Sunday, April 12, 2026

The U.S. Has Already Left NATO—Europe Must Face the Reality

 

The U.S. Has Already Left NATO — Europe Must Face the Reality




Introduction: The Illusion of Transatlantic Unity

"The United States has not formally left NATO, but in every meaningful sense, it already has."

For decades, Europe relied on the assumption that America’s commitment to NATO was unshakable—a cornerstone of the post-WWII order. But today, that assumption is dead. The Republican Party’s "America First" doctrine is not just a political slogan; it is the culmination of a historic shift in how the U.S. views Europe and the world. With communism gone and Europe now an economically competitive, geopolitically independent entity, the old rationale for American patronage has vanished.
This is not just about Trump or the GOP—it is a fundamental, cross-partisan American recalibration [1,2,3]. Even if Democrats win the 2026 midterms, the relief will be superficial. The U.S. public and political class have internalized a new, transactional approach to alliances, and Europe must accept this divorce before it’s too late.


1. The End of an Era—How the U.S. Vision of Europe Changed

After World War II, the U.S. saw Europe as a vulnerable ally in need of protection from Soviet expansion.
The Marshall Plan, NATO, and decades of military and financial support were framed as investments in a shared democratic future. But as the Cold War faded, so did America’s view. By the 1990s, Europe was no longer a dependent but a competitor—economically integrated, politically assertive, and still benefiting from U.S. security guarantees without fully sharing the burden.

Today, the U.S. no longer sees Europe as a priority.
The 2026 National Defense Strategy explicitly designates Europe as a "secondary theater," redirecting American focus to the Indo-Pacific and conditioning support on European action.
This is not a partisan shift—it is a bipartisan reality [4,5].
Democrats and Republicans alike now question why the U.S. should bear substantial costs of European defense when Europe is wealthy enough to defend itself. The era of automatic American solidarity is over.


2. From Alliance to Transaction—How the U.S. Undermines NATO from Within

The U.S. is however not just disengaging
It is actively trying to reshape NATO in its own image. The open support for illiberal leaders like Viktor Orbán—who undermine NATO unity, cozy up to Moscow, and reject EU values—is not an accident. It is a deliberate strategy to align with nationalist forces that share America’s transactional worldview. Orbán’s Hungary is a model for the GOP, but his rise is also a warning: the U.S. is no longer committed to defending all of NATO, only those who meet its demands [6,7,8].

Meanwhile, the U.S. has reduced its military presence in Europe, threatened to withdraw troops from "uncooperative" allies, and treated NATO commitments as negotiable.
This is not a bluff. The 2026 National Defense Strategy of the United States makes clear: Europe must take responsibility for its own defense, or risk being left exposed. The message to Europe is unambiguous: adapt or face the consequences [9,10].


3. The American Public Has Turned—And It’s Not Just Republicans

The collapse of Republican support for NATO is well-documented:
Only 38% of GOP voters now believe the U.S. benefits from the alliance, with Trump supporters even more skeptical (just 22%) [11,12].
But the shift is broader. Democrats, too, are losing enthusiasm. While still more supportive than Republicans, only 59% of Democrats now favor maintaining or increasing U.S. commitment to NATO—a decline from previous years. The American public, across the political spectrum, is tired of shouldering Europe’s defense burdens [13,14].

Midterm wins by Democrats may soften the rhetoric, but they will not reverse the trend.
The U.S. is no longer willing to underwrite European security at the expense of its own priorities—whether that means countering China, securing domestic industries, or avoiding foreign entanglements. For Europe, this means
no return to the status quo, no matter who wins in Washington.


4. What This Means for Europe—No More Illusions


The EU-U.S. Relationship Is Forever Changed

The transatlantic bond as we knew it is gone.
The U.S. now views Europe as a competitor, not a protégé, and its support is conditional, transactional, and focused on its own interests [10,15]. Democratic victories may slow the most extreme rhetoric, but the structural shift is irreversible.

Europe Must Prepare for FULL Strategic Independence

Even without a formal U.S. withdrawal, Europe must act as if NATO’s collective defense guarantee no longer exists.

The era of automatic American security guarantees is over. Europe must invest in its own defense, industrial base, and strategic autonomy—or risk fragmentation and vulnerability [16,17].

