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The Daily Blast: A Danish Journo’s Viral Takedown of Trump Caps Off Epic NATO Meltdown

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At the NATO summit on Wednesday, Donald Trump lashed out wildly at, well, everyone in sight. He threatened more war with Iran. He angrily vowed to cut off all trade with Spain. He hinted aga...

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This is the Daily Blast from the New Republic, produced and presented by the ...

I'm your host, Greg Sargent. Donald Trump stumbled haplessly through a series of events at NATO on Wednesday. It was profoundly humiliating and countless ways, not just to him, but also to the United States. But there was one remarkable exchange in which a Danish reporter pressed the NATO Secretary

General about NATO's relationship with Trump that captured something really essential

about this moment. The reporter asked, "How can you have any self-respect praising Trump after all he's done to NATO and to our allies?" The deeper question here is, "What's going to happen to NATO and America's international alliances after all that Donald Trump has done to them?"

We're talking about it all with Elizabeth Sonders, a foreign policy writer and thinker who's really good on this sort of thing. Elizabeth, thanks for coming on. My pleasure, thanks for having me. OK, so the headline news out of Trump's visit to NATO was that he lashed out at everyone

on site. He said the ceasefire with Iran is over, he threatened more strikes, he erupted at Spain for failing to help with Iran, said our trade is finished with them, and he again threatened to steal Greenland outright.

Elizabeth, what was your one simple big takeaway from everything that happened there?

Well, I think it was a classic Trump display of volatility. NATO is in survival mode, its mission at these meetings is to not have anything major come out of them in terms of an American withdrawal, right? So I think if you think back to the Davos meetings in January, when Trump had already been engaged in a couple days of saber rattling over Greenland and even floated the idea

of taking it through military force, and then Mark Carney came and delivered the, you know, this is a rupture speech. And then Trump did back down that episode reporting in the Wall Street Journal and elsewhere has shown it was really, I wouldn't say a wake-up call, I'd say it was a straw that broke the camel's back, but it really made clear to the Europeans that this was a serious crisis

that America might be turning on its allies.

And so from that point on, I think the strategy of flattery that many European countries

had, you know, I mean, it's understandable why they thought they had to try has really fallen by the wayside. All that said, it is still especially NATO Secretary General Mark Routes job to try to hold the alliance together, move forward. And I think he in particular has stuck with the flattery strategy a lot longer than some

of his other car parts. Yeah, it's almost comical at this point. So speaking of that, here's an exchange in which a reporter from Denmark, Rosmas Sthannaborg, question NATO Secretary General Mark Routes, the reporter starts out by saying, Mark, you sit next to Trump while he says and does all these things to NATO and our allies.

Listen, Mark, you sit next to Don Trump in moments where he talks about conquering Greenland, talks about lashing out an allies like Spain, starting trade wars, thinks that it doesn't seem like the old, Mark Routes would approve of, does this have any effect on your self-respect

when you sit next to him like that and say nothing?

You know, what I always do is acknowledge when praise is due and I think we should praise

Donald Trump for the fact that NATO is so much stronger. Of course it has to do with the Russians threat it has to do with the war in Ukraine, but it's very much also has to do with President Trump delivering now what since Eisenhower would do, United States trying to achieve equalizing spending between the US and Europe. So as you heard there, the reporter asked Mark Routes, how can you sit there next to this guy

while he talks about seizing territory by force, lashes out pathologically at allies, and unleashes wildly destructive and crazy trade wars, how can you do that while maintaining yourself respect? A little bit, there's something about this moment that perfectly captures the essence of the situation. What did you think of it?

Well, your first instinct is to cheer the reporter and hope that Routes says something like,

you know, you're right, I feel, I feel cheap and horrible when I do that and I, I really think that Trump is, you know, an idiot or whatever, very much like people were cheering for

Kira Starmer, the Prime Minister of the UK, to have a love-actually moment wh...

off the American president in a big televised speech, as Hugh Grant does in the movie love, actually.

I mean, again, I think the, I think the era of flattery is over. I think Routes probably knows that, but he, in his defense, he is the one in charge of just NATO, not a country anymore, and so he may feel that there's a reason why he wants to keep, at least keep Trump from

lashing out, right? That's how you get the no drama is you, you flatter him enough that he doesn't

do anything rash. I mean, I, I do think it does seem increasingly ridiculous to see anybody acting that way, though. This is the president of the United States. His words really matter, and he said,

you know, he again threatened Iranian civilian targets when he said he was going to bomb Iran tonight.

