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Jan 17, 2017 15:30:32   #
permafrost Loc: Minnesota
 
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized President Obama’s approach to foreign policy, they invariably complain that his priorities are backwards. America’s allies, the argument goes, no longer count on us, while America’s adversaries no longer fear us.

In a foreign policy speech delivered in April, none other than Donald Trump, reading from his trusted teleprompter, argued, “[O]ur friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us. We’ve had a president who dislikes our friends and bows to our enemies.”

The entire line of attack has long been deeply ironic. Under Obama’s presidency, the United States’ international reputation has improved considerably over the Bush/Cheney era, and our allies’ confidence in our leadership has grown. Now that Trump is poised to take power, however, anxiety and mistrust among American allies has reached levels unseen in generations. The Washington Post reported yesterday:
European leaders grappled with the jolting reality of President-elect Donald Trump’s skepticism of the European Union on Monday, saying they might have to stand without the United States at their side during the Trump presidency.

The possibility of an unprecedented breach in transatlantic relations came after Trump – who embraced anti-E.U. insurgents during his campaign and following his victory – said in weekend remarks that the 28-nation European Union was bound for a breakup and that he was indifferent to its fate. He also said NATO’s current configuration is “obsolete,” even as he professed commitment to Europe’s defense.
To put it mildly, the president-elect’s weekend comments have rattled much of the world. As we noted yesterday, Trump sat down with two European newspapers for an interview in which he dismissed NATO as “obsolete”; criticized German Chancellor Angela Merkel for assisting Syrian refugees (whom Trump referred to as “illegals”); said the United States “should be ready to trust” Russian President Vladimir Putin; and endorsed the further unraveling of the European Union.

The Post added that Trump’s attitudes “have raised alarm bells across Europe,” as America’s traditional allies come to the “painful realization” that Europeans may no longer have “the full backing of their oldest, strongest partner.”

The article went on to note, “The full ramifications of a potential breakdown in transatlantic ties are so extensive, they are difficult to total…. For decades, European nations and the United States have worked tightly together on issues of war, peace and wealth.”

This has been the backbone of the world order for generations, and in the United States, there’s been a steady, bipartisan commitment to the Western alliance. American allies counted on this international partnership to endure.

And now countries around the globe are anxious, if not terrified, because Americans elected an erratic amateur who says he intends to shuffle the diplomatic deck, partnering not with U.S. allies, but with a U.S. adversary – Russia – which apparently played a role in putting Donald Trump in the Oval Office.

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 15:31:31   #
permafrost Loc: Minnesota
 
To borrow Trump’s own rhetoric, America’s friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us.

Vox’s Zack Beauchamp had a good piece yesterday on the global landscape.
Bashing NATO and the European Union, and alienating Germany, is a plan for tearing apart US relations with the EU – for weakening the agreements that underpin America’s status as the sole superpower and that maintain peace on the European continent.

It also means that Trump is talking about radically reshaping US foreign policy in a way that would significantly boost Putin’s influence while leaving America’s allies scrambling to figure out where they stand and how much they can trust in the future stability of an international system that has brought unprecedented economic strength and stability to the continent for decades.

“What Trump proposes is [American] geopolitical suicide,” Daniel Nexon, a professor at Georgetown who studies great power politics, writes at the Lawyers, Guns, and Money blog. “Make no mistake: you should be very worried right now.”
About a year ago, a reporter asked President Obama whether Trump was “already doing damage” to America’s reputation. “The answer … is yes,” Obama responded. “I think that I’ve been very clear earlier that I am getting questions constantly from foreign leaders about some of the wackier suggestions that are being made.”

This dovetailed with reporting from the time about international “alarm” over Trump from officials in Europe, the Middle East, Latin America, and Asia.

A senior NATO official was quoted telling Reuters last March, “European diplomats are constantly asking about Trump’s rise with disbelief and, now, growing panic.”

That was when Trump was still one of several GOP candidates. Now that he’s poised to take office, our allies’ disbelief and panic is far more acute.

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 15:33:39   #
robmull Loc: florida
 
permafrost wrote:
To borrow Trump’s own rhetoric, America’s friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us.

Vox’s Zack Beauchamp had a good piece yesterday on the global landscape.
Bashing NATO and the European Union, and alienating Germany, is a plan for tearing apart US relations with the EU – for weakening the agreements that underpin America’s status as the sole superpower and that maintain peace on the European continent.