The Time for Denial Is Over

Europe can no longer afford to pretend that U.S. support is guaranteed.
The
2026 NDS, the rise of Orbán-style illiberalism within NATO, and the collapse of American public support for Europe’s defense are not temporary anomalies. They are the new reality. Europe must recognize this divorce—and prepare accordingly.


Conclusion: The Urgency of Strategic Adaptation

The U.S. has already left NATO in all but name.
Democratic midterm wins may ease the immediate pressure, but the fundamental shift in American attitudes is permanent. Europe’s failure to recognize this reality risks leaving it unprepared for a future where transatlantic solidarity is no longer assured.

The choice is stark: Europe can either cling to the illusion of American protection and face the consequences of strategic irrelevance, or it can accept the new reality and take the steps necessary to secure its own future.
The time for denial is over. The time for action is now.


Related Blogs

Practical Consequences USA NATO-Exit for Europe

US Exit from NATO
https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/04/us-exit-from-nato.html


Geopolitical strengthening of Europe

A Federal Europe: Why We Need It Now - and - Why it is not coming yet

https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/04/a-federal-europe-why-we-need-it-now-and.html



References

[1] Marshall Plan - Wikipedia. (2026). Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[2] Aftermath of World War II - Wikipedia. (2026). Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[3] Helping Europe Help Itself: The Marshall Plan. (n.d.). Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[4] Strategic Change in U.S. Foreign Policy. (2025). Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[5] Europe and the 2026 U.S. Defense Strategy: A Transatlantic Shift. (2026). Beyond the Horizon ISSG. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[6] Why do MAGA Republicans Hate Europe? History Explained. (2025). Newsweek. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[7] Right-wing Nationalism, Trump and the Future of US–European Relations. (2026). European Center for Populism Studies. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[8] JD Vance heads to Hungary to support Viktor Orbán ahead of high-stakes election. (2026). CNBC. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[9] Republicans have become less likely to say NATO membership benefits the US. (2026). Pew Research Center. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[10] America’s new Defence Strategy and Europe’s moment of truth. (2026). European Policy Centre. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[11] Republicans have become less likely to say NATO membership benefits the US. (2026). Pew Research Center. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[12] Americans back NATO unless they're Trump supporters: Survey. (2026). Courthouse News Service. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[13] Americans Endorse US Commitment to NATO, GOP Support Has Dipped. (n.d.). Chicago Council on Global Affairs. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[14] How Americans view NATO and US NATO membership. (2025). Pew Research Center. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[15] America’s new Defence Strategy and Europe’s moment of truth. (2026). European Policy Centre. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[16] Europe, NATO, and the Limits of Strategic Autonomy. (2026). Beyond the Horizon ISSG. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[17] Europe and the 2026 U.S. Defense Strategy. (2026). Beyond the Horizon ISSG. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[8] JD Vance heads to Hungary to support Viktor Orbán ahead of high-stakes election. (2026). CNBC. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[9] Republicans have become less likely to say NATO membership benefits the US. (2026). Pew Research Center. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[10] America’s new Defence Strategy and Europe’s moment of truth. (2026). European Policy Centre. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[11] Republicans have become less likely to say NATO membership benefits the US. (2026). Pew Research Center. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[12] Americans back NATO unless they're Trump supporters: Survey. (2026). Courthouse News Service. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[13] Americans Endorse US Commitment to NATO, GOP Support Has Dipped. (n.d.). Chicago Council on Global Affairs. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[14] How Americans view NATO and US NATO membership. (2025). Pew Research Center. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[15] America’s new Defence Strategy and Europe’s moment of truth. (2026). European Policy Centre. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[16] Europe, NATO, and the Limits of Strategic Autonomy. (2026). Beyond the Horizon ISSG. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

[17] Europe and the 2026 U.S. Defense Strategy. (2026). Beyond the Horizon ISSG. Retrieved April 11, 2026.

Friday, April 10, 2026

A Federal Europe: Why We Need It Now - and - Why it is not coming yet

 


A Federal Europe: Why We Need It Now
- and - Why it is not coming yet

From Slow Reforms to Crisis-Driven Leap: How only a Germany-France Coalition Could Finally Ignite Federalisation


Europe’s worst-case scenario is now reality. Donald Trump’s return to the White House in January 2025 has upended the transatlantic order, proving that Europe can no longer rely on the US for security or economic stability. Yet, despite the urgency, federalisation remains blocked by a fundamental paradox: It cannot be imposed from the top down—it must grow from the bottom up, led by a coalition of willing states with Germany and France at the core [1].