I mean, he throws this language around so indiscriminately, and I don't think we can forget that it is very, it's not normal. It's, it's very abnormal. On the exchange with the reporter, I just want to point out how, in an understated way, it was an extraordinary take down a Donald Trump, because it treated him as this buffoonish, irrelevant, sideline figure, and essentially said, at this point, the only thing that matters now is how the rest of us react to this lunatic. It's all on us.

It essentially says no more enabling of this madman, the whole world sees how crazy and destructive he is, it's time to stop. The difficulty is, it isn't just on the Europeans, because the U.S. still has all the military power, or most of, you know, enough military power that it matters more. It's that any other country, the Europeans and Canadians are still dependent on it. And so, you have this situation where Donald Trump is the single point of failure for the, the, the, the,

the West, right? And, and it has some pretty serious threats facing it from Russia,

you know, I mean, I could go on, but the, the big one they were there to talk about was Russia, right?

And instead of that, he's not, he's not just, as in his first term, doing things to kind of undermine

the foundations, he has actually lashed out at Iran in a way that we can's the entire region, and over which they have very little control over events, if any. So, you know, I don't envy, I wouldn't want to be, there are many jobs that would not want to have in today's world, university president, European head of state, right? That's a tough one right now. Let's listen to what Trump said about Spain. Check this out. Spain is a wasted clause.

We don't want to do any trade business with Spain anymore. By the way, I'd like you to cut it right. Again, Spain is a terrible partner in NATO. They don't participate, they don't pay. I don't want anything to do with Spain. Cut off what trade was spanned with, including visits. Okay, we don't want anything to do. Watch them, watch them come running back. They're open about it. They're hostile about it, and let's see how hostile they remain when they call up

and they please, please, we want to trade with you, sir. We want to trade with you, sir. They make so much money with us, and we're going to see that they make a lot less. So, Trump appears to be angry because Spain wasn't willing to help reopen the straight of poor moves, but let's just recap what happened there. Trump went to war without consulting allies, after spending the last year and a half, shitting all over them, and then when his war went

south, exactly as his own advisors and everyone else, including the allies, war in that it would, he suddenly runs back to our allies for help in cleaning up his mess. The Elizabeth, can you talk

about that big dynamic, how ridiculous it is? Yeah, I think the other piece of it is that Spain

refused to sign on to the defense spending pledge that Trump wanted and that Mark Routil tried to kind of get everyone to pledge and, you know, Spain is pretty far from Russia. It has some mountains in between it and the rest of continental Europe. It certainly has maritime, you know, it's a great maritime importance, but Spain is not going to be the backbone of NATO under any circumstances, right? And it doesn't make sense for Spain to spend as much or to spend the same way, right? Not every

European country can build tanks, so he's been angry about Spain not providing help that makes no sense, and then insulting Spain and Italy and all and, you know, care starmer who flattered him

As not very churchelian and so forth, but then he really doesn't need help fr...

So it is, it's a situation where again, he's not a very good negotiator. He doesn't know how to take care of his friends and keep them happy so that they're there when you need them. Routil has kind of praised Trump by saying he was right about getting European powers to chip in more for defense and all that and just putting that aside, there's no denying that Trump has essentially

screwed over the alliance in all kinds of ways, is there? And also screwed over America, right?

It's very helpful to have these allies. This is the part that Trump has never appreciated,

that having allies who will not just share the burden but allow you to use their bases, provide all kinds of logistical support without having to occupy them. That's a huge advantage. It's an advantage as Soviets didn't have in the Cold War. It's advantage China doesn't have today. It's much better and strategically more valuable and easier for the U.S. to just be really close friends with Denmark and get what they need out of Greenland rather than take over Greenland itself.

So I think the U.S. role in the alliance is special. It has the most capabilities, especially the nuclear umbrella, but fundamentally NATO boils down to trust, trust that each country will in

fact come to each other's aid if attacked. And fundamentally the most important person,

the most important country there has always been the U.S. and the credibility of the U.S. guarantee is the most important thing. Presidents have always sought to make that promise credible and the way you make things credible is you say what you mean and then you follow through and

you don't change your mind overnight and start making demands and so forth. And so I think

they have recognized that Trump is the single point of failure in the alliance and they cannot allow they need to build in some redundancies. It's also just kind of as another example of how this is screwing over America too. The dynamic of NATO has always been, we ask them to spend more that they allies to spend more and do more on their own. But the minute they start to do that, we get annoyed because we also want to tell them what to do. And you know, whatever one thinks of

that clearly we're giving up whatever leverage we had over the NATO countries militarily and that's a loss for the U.S. You can't deny it. Yeah, let's just try to sum up the big picture here. So Donald Trump comes in. He's supposed to be the hard-headed realist who does big things in the world. He knows how to manhandle Putin because he's a tough guy like Putin. He recognizes the China's a threat and he'll confront China because unlike Biden, that's softy. He's a tough guy and

all that. But then what you've basically actually got is Trump empowering Russia in all kinds of ways.

