Trump's New National Security Strategy: Europe as Strategic Liability

Article author: 
Simplicius
Article date: 
8 December 2025
Article category: 
Our American Future
Medium
Article Body: 

The US has released a new National Security Strategy which re-envisions the Monroe Doctrine for a new century. Bernhard at MoA covered it in full here for those interested in the thorough details...

Well, why wouldn’t Trump hate the new Europe? It’s a continent that has turned its back on civil liberties, the principles for which America itself was supposed to stand first and foremost...

Most interesting in the above is the mention of one particular aspect of Trump’s new document, which essentially reframes US’s waning support for Europe as a backlash against Europe’s continued policy of erasure of its own peoples and cultures...

When the demographics of your chief allies completely revert to a people with understandably questionable loyalties to the very security architectures which underpin your key alliance—well, that becomes quite a tangible problem...

When your very own allies have shifted their core demographic to the point that you must worry about the civic, social, and cultural underpinning of the agreements with those very allies, it’s time to rethink relevant strategic alliances you have with them...

In the US in particular, this was highlighted in the early 2000s in a kind of cult-essay written by Stephen Steinlight, called "The Jewish Stake in America’s Changing Demography"... His argument is that the mass migration sweeping through the US will eventually alter the demographics of the nation to such an extent that it will pose a serious threat to Jewish-American ‘special interests’, given that the predominantly Latin-American and Muslim immigrants will lack the same inculcated sense of respect for Jewish values and guilt for the Holocaust that native-born Americans possess...

If the US can have an entire hemisphere to itself... then surely Russia can be afforded the right to do the same anywhere along its borders...

... the world is entering an era of Great Powers consolidating their spheres of influence amidst a historic breakdown of geopolitical blocs and the ushering in of multipolarity...

In many ways, it signals another final death knell for globalism, though not necessarily—in the case of the US—neocon-ism.