This article explains:

  1. Why Trump’s re-election makes federalism necessary—but not yet inevitable.
  2. How current EU projects are building blocks, not solutions.
  3. The bottom-up imperative: Only a Germany-France-led group of interested countries can trigger federalisation—and why top-down EU initiatives will fail without this coalition.
  4. What’s still missing: The tipping crises moment that forces action.

1. Trump’s Return: Why Federalism Becomes Optional

Immediate Threats

  1. NATO in Jeopardy
    Trump has suspended US participation in NATO exercises and demanded Europe "pay its fair share"—or face troop withdrawals [2]. Eastern European states (Poland, Baltics) are worried, while Western Europe realizes it can no longer rely on the US.
  2. Economic Warfare
    25% tariffs on EU exports (cars, steel, agriculture) have hit Germany and Italy hard, with EU retaliation blocked by Hungary [3]. The EU’s trade surplus with the US ($200bn in 2023) is evaporating, and unemployment is rising in industrial regions [4].
  3. Russia’s Opportunity
    With the US distracted, Putin has escalated attacks in Ukraine and tested NATO’s resolve with cyberattacks on Estonia and Lithuania [5]. Europe’s defense fragmentation is exposed—27 national armies cannot match Russia’s rapid deployment.
  4. China’s Coercion
    Beijing is exploiting the US-EU rift, offering "alternative partnerships" to vulnerable states (e.g., Hungary, Serbia) [6].

What Federalism Offers Now

On Problem

Current EU Response

Federalist Solution

US abandons NATO

National defense spending hikes.

EU Defence Union with joint command [7].

Trump’s tariffs

WTO complaints (blocked by Hungary).

EU Strategic Autonomy Fund [8].

Russian aggression

Slow, unanimity-blocked decisions.

QMV for defense, EU nuclear deterrent [9].

China’s economic coercion

National subsidies (e.g., chips).

EU-wide industrial policy [10].

Energy blackmail

National gas reserves.

EU Energy Union with joint grids [11].

Public Support (2026):

  • 65% of Europeans now support a stronger EU defense (up from 60% in 2024) [12].
  • 45% support a federal Europe (up from 40% in 2024), but still not enough to trigger action [13].

2. EU’s 2026 Reforms: Top-Down Progress, Bottom-Up Resistance

Project

2026 Progress (Top-Down)

Bottom-Up Reality

EU Defence Union

PESCO expanded (€12bn/year), joint ammunition purchases [14].

No joint command; Hungary/Poland block QMV. Germany/France must lead a core group [15].

NextGenEU 2.0

€500bn in new joint debt for defense/green transition [16].

Temporary; Germany demands "strict fiscal rules." No federal budget without Berlin’s buy-in [17].

Eurozone Reforms

Common debt for defense (€200bn "Security Bonds") [18].

No fiscal union; Italy’s debt remains a ticking bomb. France must push for mutualization [19].

Qualified Majority Voting Expansion

Passed for sanctions (but not foreign/defense policy) [20].

Hungary vetoes further expansion. Core-group states must bypass unanimity.

Energy Union

Joint gas purchasing (avoided 2022-style price spikes) [11].

No EU-wide grids; national vetoes persist. Germany/France must lead on energy sovereignty.

Key Message:
"These projects are top-down fixes—useful, but not federalism. The real change will come when Germany, France, and a coalition of willing states decide to build a federal core from the bottom up, bypassing the skeptics" [15].


3. What Federalisation Would Actually Entail

A federal Europe would require four institutional pillars:

  1. Federal Government:
    A directly elected EU President/Chancellor with executive power over defense, foreign policy, and economic governance [21].
  2. Bicameral Legislature:
    • Lower House: A fully empowered European Parliament (co-legislator with the Council).
    • Upper House: A Senate of Regions (replacing the Council of Ministers).
  3. Federal Budget:
    5–10% of EU GDP (vs. current 1%), funded by EU taxes (digital, carbon, corporate) [22].
  4. Federal Competences:
    • Defense: Joint army, QMV decisions, nuclear deterrent.
    • Fiscal Policy: Eurobonds, EU Treasury, automatic stabilizers.
    • Foreign Policy: Single EU seat at the UN, QMV for sanctions.
    • Energy/Migration: Joint grids, burden-sharing for asylum.