It also means that Trump is talking about radically reshaping US foreign policy in a way that would significantly boost Putin’s influence while leaving America’s allies scrambling to figure out where they stand and how much they can trust in the future stability of an international system that has brought unprecedented economic strength and stability to the continent for decades.

“What Trump proposes is [American] geopolitical suicide,” Daniel Nexon, a professor at Georgetown who studies great power politics, writes at the Lawyers, Guns, and Money blog. “Make no mistake: you should be very worried right now.”
About a year ago, a reporter asked President Obama whether Trump was “already doing damage” to America’s reputation. “The answer … is yes,” Obama responded. “I think that I’ve been very clear earlier that I am getting questions constantly from foreign leaders about some of the wackier suggestions that are being made.”

This dovetailed with reporting from the time about international “alarm” over Trump from officials in Europe, the Middle East, Latin America, and Asia.

A senior NATO official was quoted telling Reuters last March, “European diplomats are constantly asking about Trump’s rise with disbelief and, now, growing panic.”

That was when Trump was still one of several GOP candidates. Now that he’s poised to take office, our allies’ disbelief and panic is far more acute.
To borrow Trump’s own rhetoric, America’s friends ... (show quote)









GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO PRESIDENT "45" DONALD J. TRUMP!!! "DRAIN THAT {RADICAL SECULAR LIBERAL "REGRESSIVE" LEFTY} SWAMP!!!

Reply
 
 
Jan 17, 2017 15:34:40   #
robmull Loc: florida
 
permafrost wrote:
To borrow Trump’s own rhetoric, America’s friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us.

Vox’s Zack Beauchamp had a good piece yesterday on the global landscape.
Bashing NATO and the European Union, and alienating Germany, is a plan for tearing apart US relations with the EU – for weakening the agreements that underpin America’s status as the sole superpower and that maintain peace on the European continent.

It also means that Trump is talking about radically reshaping US foreign policy in a way that would significantly boost Putin’s influence while leaving America’s allies scrambling to figure out where they stand and how much they can trust in the future stability of an international system that has brought unprecedented economic strength and stability to the continent for decades.

“What Trump proposes is [American] geopolitical suicide,” Daniel Nexon, a professor at Georgetown who studies great power politics, writes at the Lawyers, Guns, and Money blog. “Make no mistake: you should be very worried right now.”
About a year ago, a reporter asked President Obama whether Trump was “already doing damage” to America’s reputation. “The answer … is yes,” Obama responded. “I think that I’ve been very clear earlier that I am getting questions constantly from foreign leaders about some of the wackier suggestions that are being made.”

This dovetailed with reporting from the time about international “alarm” over Trump from officials in Europe, the Middle East, Latin America, and Asia.

A senior NATO official was quoted telling Reuters last March, “European diplomats are constantly asking about Trump’s rise with disbelief and, now, growing panic.”

That was when Trump was still one of several GOP candidates. Now that he’s poised to take office, our allies’ disbelief and panic is far more acute.
To borrow Trump’s own rhetoric, America’s friends ... (show quote)










GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO PRESIDENT "45" DONALD J. TRUMP!!! "DRAIN THAT {RADICAL SECULAR LIBERAL "REGRESSIVE" LEFTY} SWAMP!!!"

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 15:41:16   #
Rivers
 
permafrost wrote:
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized President Obama’s approach to foreign policy, they invariably complain that his priorities are backwards. America’s allies, the argument goes, no longer count on us, while America’s adversaries no longer fear us.

In a foreign policy speech delivered in April, none other than Donald Trump, reading from his trusted teleprompter, argued, “[O]ur friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us. We’ve had a president who dislikes our friends and bows to our enemies.”

The entire line of attack has long been deeply ironic. Under Obama’s presidency, the United States’ international reputation has improved considerably over the Bush/Cheney era, and our allies’ confidence in our leadership has grown. Now that Trump is poised to take power, however, anxiety and mistrust among American allies has reached levels unseen in generations. The Washington Post reported yesterday:
European leaders grappled with the jolting reality of President-elect Donald Trump’s skepticism of the European Union on Monday, saying they might have to stand without the United States at their side during the Trump presidency.

