Hola Aloha, always good to read somewhere something I had been thinking - and 
saying in my circles - ever since the advent of Trump 2.0 ...

Cheers to all - but, no, it doesn't look good at all. The horizon is closing 
fast.
p+7D!

--------------------------------

Original to:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/sep/28/trump-putin-europe-1939-us-russia-ukraine-liberal-democracy


Trump and Putin are carrying out a pincer movement on Europe’s democracies. 
Suddenly, it all feels a bit 1939

Forget the US president’s seeming volte-face on Ukraine this week: he and Putin 
fundamentally agree that European liberal democracy is the problem

By Simon Tisdall
Sun 28 Sep 2025 

For many people in eastern Europe, August 1939 may not feel that long ago. That 
was the moment Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s Soviet Union secretly agreed to 
partition Poland and forcibly subsume the sovereign Baltic republics and 
Finland into their totalitarian “spheres of influence”. The world knows what 
came next.

Now the question arises: is it happening again? This time around, it’s Donald 
Trump’s United States and Vladimir Putin’s Russia making the big geopolitical 
power-play – and, once again, all of Europe is potential prey. Notwithstanding 
last week’s sparring over Ukraine, the two leaders’ core aims appear closely 
aligned.

Physical subjugation of the European continent is not a Trump objective 
(unlike, perhaps, in Venezuela, Canada or Greenland). But US efforts to 
dominate the continent through political interference, ideological subversion, 
economic blackmail, unregulated big-tech predation and the projection of 
conservative, Christian nationalist cultural beliefs amount to much the same 
thing.

Putin’s methods are cruder, yet his agenda mirrors Trump’s. He will not let go 
of Ukraine. He is intensifying, and leveraging, the Russian military threat, 
from the Baltic states to the Black Sea, including in Moldova, Romania and 
Georgia. Russian hybrid warfare – sabotage, cyber-attacks, online trolling and 
disinformation – is now a fact of daily western European life.

Trump, failed coup leader, and Putin, indicted war criminal, are not in formal 
alliance, yet. They have not agreed a 1939-style Molotov-Ribbentrop 
non-aggression pact. But there is extensive common ground. Both despise 
European liberal democracy, equal rights and multiculturalism. Both are 
viscerally hostile to the EU. Both hanker for past imperial glories; both 
reject UN “globalism” and international law. Their anti-democratic 
ultranationalism nurtures foul ideas of ethnic and racial supremacy that most 
Europeans had long consigned to history.

Trump makes no secret of his desire to normalise US relations with Russia. 
This, he claims, would lead to vast, mutually beneficial money-making 
opportunities. When he complained last week that Putin has “let me down”, he 
was not so much talking about his embarrassing Alaska peace summit flop but 
about the Russian president’s refusal to cut a deal and cash in.

Trump’s supposed pro-Kyiv shift typifies his pinball policymaking, which 
ricochets randomly from one wacky idea to another. It will not endure. His 
warning that Russia faces “big economic trouble” was his way of pushing Putin 
into doing business while leaving Ukraine and European Nato members to manage 
the long-term Russian threat alone.

The US president is urging others to cut off Russian oil, but the US itself 
does nothing. Promised tougher sanctions are all talk. He refuses to resume 
direct military aid to Kyiv, or punish Russian incursions into Nato territory. 
In this context, his prediction that Ukraine will somehow regain all its lost 
territory is cruel mockery.

Trump and Putin’s political pressure campaigns are mutually reinforcing. Both 
support European hard-right, populist-nationalist parties and politicians. In 
February, the US vice-president, JD Vance, directly intervened in Germany’s 
election, siding with the far-right Alternative für Deutschland. Trump’s 
backing for the Polish presidential candidate Karol Nawrocki may have helped 
the conservative nationalist score a narrow victory.

Similar Russian influence campaigns, plus dirty tricks and alleged vote-buying, 
have marred elections in Romania and Moldova, which goes to the polls this 
weekend. Will Trump and Putin conspire to ensure a hard-right populist succeeds 
Emmanuel Macron as French president in 2027? It’s a legitimate worry.

Both leaders exploit Europe’s open societies, stirring political pots and 
promoting favourites. In Trump’s case, one such is Giorgia Meloni, Italy’s 
rightwing prime minister. Another is British anti-migrant populist Nigel 
Farage, the quintessential useful idiot. In Putin’s case, it’s pro-Moscow 
leaders such as Hungary’s Viktor Orbán and Slovakia’s Robert Fico.

The most obvious manifestation of hostile US economic pressure is Trump’s 
unilateral tariffs, which foreshadowed the summer’s risibly lopsided EU-US 
trade deal. American big-tech’s £31bn UK investment, announced during Trump’s 
quasi-regal state visit, carries a whiff of neocolonialism. Buying British is 
fine. But are US billionaires buying Britain?

Putin is even less subtle. Deniable cyber-attacks cripple key European 
industries and institutions. An undersea communications cable or gas pipeline 
mysteriously ruptures. Drones force the closure of airports. Undocumented 
migrants are directed across EU borders. Online scams proliferate. Methods 
vary. Yet the economic warfare waged on Europe in tandem by Moscow and 
Washington is real.

A disturbing report by the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) and 
European Cultural Foundation claims the US is waging a broad culture war 
against Europe. Yet its central finding – that Trump is promoting political and 
ideological allies while simultaneously trying to sideline and divide the EU – 
applies with equal force to Putin’s Russia.

The defence of “free speech”, mounted by Vance during his infamous Munich 
security conference attack on Europe’s supposed retreat from “some of its most 
fundamental values”, is a key cultural battleground. And here is another 
convergence. For Trump and Putin, speech is free – if they agree with the 
speaker. But not otherwise. (Ask Jimmy Kimmel, or the late Alexei Navalny.) 
Trump and Putin: two clowns resembling Laurel and Hardy – except their gags are 
not jokes.

The ECFR report optimistically suggests the dual assault from east and west is 
drawing Europeans together. Yet, as ever in Europe, what’s lacking is urgency 
and strong, united leadership. What’s lacking is clear understanding that this 
US administration, no longer a trusted friend, is turning into an outright 
enemy; and that the Russian bear, a species once thought extinct, is back with 
a vengeance.

The evidence grows. So does the threat. Planned or not, Trump and Putin – 
like-minded, amoral, authoritarian apex predators – are working together, or at 
least in parallel, to undercut European democracy, security, prosperity and 
progressive values. It looks like a concerted pincer movement. It feels like 
1939.

Simon Tisdall is a Guardian foreign affairs commentator




-- 
# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
# <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
# collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
# more info: https://www.nettime.org
# contact: [email protected]

Reply via email to