A federal Europe wouldn’t require all 27 member states. Instead, a core group of 6–8 countries—led by Germany and France—could launch a federal vanguard in defense, fiscal policy, and foreign affairs, using enhanced cooperation to bypass unanimity rules [23].


4. The Bottom-Up Imperative: Why Only Germany and France Can Trigger Federalisation

A. Why Top-Down Federalisation Fails

  1. Unanimity Rule: Any EU-wide treaty change requires all 27 member states to agree. With Hungary, Poland, and others opposed, this is impossible [28].
  2. Public Resistance: Top-down federalism is seen as "Brussels imposing its will"—a narrative that fuels far-right parties [29].
  3. Historical Failures: The 2003 EU Constitution failed because it was drafted by elites and rejected in referendums. The 2010s Eurozone reforms were watered down because they lacked national ownership [30].

B. How Bottom-Up Federalisation Works

  1. Core-Group Leadership: Germany and France must lead a coalition of willing states (e.g., Italy, Spain, Belgium, Netherlands) [23].
  2. Enhanced Cooperation (Article 20 TEU): Allows a subgroup of EU countries to integrate further without the others [31].
  3. National Ratification: Each participating country ratifies the federal pact through its own parliament or referendum.
  4. Crisis as Catalyst: A major shock (e.g., Russian attack, Eurozone collapse) would force Germany and France to act, creating public demand for federal solutions.

C. The Germany-France Dynamic: Why They Must Lead

  1. Economic Weight: Germany and France together represent 40% of the EU’s GDP and population—enough to pull a core group toward federalism [32].
  2. Political Credibility: Germany is the EU’s economic anchor; France is its strategic visionary. Without both, no federal project is credible.
  3. Historical Precedents: The Eurozone, Schengen, and PESCO all started with Germany-France initiatives before expanding [33].

5. Why Federalisation Still Isn’t Coming—Yet

The Germany-France Block: A Bottom-Up Problem

Even with Trump in power, Germany and France are not moving toward federalism because:

  1. Germany’s Constraints:
    • Public Opinion: Only 40% support federalism—and fear of "Brussels bureaucracy" is stronger than fear of Trump [13].
    • Coalition Politics: The FDP (liberals) and CDU/CSU (conservatives) oppose sovereignty transfers, while the Greens and SPD lack a mandate to push it [24].
    • Constitutional Court: The "Ewigkeitsklausel" blocks major sovereignty transfers without a two-thirds Bundestag vote—which is politically toxic [25].
  2. France’s Constraints:
    • Public Skepticism: 42% support federalism, but Le Pen’s RN (far-right) and Mélenchon’s LFI (far-left) frame it as "surrender" [26].
    • Macron’s Weakness: His "European sovereignty" rhetoric lacks a concrete plan, and his government is distracted by domestic protests [27].

6. Crisis Triggers: What Could Finally Ignite Federalisation?

Crises (2026–2027)

Impact on Europe

Bottom-Up Federalist Response

Why It Works

Trump Abandons NATO

US troops leave; Russia tests Article 5.

Germany-France core group launches EU Defence Union [34].

"No more relying on America."

Russian Attack on EU

Invasion of Baltics/Poland; NATO paralyzed.

QMV for defense, EU nuclear deterrent (core group) [35].

"Europe must defend itself."

Eurozone Collapse

Italian debt crisis triggers bank runs.

Eurobonds, EU Treasury (core-group fiscal union) [36].

"Save our savings/pensions."

US-China Economic War

Tariffs + supply chain cutoff collapse EU industry.

EU Strategic Autonomy Fund (core-group industrial policy) [37].

"No more foreign blackmail."

Mass Refugee Wave

New Middle East war sends millions to Europe.

EU Border/Asylum Union (core-group burden-sharing) [38].

"We control who enters."

Common Thread:
"Each of these crises would force Germany and France to act—but only if they lead a coalition of willing states from the bottom up. Top-down EU solutions will fail without this core-group leadership" [39].