The possibility of an unprecedented breach in transatlantic relations came after Trump – who embraced anti-E.U. insurgents during his campaign and following his victory – said in weekend remarks that the 28-nation European Union was bound for a breakup and that he was indifferent to its fate. He also said NATO’s current configuration is “obsolete,” even as he professed commitment to Europe’s defense.
To put it mildly, the president-elect’s weekend comments have rattled much of the world. As we noted yesterday, Trump sat down with two European newspapers for an interview in which he dismissed NATO as “obsolete”; criticized German Chancellor Angela Merkel for assisting Syrian refugees (whom Trump referred to as “illegals”); said the United States “should be ready to trust” Russian President Vladimir Putin; and endorsed the further unraveling of the European Union.

The Post added that Trump’s attitudes “have raised alarm bells across Europe,” as America’s traditional allies come to the “painful realization” that Europeans may no longer have “the full backing of their oldest, strongest partner.”

The article went on to note, “The full ramifications of a potential breakdown in transatlantic ties are so extensive, they are difficult to total…. For decades, European nations and the United States have worked tightly together on issues of war, peace and wealth.”

This has been the backbone of the world order for generations, and in the United States, there’s been a steady, bipartisan commitment to the Western alliance. American allies counted on this international partnership to endure.

And now countries around the globe are anxious, if not terrified, because Americans elected an erratic amateur who says he intends to shuffle the diplomatic deck, partnering not with U.S. allies, but with a U.S. adversary – Russia – which apparently played a role in putting Donald Trump in the Oval Office.
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized ... (show quote)


Blowing more smoke out your ass again, I see.

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 15:52:03   #
rick1958
 
The EU has destroyed itself by letting the islamic hordes overrun their countries and Merkel is the chief architect of European culture's demise. I only hope it is not too late to reverse the damage and remove the invaders.

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 16:11:15   #
tugboat
 
permafrost wrote:
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized President Obama’s approach to foreign policy, they invariably complain that his priorities are backwards. America’s allies, the argument goes, no longer count on us, while America’s adversaries no longer fear us.

In a foreign policy speech delivered in April, none other than Donald Trump, reading from his trusted teleprompter, argued, “[O]ur friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us. We’ve had a president who dislikes our friends and bows to our enemies.”

The entire line of attack has long been deeply ironic. Under Obama’s presidency, the United States’ international reputation has improved considerably over the Bush/Cheney era, and our allies’ confidence in our leadership has grown. Now that Trump is poised to take power, however, anxiety and mistrust among American allies has reached levels unseen in generations. The Washington Post reported yesterday:
European leaders grappled with the jolting reality of President-elect Donald Trump’s skepticism of the European Union on Monday, saying they might have to stand without the United States at their side during the Trump presidency.

The possibility of an unprecedented breach in transatlantic relations came after Trump – who embraced anti-E.U. insurgents during his campaign and following his victory – said in weekend remarks that the 28-nation European Union was bound for a breakup and that he was indifferent to its fate. He also said NATO’s current configuration is “obsolete,” even as he professed commitment to Europe’s defense.
To put it mildly, the president-elect’s weekend comments have rattled much of the world. As we noted yesterday, Trump sat down with two European newspapers for an interview in which he dismissed NATO as “obsolete”; criticized German Chancellor Angela Merkel for assisting Syrian refugees (whom Trump referred to as “illegals”); said the United States “should be ready to trust” Russian President Vladimir Putin; and endorsed the further unraveling of the European Union.

The Post added that Trump’s attitudes “have raised alarm bells across Europe,” as America’s traditional allies come to the “painful realization” that Europeans may no longer have “the full backing of their oldest, strongest partner.”

The article went on to note, “The full ramifications of a potential breakdown in transatlantic ties are so extensive, they are difficult to total…. For decades, European nations and the United States have worked tightly together on issues of war, peace and wealth.”

This has been the backbone of the world order for generations, and in the United States, there’s been a steady, bipartisan commitment to the Western alliance. American allies counted on this international partnership to endure.

And now countries around the globe are anxious, if not terrified, because Americans elected an erratic amateur who says he intends to shuffle the diplomatic deck, partnering not with U.S. allies, but with a U.S. adversary – Russia – which apparently played a role in putting Donald Trump in the Oval Office.
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized ... (show quote)


Maybe it's time our allies learn our country is tired of being the big protector of the world and need to take care of America first.We are getting ripped off nonstop from friends and foes alike.Is Trump wrong for blaming Merkel for Germany's Syrian crisis? He's speaking the truth cause he knows it can happen here.I'm worried more for this country than any other. We are in big trouble and Trump didn't cause it.

