JD Vance’s speech on Friday at the Munich Security Conference deeply
offended European leaders, drawing widespread criticism and fueling
serious concerns about President Donald Trump’s foreign policy.
“Hard to convey the level of disgust with and rejection of Vance remarks,” explained veteran foreign policy journalist Laura Rozen, “which included lecturing Europe to be more open to Musk promoting the German far right party and which ignored Russia.”
Vance’s speech, Rozen continued,
“was not about Europe doing more to protect European security. It was
telling them how to be internally—more open to right wing/ hate
speech/techno oligarchd/Russian election interference.”
“Truly disturbing,” she concluded.
The New York Times did not hold back. Its headline reads: “Vance Tells Europeans to Stop Shunning Parties Deemed Extreme.”
A member of France’s armed services committee “could not believe [Vance] did not mention Ukraine/Russia,” Rozen noted, while adding that “the German defense minister was the most forceful in expressing his rejection.”
Indeed, Tom Nutall, the Berlin Bureau Chief for The Economist wrote: “Blistering response by Boris Pistorius, Germany’s defence minister, to JD Vance’s speech.”
Nutall
quoted the minister as saying: “Democracy does not mean that a
vociferous minority can decide what truth is…democracy must be able to
defend itself against extremists.”
Pistorius continued,
describing himself as “a staunch believer in the Transatlantic
Alliance,” and “a staunch ally and friend of America,” Real Clear Politics reported.
“The
American dream is something that has always fascinated me and
influenced me, and this is why I cannot just ignore what we heard
before, I cannot not comment on the speech we heard by the U.S. Vice
President.”
“This democracy … was just called into question by the U.S. vice
president. And not just the German democracy, but Europe as a whole, he
spoke of the annulment of democracy and if I understood him correctly,
he compares the condition of Europe with the condition that prevails in
some authoritarian regimes.”
“Ladies and gentlemen, this is not acceptable. That’s it. This is not acceptable,” Pistorius declared.
Damian Boeselager, a member of the European Parliament, wrote:
“JD Vance speech at the MSC was a disgrace. Telling Europe how to run a
democracy and free speech while centralizing all power in the hands of a
couple of power hungry people is a horrible cynicism.”
The Guardian
reported that the European Union’s “foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas,
reacting to US vice president JD Vance’s speech, said it felt like
Washington was ‘trying to pick a fight’ with Europe.”
Other experts also agreed with Rozen’s remarks.
“This
is definitely how most foreign policy elites in Europe interpreted US
Vice President Vance’s speech at the Munich Security Conference,” wrote
Dr. Leslie Vinjamuri, director of the U.S. and Americas program at the
London-based think tank Chatham House, and a professor of international
relations at the University of London.
“Exactly this. Another disturbing glimpse into MAGA thinking,” added David Hartwell, a former UK Ministry of Defense intelligence analyst.
“Shocking hypocrisy from Vance – lecturing Europe on democracy when
he serves as vice president to a man who attempted a coup in the US,” wrote Gideon Rachman, chief foreign affairs commentator for the Financial Times.
“It does not appear,” noted
former Marine fighter pilot Amy McGrath, who has a Master of Arts in
international and global security studies from Johns Hopkins University,
“that Vance, Hegseth or Trump
on the same page when it comes to Europe, Ukraine, Russia. No coherent
message. The world has no idea what American foreign policy is right
now. I don’t think [the Trump] team knows either.”
Watch a portion of Vance’s remarks below or at this link.
'Disgust': Vance’s 'disturbing' speech alarms Europe, sparks foreign policy fears
No comments:
Post a Comment