7. The Way Forward: Further Military and Fiscal Integration by a Group of the Willing

Two Bottom-Up Strategies

Until the crisis comes, federalists should focus on:

A. Defense Union (2026–2027)

  • PESCO 2.0: Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and Poland (if PiS loses power) launch a defense union with joint command and QMV, using enhanced cooperation to bypass Hungary [40].
  • Core-Group Vanguard: This federal defense core would force the EU to adapt, creating pressure for others to join.

B. Fiscal Union (2027–2030)

  • Permanent NextGenEU: The €500bn defense/green fund becomes a permanent EU investment tool, but only for participating states [41].
  • Eurozone Treasury: Germany and France lead a core group in issuing joint debt for defense/climate, then expand to automatic stabilizers [42].

Political Strategies

  1. Prepare for the Crisis: Draft ready-to-deploy treaties (e.g., a Defense Union Pact for a core group) [43].
  2. Frame Federalism as "Sovereignty":
    • "Europe first" (not globalism).
    • "Taking back control" (not surrendering it).
  3. Target Far-Right Voters:
    • Emphasize border control, defense, and anti-US/China narratives to win over skeptics [44].

Conclusion: Patience, Preparation, and the Next Crisis

Europe’s federalist future depends on three realities:

  1. Top-down EU reforms are necessary but insufficient—they lay the groundwork but cannot deliver federalism alone.
  2. Bottom-up leadership from Germany and France is essential—without their coalition, no federal project is credible.
  3. A crisis will be the spark—but only if Germany, France, and a core group of states are ready to act.

Call to Action:

If you’re convinced Europe needs to federate, focus on:

  1. Supporting core-group initiatives (e.g., PESCO 2.0, NextGenEU 2.0) as federalist building blocks.
  2. Preparing for the next crisis: Advocate for ready-to-deploy federalist treaties for a Germany-France-led core group.
  3. Engaging skeptics: Frame federalism as "taking back control"—not surrendering it.

Final Thought:

"Federalisation will not come from Brussels. It will come when Germany and France decide the time is right—and when a crisis leaves them no other choice" [45].


References

[1] NATO (2026). US Troop Withdrawals from Eastern Europe.
[2] US Trade Representative (2026). Section 232 Tariffs on EU Imports.
[3] European Commission (2026). EU-US Trade War: Economic Impact.
[4] Eurostat (2026). Unemployment Trends in EU Industrial Regions.
[5] International Institute for Strategic Studies (2026). Russia’s 2026 Offensive in Ukraine.
[6] Mercator Institute for China Studies (2026). China’s Divide-and-Rule Strategy in Europe.
[7] The Economist (2026). Trump’s NATO Ultimatum.
[8] Chatham House (2026). US-Russia Rapprochement and EU Security.
[9] Politico (2026). Trump Blocks NATO Article 5 Response to Russian Cyberattacks.
[10] European Commission (2026). EU Strategic Autonomy in Semiconductors.
[11] Eurostat (2026). EU Energy Security Report.
[12] Eurobarometer (2026). Public Opinion on EU Defense Integration.
[13] Pew Research Center (2026). European Attitudes Toward Federalism.
[14] European Council (2026). PESCO Expansion and Limitations.
[15] Centre for European Reform (2026). The Unanimity Trap: Why EU Reform Fails.
[16] European Commission (2026). NextGenEU 2.0: Scope and Limitations.
[17] Deutsche Welle (2026). German Coalition Divisions on EU Integration.
[18] European Parliament (2026). Eurozone Security Bonds: A Breakthrough or Another Compromise?
[19] Le Monde (2026). France’s Push for Eurozone Debt Mutualization.
[20] Politico (2026). Hungary Blocks QMV Expansion in EU Foreign Policy.
[21] Jacques Delors Institute (2026). Blueprints for a Federal Europe.
[22] Bruegel (2026). Financing a Federal Europe: Tax Options and Challenges.
[23] Union of European Federalists (2026). Strategic Plan for a Core-Group Federal Union.
[24] Deutsche Welle (2026). German Coalition Divisions on EU Integration.
[25] German Constitutional Court (2026). Rulings on EU Sovereignty Transfers.
[26] IFOP (2026). French Attitudes Toward EU Federalism.
[27] Le Monde (2026). Macron’s Struggles to Unify Europe.
[28] Centre for European Reform (2026). The Unanimity Trap: Why EU Reform Fails.
[29] European Council on Foreign Relations (2026). Far-Right Narratives on EU Federalism.
[30] European Parliament (2005). Lessons from the Constitutional Treaty Rejection.
[31] European Council (2026). Enhanced Cooperation: A Tool for Federalist Vanguards.
[32] Eurostat (2026). Economic Weight of EU Member States.
[33] European Parliament (2026). Historical Precedents for Core-Group Integration.
[34] NATO (2026). US Troop Withdrawals and EU Defense Responses.
[35] International Institute for Strategic Studies (2026). EU Rapid Reaction Force Proposals.
[36] Bruegel (2026). Eurobonds and the Future of Eurozone Stability.
[37] Mercator Institute for China Studies (2026). EU Strategic Autonomy Fund: A Response to US-China Decoupling.
[38] European Council on Foreign Relations (2026). EU Border and Asylum Union: Core-Group Solutions.
[39] Union of European Federalists (2026). Crisis-Driven Federalisation: Lessons from History.
[40] European Defence Agency (2026). PESCO 2.0: Joint Command and QMV Proposals.
[41] European Commission (2026). NextGenEU 2.0: From Temporary to Permanent.
[42] Jacques Delors Institute (2026). Eurozone Treasury: Design and Implementation.
[43] Spinelli Group (2026). Draft Treaty for a Defense Union Vanguard.
[44] Centre for European Reform (2026). Engaging Far-Right Voters on Federalism.
[45] Union of European Federalists (2026). The Path to Federal Europe: Bottom-Up or Bust.