Reply
 
 
Jan 17, 2017 16:35:57   #
mouset783 Loc: Oklahoma
 
Rivers wrote:
Blowing more smoke out your ass again, I see.


He is the worlds best at that which is is his only talent.I wonder How he gets the bong smoke from his mouth to his behind or does he stick the bong up there to save a trip?

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 17:34:15   #
CDM Loc: Florida
 
permafrost wrote:
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized President Obama’s approach to foreign policy, they invariably complain that his priorities are backwards. America’s allies, the argument goes, no longer count on us, while America’s adversaries no longer fear us.

In a foreign policy speech delivered in April, none other than Donald Trump, reading from his trusted teleprompter, argued, “[O]ur friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us. We’ve had a president who dislikes our friends and bows to our enemies.”

The entire line of attack has long been deeply ironic. Under Obama’s presidency, the United States’ international reputation has improved considerably over the Bush/Cheney era, and our allies’ confidence in our leadership has grown. Now that Trump is poised to take power, however, anxiety and mistrust among American allies has reached levels unseen in generations. The Washington Post reported yesterday:
European leaders grappled with the jolting reality of President-elect Donald Trump’s skepticism of the European Union on Monday, saying they might have to stand without the United States at their side during the Trump presidency.

The possibility of an unprecedented breach in transatlantic relations came after Trump – who embraced anti-E.U. insurgents during his campaign and following his victory – said in weekend remarks that the 28-nation European Union was bound for a breakup and that he was indifferent to its fate. He also said NATO’s current configuration is “obsolete,” even as he professed commitment to Europe’s defense.
To put it mildly, the president-elect’s weekend comments have rattled much of the world. As we noted yesterday, Trump sat down with two European newspapers for an interview in which he dismissed NATO as “obsolete”; criticized German Chancellor Angela Merkel for assisting Syrian refugees (whom Trump referred to as “illegals”); said the United States “should be ready to trust” Russian President Vladimir Putin; and endorsed the further unraveling of the European Union.

The Post added that Trump’s attitudes “have raised alarm bells across Europe,” as America’s traditional allies come to the “painful realization” that Europeans may no longer have “the full backing of their oldest, strongest partner.”

The article went on to note, “The full ramifications of a potential breakdown in transatlantic ties are so extensive, they are difficult to total…. For decades, European nations and the United States have worked tightly together on issues of war, peace and wealth.”

This has been the backbone of the world order for generations, and in the United States, there’s been a steady, bipartisan commitment to the Western alliance. American allies counted on this international partnership to endure.

And now countries around the globe are anxious, if not terrified, because Americans elected an erratic amateur who says he intends to shuffle the diplomatic deck, partnering not with U.S. allies, but with a U.S. adversary – Russia – which apparently played a role in putting Donald Trump in the Oval Office.
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized ... (show quote)




"Under Obama’s presidency, the United States€™ international reputation has improved considerably over the Bush/Cheney era, and our allies’ confidence in our leadership has grown." What in the f**k have you been ingesting???? If you pull your head out of your Leftist ass and take a look at something besides Hollywood rhetoric and CNN bullshit you will see that the free, first world is generally looking forward to an American leader who understands the strength of the country and how to use it. Obama is universally criticized for his false bravado, red lines and generally embracing our enemies while shunning our friends.

We had the middle east under the best control in 50 years ... Obama personally and purposefully over saw the complete destruction of that progress resulting in the rise of ISIS an outcome that many, many believe was his objective.

You Leftist America Hating degenerates are enough to make a maggot puke ... Here's the new truth to foreign relations;



Reply
Jan 17, 2017 17:35:23   #
mouset783 Loc: Oklahoma
 
CDM wrote:
"Under Obama’s presidency, the United States€™ international reputation has improved considerably over the Bush/Cheney era, and our allies’ confidence in our leadership has grown." What in the f**k have you been ingesting???? If you pull your head out of your Leftist ass and take a look at something besides Hollywood rhetoric and CNN bullshit you will see that the free, first world is generally looking forward to an American leader who understands the strength of the country and how to use it. Obama is universally criticized for his false bravado, red lines and generally embracing our enemies while shunning our friends.