Trump failing vis-à-vis China doing things that actually empower China and simultaneously throwing away all our allies who would essentially act as our allies in being a bull work against those rising

powers. Is that a fair summary of what's going on? Yeah, I think that sums it up. And for me,

one of the most, it was both ridiculous and very poignant moments was when Trump, a reporter asked him a question about his recent talk of, you know, the fear of communist because he's like he's been calling some Democrats communist of late and leaving aside the whole domestic angle of that. He then went on a long discussion about communism and the dangers of communism and you can't go back. Once you've been gone communist and you suffer and you suffer. And I'm thinking, as I'm

listening to this, like does he realize that he is in a room full of people dedicated to an organization that was founded to stop the spread of communism and Russian and Soviet aggression? And many of the countries that are now NATO members were under the, you know, behind the iron curtain for decades and they sure do know what it's like to live under communism. So I think you know, I think what you say is right and I think NATO is sort of hoping that it can limp

along to maybe not to a point where I think nobody really thinks it can go back to the way it was. But I think I think they hope that they can improve their own defenses to a point where they can make a deal with a much more rational president who will stick to what he says. Yeah, and I think that that's possible. I think a democratic president could actually repair all this, which bring me to this Wall Street Journal report. You referenced this earlier. The journal

Reported on what our NATO allies are doing right now as they contemplate a wo...

reliable America. As the journal put it, these countries are engaged in an unprecedented

experiment in de-Americanization. Paul Cragman had a good line about this where he said this reflects Europe's realization that a country that elects Trump, twice, can't ever be trusted again. What I take from this is the world is moving on from us. Can you talk about this de-Americanization

process? What does it entail? And what does it all really mean? Where does it go?

Well, there are various points on a spectrum of quote unquote de-Americanization, right?

And one would just be hedging where, you know, you might not want to have American technology

underpinning literally every facet of your defense and economy and all, and so forth, not just because of Trump, but because of, you know, American tech companies and being overly reliant on a single set of systems is, you know, everybody knows that redundancy is good in this sort of situation. So, so there's sort of hedging insurance, reducing dependency, and then there's rupture, and Carney's speech and Davos talked about rupture, but I think even he would probably say it would

still be better if NATO existed, right? And it existed in a form that people in question whether

it was still going to exist in a year or two. So, I think fundamentally we're going to see more

hedging from Europe. I don't think that they will break away entirely because they're interests, you know, if you step back, if you take a sort of, you know, 30,000 foot view of this, fundamentally Europe wants Ukraine to stay sovereign. The U.S. should want Ukraine to stay sovereign. There's lots of common interests that still exist, right? And so I think, I think you'll see some hedging, but it's not going to be as far as maybe, you know, a full de-Americanization,

and part of that also is just the constraints of what Europe can do and how fast it can do it. It can't make a tech industry overnight. Yeah, it does seem like a democratic president probably can repair things so that some form of an alliance that really matters in the world can continue. Do you think that's possible? I don't think we're ever going back to the way it was because I think we had Biden and then we got Trump again. And I think I think Krugman's point about this,

you know, they voted for him twice. That is the thing that gets people just stops him in their tracks when they think about it that way. So I think there will be, I think even if you got a president from the sort of more, you know, supposed like just throwing out a name, Nicky Haley, right? Someone who even worked for Trump, but who has clearly got a more internationalist outlook would not ever see want to go trashing NATO for the sake of trashing it. I don't think

that's someone that I think the leaders at this meeting could work with would want to work with, but they're under no illusions anymore. And I think they will want to have redundancy. It's just

prudent, right? Deversification of portfolios, that's what we're all supposed to do with our money,

right? So, you know, I don't think they're going to allow themselves to be into this position to the extent their economies and, you know, capacity allows them to diversify. They have learned an important lesson. And, you know, I think America's going to have to learn what it's like to have a Europe with some autonomous capacity, as I said before, that traditionally has not been what we actually want when push comes to shove. We'd much rather tell them what to do.

Yeah, well, I think that that reporter in that exchange really kind of nailed it. He basically said

in his own way, it's time to move on. Elizabeth Saunders, really great to talk to you. Thanks for all that. It's really great stuff. Thank you so much.

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