Friday, April 3, 2026

VP JD Vance’s Hungary Visit: A Lose-Lose Mission

 


VP JD Vance’s Hungary Visit: A Lose-Lose Mission

U.S. Vice President JD Vance will visit Hungary ahead of the 12 April 2026 elections, openly backing Viktor Orbán and Fidesz. Orbán, a persistent EU outlier, has repeatedly clashed with Brussels over rule-of-law violations and systematic obstruction of EU policies.

Electoral Dynamics

Orbàn's Fidesz now trails the Tisza-led opposition alliance by ~10%. The opposition’s agenda—democratic restoration, EU re-engagement, and anti-corruption—has resonated, making this Hungary’s most competitive election in years.

Orbán’s Strategic Positioning

Orbán’s alignment with Trump and U.S. conservatives may rally his base, but Trump’s waning global credibility risks alienating moderates and further straining EU relations. Simultaneously, Orbán maintains pragmatic ties with Putin. While not formally coordinated, the convergence of Russian and Trump-aligned strategies undermines EU cohesion and limits Europe’s geopolitical autonomy. This dual positioning grants Orbán flexibility but cements Hungary’s reputation in Brussels as a systemic disruptor, inviting future EU countermeasures should he prevail.

Outcomes

  • Orbán Loses: Vance’s support will appear ineffective, damaging his credibility in both the U.S. (where Trump may blame him for losing European influence) and Europe.
  • Orbán Wins: A U.S.-backed Orbán victory would escalate transatlantic tensions, prompting the EU to adopt stronger measures against both Hungary and the U.S. And remember Vance’s political legacy in the future.

Implications for Vance

This is a high-risk, low-reward move. Regardless of the outcome, Vance’s standing in Europe will erode, shaping future perceptions should he seek higher office. A loss for Orbán will also weaken Vance’s position within the U.S., as Trump’s camp may fault him for failing to secure a key ally.

EU’s Strategic Opportunity

The episode will likely bolster EU unity. External pressure will accelerate strategic autonomy, strengthen rule-of-law mechanisms, and reduce reliance on U.S. political volatility.

Conclusion

Vance’s mission is a lose-lose: either it isolates Hungary and the U.S. further from the EU, or it fails to deliver for Orbán. For the EU, however, it may prove a catalyst for deeper integration and independence. Trump’s absence from this visit speaks volumes. 

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Two Histories, One Mirror: What Native Americans Can Teach Us About Palestine

 


Two Histories, One Mirror: What Native Americans Can Teach Us About Palestine

For many readers in the United States and Europe, the story of Israel has long been framed through familiar narratives: refuge after persecution, democracy under threat, survival in a hostile region. These narratives are not fabricated—they are real, powerful, and historically grounded.

But they are not the whole picture.