We had the middle east under the best control in 50 years ... Obama personally and purposefully over saw the complete destruction of that progress resulting in the rise of ISIS an outcome that many, many believe was his objective.

You Leftist America Hating degenerates are enough to make a maggot puke ... Here's the new truth to foreign relations;
"Under Obama’s presidency, the United State... (show quote)



Reply
Jan 17, 2017 18:16:02   #
steve66613
 
mouset783 wrote:
img src="https://static.onepoliticalplaza.com/ima... (show quote)


Most of Europe would not exist today if it weren't for several western nation's youth laying down their lives in the '40's.

So, how do they thank us? Mostly, by sucking us "financially dry" for "protection". All the while, importing eastern hordes of rapists and murders. No doubt, they'll be begging us to bail them out.

NATO? How did that work in Ukraine? Syria? Libya and others?

Reply
 
 
Jan 17, 2017 19:24:56   #
permafrost Loc: Minnesota
 
steve66613 wrote:
Most of Europe would not exist today if it weren't for several western nation's youth laying down their lives in the '40's.

So, how do they thank us? Mostly, by sucking us "financially dry" for "protection". All the while, importing eastern hordes of rapists and murders. No doubt, they'll be begging us to bail them out.

NATO? How did that work in Ukraine? Syria? Libya and others?




666,

I would have to dig for the situation covering Ukraine. Syria and Libya... NATO pretty will bombed Libya to desert.. Syria, more selective but that 3 sided war is far more complicated. ISIS is about finished, other groups not so much and Assad is still in place... But NATO forces pretty selective..

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 20:07:16   #
vernon
 
permafrost wrote:
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized President Obama’s approach to foreign policy, they invariably complain that his priorities are backwards. America’s allies, the argument goes, no longer count on us, while America’s adversaries no longer fear us.

In a foreign policy speech delivered in April, none other than Donald Trump, reading from his trusted teleprompter, argued, “[O]ur friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us. We’ve had a president who dislikes our friends and bows to our enemies.”

The entire line of attack has long been deeply ironic. Under Obama’s presidency, the United States’ international reputation has improved considerably over the Bush/Cheney era, and our allies’ confidence in our leadership has grown. Now that Trump is poised to take power, however, anxiety and mistrust among American allies has reached levels unseen in generations. The Washington Post reported yesterday:
European leaders grappled with the jolting reality of President-elect Donald Trump’s skepticism of the European Union on Monday, saying they might have to stand without the United States at their side during the Trump presidency.

The possibility of an unprecedented breach in transatlantic relations came after Trump – who embraced anti-E.U. insurgents during his campaign and following his victory – said in weekend remarks that the 28-nation European Union was bound for a breakup and that he was indifferent to its fate. He also said NATO’s current configuration is “obsolete,” even as he professed commitment to Europe’s defense.
To put it mildly, the president-elect’s weekend comments have rattled much of the world. As we noted yesterday, Trump sat down with two European newspapers for an interview in which he dismissed NATO as “obsolete”; criticized German Chancellor Angela Merkel for assisting Syrian refugees (whom Trump referred to as “illegals”); said the United States “should be ready to trust” Russian President Vladimir Putin; and endorsed the further unraveling of the European Union.

The Post added that Trump’s attitudes “have raised alarm bells across Europe,” as America’s traditional allies come to the “painful realization” that Europeans may no longer have “the full backing of their oldest, strongest partner.”

The article went on to note, “The full ramifications of a potential breakdown in transatlantic ties are so extensive, they are difficult to total…. For decades, European nations and the United States have worked tightly together on issues of war, peace and wealth.”

This has been the backbone of the world order for generations, and in the United States, there’s been a steady, bipartisan commitment to the Western alliance. American allies counted on this international partnership to endure.

And now countries around the globe are anxious, if not terrified, because Americans elected an erratic amateur who says he intends to shuffle the diplomatic deck, partnering not with U.S. allies, but with a U.S. adversary – Russia – which apparently played a role in putting Donald Trump in the Oval Office.
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized ... (show quote)


you closed with another dumassed lie,you guys listen to your propagandist and just come on carrying it like you think it's true but you really know better.as far as an erratic amateur you must be talking about obama who has done nothing but stir the race hate all his life.
i have not heard one thing about a job he held in his life except as an agitator.

