for private property rights. Which brings us to the European situation that Trump, Vance, and Hegseth confronted last week as they took the reins of the American government.

Western European governments have instituted totalitarianism in the name of averting the rise of totalitarianism and built up another large network of war guarantees in the name of preventing another world war. 

The European establishment is seemingly still so traumatized from WWII that it acts like history began in 1933 and ignores all the important lessons from before that date.

After Vance’s comments last week, European officials went in front of the media and mounted a passionate defense of their totalitarian crackdown on dissent.

And, as Trump finally moves to end US involvement in the war in Ukraine, European leaders are scrambling to find ways to independently double down on the same security set-up that helped bring the war about in the first place.

The decline of Europe is a sad thing to watch. 

But the reaction from European officials to Vance calling them out on some aspects of that decline confirms that the people currently in charge over there will not be changing direction any time soon.

If Europe is really set on shrinking back into obscurity through domestic totalitarianism, economic stagnation, or by setting off a new continent-wide war, American taxpayers should not be forced to help.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/20/2025 - 07:20
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