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U.S. flips history by casting Europe—not Russia—as villain in security policy
Mint Bangalore
|December 08, 2025
An annual strategy document directs some of its harshest language at NATO allies
President Donald Trump flanked on his right by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth during a cabinet meeting in Washington, DC, on December 2.
(BLOOMBERG)
For years, the U.S. government has published an annual National Security Strategy that lays out how Washington sees the world and its approach to dealing with looming threats, from China to Russia to drug-traffickers in Latin America.
This week, the Trump administration’s version seemed to reserve its harshest tone for a new target: America’s closest allies in Europe.
The 30-page document painted European nations as wayward, declining powers that have ceded their sovereignty to the European Union and are led by governments that suppress democracy and muzzle voices that want a more nationalistic turn.
It says the continent faces “civilizational erasure” through immigration that could render it “unrecognizable” in two decades—as well as turning several North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies into majority “non-European” countries. It concludes the region could grow too weak to be “reliable allies.”
The document underscores how radically the Trump administration is reshaping traditional American foreign policy, and it is likely to deepen divisions in the trans-Atlantic alliance, which has largely kept the peace in Europe since World War II and promoted Western values across the world.
The document landed like a bucket of cold water in European capitals. European leaders reading the document need “to assume that the traditional trans-Atlantic relationship is dead,” said Katja Bego, a senior researcher at Chatham House, a think tank in London.
Timothy Garton Ash, a prominent British historian, described the document “as the mother of all wake-up calls for Europe.”
This story is from the December 08, 2025 edition of Mint Bangalore.
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