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 20:23:18   #
CDM Loc: Florida
 
steve66613 wrote:
Most of Europe would not exist today if it weren't for several western nation's youth laying down their lives in the '40's.

So, how do they thank us? Mostly, by sucking us "financially dry" for "protection". All the while, importing eastern hordes of rapists and murders. No doubt, they'll be begging us to bail them out.

NATO? How did that work in Ukraine? Syria? Libya and others?



Exactly. What flag draped the coffins of the thousands of souls under the sea of white crosses on the French coast? Not Frogland! And you're absolutely correct; how do they repay us? By pissing on us. That the likes of Obama set foot on that ground is an unimaginable desecration and embarrassment.

NATO is as farcical as the U.N. and has been totally ineffective from it's inception. This is born out in it's documented history. It and the U.N. are both devices designed to be capitalized (capital, much of which ends up in the hands of anti-U.S. entities) primarily by the U.S. and solely reliant on the U.S. war machine when they get in trouble. Trump is absolutely right that IF - big IF- NATO is to exist the NATO cronies will have to pony up or we get out.

It's almost a shame that Leftists rely solely on Collective Central, Hollywood and CNN for their information. If they took a little bit of individual initiative and could read for comprehension (something government schools avoid teaching) they would know these things and not post the bullshit they do; current thread Exhibit A ...

Reply
Jan 17, 2017 21:03:03   #
Sonny Magoo Loc: Where pot pie is boiled in a kettle
 
permafrost wrote:
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized President Obama’s approach to foreign policy, they invariably complain that his priorities are backwards. America’s allies, the argument goes, no longer count on us, while America’s adversaries no longer fear us.

In a foreign policy speech delivered in April, none other than Donald Trump, reading from his trusted teleprompter, argued, “[O]ur friends are beginning to think they can’t depend on us. We’ve had a president who dislikes our friends and bows to our enemies.”

The entire line of attack has long been deeply ironic. Under Obama’s presidency, the United States’ international reputation has improved considerably over the Bush/Cheney era, and our allies’ confidence in our leadership has grown. Now that Trump is poised to take power, however, anxiety and mistrust among American allies has reached levels unseen in generations. The Washington Post reported yesterday:
European leaders grappled with the jolting reality of President-elect Donald Trump’s skepticism of the European Union on Monday, saying they might have to stand without the United States at their side during the Trump presidency.

The possibility of an unprecedented breach in transatlantic relations came after Trump – who embraced anti-E.U. insurgents during his campaign and following his victory – said in weekend remarks that the 28-nation European Union was bound for a breakup and that he was indifferent to its fate. He also said NATO’s current configuration is “obsolete,” even as he professed commitment to Europe’s defense.
To put it mildly, the president-elect’s weekend comments have rattled much of the world. As we noted yesterday, Trump sat down with two European newspapers for an interview in which he dismissed NATO as “obsolete”; criticized German Chancellor Angela Merkel for assisting Syrian refugees (whom Trump referred to as “illegals”); said the United States “should be ready to trust” Russian President Vladimir Putin; and endorsed the further unraveling of the European Union.

The Post added that Trump’s attitudes “have raised alarm bells across Europe,” as America’s traditional allies come to the “painful realization” that Europeans may no longer have “the full backing of their oldest, strongest partner.”

The article went on to note, “The full ramifications of a potential breakdown in transatlantic ties are so extensive, they are difficult to total…. For decades, European nations and the United States have worked tightly together on issues of war, peace and wealth.”

This has been the backbone of the world order for generations, and in the United States, there’s been a steady, bipartisan commitment to the Western alliance. American allies counted on this international partnership to endure.

And now countries around the globe are anxious, if not terrified, because Americans elected an erratic amateur who says he intends to shuffle the diplomatic deck, partnering not with U.S. allies, but with a U.S. adversary – Russia – which apparently played a role in putting Donald Trump in the Oval Office.
In recent years, when Republicans have criticized ... (show quote)


The mental illness thing is coming through loud and clear here folks. What Trump says and how you process it, is blinded or worse. Trump is correct. Our allies (the people of Germany, England, France, etc.. and NOT The corrupt globalists like Merkel) have NOT been able to count on us. Especially for leadership. I know this may shock you , but most of the world including African Americans, have more confidence in a white man to get good things done, and have success, than an African.

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