Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Trump: A Reason Europe Is Rearming

While far, far too many Americans ignore politics and fail to educate themselves to the menace Donald Trump poses - or worse yet, support his increasingly racist and fascist agenda - many in Europe are paying close attention to the lead up to America's 2024 elections and the horrific possibility Trump could regain the White House.  In his past regime, Trump showed he was no friend to long time allies and that he was all too enamored with Vladimir Putin.   The result is surging military spend in continental Europe as Russia looms as a threat and fears that another Trump term (if he would even leave after four years) would leave Poland, France, Germany and other nations to their own devises should Trump carry out his threat to withdraw from NATO.  Yes, Russia poses a huge threat to Europe, but so does another Trump regime, especially were Trump to push America from NATO and in effect signal to Putin to do whatever he wants in terms of aggression and conquest.  A column in the Washington Post looks at the European response to these dual dangers,   Here are column highlights:  

Poland is building one of the West’s most muscle-bound militaries, on course to deploy more battle tanks than Britain, France, Germany and Italy – combined.

How will leaders in Poland — and, to varying degrees, others across Europe — manage the inevitable economic and political fallout of major military buildups in the face of Moscow’s aggression and Washington’s distraction?

Credit Warsaw with a baseline of strategic sanity. It faces a revanchist enemy in Russia, which invaded Poland in 1939 and subjugated it for decades after World War II. This month, a top aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin threatened to eliminate “Polish statehood in its entirety.”

And don’t forget, Poland lives in a hostile neighborhood. It is bordered in part by Belarus, a Russian puppet; by Ukraine, which Putin is determined to subjugate; and by Kaliningrad, a Russian outpost bristling with weapons. Defense was one of the few major policies that was not a subject of debate in Poland’s bitterly contested elections last month.

Yet Poland is also a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, covered by the United States and 29 other Western allies’ commitment to its defense if attacked. More than 10,000 American troops are stationed in Poland, and 80 percent of military hardware heading for Ukraine passes through Polish transit points.

So what’s it worried about?

Beyond Russia’s snarling, there is a simple explanation: Donald Trump.

Trump repeatedly told White House aides in 2018 that he wanted to pull the United States out of NATO, a move that would leave the bloc leaderless and neutered.

“It would be extremely stressful if America pivoted away from Europe, and that’s the worry with Trump,” a top European diplomat told me. “Every foreign ministry is thinking about this.”

When Trump threatened to withdraw the United States from NATO, Poland was spending roughly 2 percent of annual economic output on defense. It is on track to double that next year, and Warsaw looks likely to increase military outlays further, especially if the war in Ukraine drags on.

Almost no other NATO country, including the United States, spends as much on defense as a percentage of gross domestic product. . . . Poland’s spending binge — for top-shelf fighter jets, attack helicopters, rocket launchers, air defense systems and artillery, as well as tanks — is impelled by the rising threat from Russia, which has shifted its own economy onto a wartime footing. But Warsaw’s buildup is also a hedge against Trump’s return to the White House and the chance that he will set NATO adrift.

That prospect has set alarm bells ringing across Europe.

In Germany, for years a defense-spending laggard, Chancellor Olaf Scholz last week committed the government to a long-term military expansion, at a cost of tens of billions of dollars annually through the 2030s. But the German economy is limping through a recession, the budget is constrained by a constitutional debt limit, and the hollowed-out army has struggled to fill its ranks with recruits. Which social programs will Berlin raid to pay for a beefier new military?

President Emmanuel Macron has embarked on France’s biggest military spending increase in a half-century, earmarking nearly $450 billion to boost outlays through the end of the decade by a third. His parallel effort to push Europe to take ownership of its security through better military and industrial coordination — and less reliance on Washington’s weaponry and leadership — springs from a clear-eyed assessment: The United States, distracted by China and entertaining the possibility of Trump’s return, is an unpredictable ally.

An enduring defense buildup in Europe depends partly on robust economies and healthy demographics. Both look anemic these days. Birthrates are low across the continent — Poland’s population is projected to shrink by a tenth by 2050 — and Europe’s post-pandemic economic rebound trails the United States’.

Russia has shifted to a wartime economy to finance its aggression in Ukraine and very possibly elsewhere. As an autocracy, it is less susceptible to the mounting pressures that will result. Europe’s ability to respond will shape the West’s new security posture as much as or more than anything Washington devises. That challenge looms right now.

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