The US National Security Strategy: Implications for Europe and for Washington's Global Priorities
6 Articles
6 Articles
The Future is Emerging From Washington and Budapest
It is the Budapest effect. Having worked for three years at a conservative think tank in the Hungarian capital, the newly released National Security Strategy of the Trump administration strikes me as oddly familiar. The document breathes an unmistakably Budapestian spirit, especially in its sections on Europe. The strategy paper advocates ‘the sovereign rights of nations’, labels mass migration an existential threat, and asserts that Europe is h…
Some see the US National Security Strategy as a "declaration of war." But it can also act as a helpful push – and release a new dynamic.
The announcement of the United States National Security Strategy shook Europe. But that was not enough. After that, two statements were made simultaneously by very high-ranking officials responsible for the foreign and security policy of the United States. And now it should have become clear to everyone where Washington is moving in relations with its partners in Europe.
In his new column, Eric Hendriks responds to the US National Security Strategy, in which the Trump administration argues that Europe is heading toward cultural decline due to mass migration and the undermining of national sovereignty. For Hendriks, who works in conservative Budapest, this doesn't sound extreme, but familiar: the memo reflects a worldview in which Europe is eroding its own foundations. At the same time, he warns that the coming g…
American strategy reveals the decline of globalism. And Europe still doesn't understand. By Antonio Maria Rinaldi - Economic Scenarios
The new US National Security Strategy (NSS) is not a mere technical document: it is the formal declaration that the era of globalism is over. For thirty years, Europe has cultivated the belief that it could outsource its security, its industry, and even its historical destiny. The 2025 NSS disproves this illusion with a clarity that brooks no benevolent interpretation. And if Europe continues to misunderstand it, it will be overwhelmed by events…
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