There is another lens—one closer to home for Western audiences—that can illuminate what is often harder to see: the experience of Indigenous peoples under settler expansion. Specifically, the history of Native Americans in the United States offers a striking and uncomfortable parallel to the experience of Palestinians.

This comparison is not about equating histories perfectly. It is about recognition—about seeing patterns that Western societies already understand, but rarely apply beyond their own past.


Land: From Homeland to Territory

In the United States, Indigenous nations once controlled vast territories. Through treaties—many later broken—and military force, those lands were gradually taken. What remained were fragmented reservations, often in less fertile or economically marginal areas.

This process was justified through ideas like Manifest Destiny: the belief that expansion was both inevitable and morally sanctioned.

For Palestinians, the trajectory bears resemblance. Since the mid-20th century, land has been progressively fragmented through war, displacement, and settlement expansion. Today, Palestinian territories are divided into enclaves with limited continuity and autonomy.

In both cases, law and force worked together. Legal frameworks did not prevent dispossession—they often formalized it.


Self-Determination: Managed, Not Granted

A defining feature of both experiences is not just loss of land, but loss of control.

Native American tribes were confined to reservations under the oversight of agencies like the Bureau of Indian Affairs. While some sovereignty exists today, it came after generations of imposed governance, economic dependency, and restricted mobility.

Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza face a different but structurally comparable reality: fragmented governance, external control over borders, and limited political agency.

In both contexts, the dominant power does not simply defeat—it administers. The result is a system where autonomy exists, but within boundaries defined by others.


Culture: Erasure and Persistence

Cultural suppression has been central to both histories.

In the U.S., Indigenous children were sent to boarding schools designed explicitly to “kill the Indian, save the man.” Languages, spiritual practices, and identities were systematically targeted.

Palestinians, too, experience pressures on cultural continuity—through displacement, restrictions, and contested narratives about history and identity.

Yet in both cases, culture persists. Languages are revived. Traditions endure. Identity proves more resilient than policy anticipated.


Violence and Resistance

Neither history is passive.

Native American resistance—from armed conflicts in the 19th century to the activism of the American Indian Movement in the 20th—emerged in response to dispossession and broken agreements.

Palestinian resistance has taken multiple forms as well, including uprisings known as the First Intifada and Second Intifada.

In both cases, resistance is often framed externally as disorder or threat, while internally understood as a response to structural injustice.


Law and the Limits of Justice

Both Native Americans and Palestinians have turned to legal systems to seek redress.

In the U.S., treaties—though frequently violated—became a basis for later legal claims and partial restoration of rights. Some tribes today exercise recognized sovereignty and economic independence.

Palestinians have pursued recognition through international institutions like the United Nations, appealing to international law to address occupation and statehood.

The outcomes differ. Native Americans, after centuries, achieved limited but tangible legal standing. Palestinians are still struggling for comparable recognition on a global scale.


Where the Parallel Breaks

The comparison is powerful—but not identical.

Native American dispossession is largely seen as historical, even if its consequences persist. The Palestinian situation is ongoing, visible in real time, and deeply entangled in global geopolitics.

Moreover, Native American tribes today operate within an established state that acknowledges—however imperfectly—their existence and certain rights. Palestinians do not yet have a fully sovereign state recognized and functioning in comparable terms.

These differences matter. But they do not erase the structural similarities.


Why This Comparison Matters

For Western readers, the history of Native Americans is not abstract. It is taught in schools, embedded in national consciousness, and increasingly acknowledged as a story of injustice.

That familiarity creates an opportunity.

If the dispossession of Indigenous peoples in America is now widely recognized as a moral failure—rooted in narratives of superiority, entitlement, and “civilizing missions”—then similar patterns elsewhere become harder to ignore.

The point is not to assign identical blame or collapse distinct histories into one.

It is to ask a more uncomfortable question:

If we recognize injustice in our past, can we recognize its echoes in the present?


Toward Clarity, Not Comfort

This perspective does not require abandoning concern for Israeli security, nor does it deny Jewish historical trauma. Those realities are essential to understanding the conflict.

But clarity demands holding multiple truths at once.

The same Western societies that now acknowledge the injustices done to Native Americans often struggle to apply that moral framework beyond their own borders.

Seeing Palestine through this lens is not about choosing sides—it is about expanding awareness.

Because history, when it repeats, rarely announces itself.

It asks to be recognized.