menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

After 'Signalgate,' MAGA's Contempt for NATO Impossible To Ignore | Opinion

3 0
previous day

The Trump administration threatens to upend the world's most successful alliance—that was the clear message coming out of the leaked "Signalgate" chat. If Americans still want their country to lead the free world, as opposed to being just another big bully on the world stage, they will have to get a clear message across to the Republicans.

At the center of this tempest is the Trumpian disdain toward the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and especially the European nations that are America's main partners in that great endeavor. If examined objectively, without pettiness, NATO is a strategic bargain for the U.S. and a bulwark for the free world. It's good for America and anyone who values democratic order over autocratic aggression. It's bad for humanity that America, or at least its leadership, no longer does.

But Trumpworld somehow believes that America is getting a raw deal. The disdain of top officials like Vice President J.D. Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth for America's closest allies came through loud and clear in the Signal exchange published in The Atlantic, whose editor, Jeffrey Goldberg, was an unintended invitee.

Vance actually argued against punishing the Houthis, who have impeded about a quarter of global maritime trade at devastating cost to Egypt's Suez Canal revenues, because the Europeans use that route more than the U.S. "I just hate bailing Europe out again," Vance wrote. Hegseth argued for the attacks, but added: "I fully share your loathing of European free-loading. It's PATHETIC."

There are many things wrong here, of course. The chat was unsecured—which is far worse than Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server. Inviting Goldberg to the chat was........

© Newsweek