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2024 m. lapkričio 7 d., ketvirtadienis

Election 2024: U.S.'s Allies Brace for Policy Shifts as Threats Mount


"Donald Trump is returning to the White House as the world is embroiled in two widening regional conflicts, America's rivals are coalescing into a new global authoritarian axis and some of the U.S.'s closest allies fret over his re-election's consequences.

Russia has now enlisted North Korea into its nearly three-year conflict in Ukraine, where it is making slow but steady advances. Israel's war with Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza has expanded into an invasion of Lebanon and the first-ever direct exchanges of missile strikes between Israel and Iran. China is giving crucial economic and political support to the cooperation among Moscow, Pyongyang and Tehran -- while strengthening its own military for a possible war over Taiwan.

In remarks that sent shivers through allied capitals, Trump declared days before the Nov. 5 election that "in many cases, our allies are worse than our so-called enemies." He also repeated his threat not to protect "under any circumstances from Russia" the members of NATO who are "delinquent" in their contributions to the alliance's security.

Europeans are among those most worried worldwide about a second Trump presidency. A Gallup opinion poll carried out in October showed that overwhelming majorities rooted for Kamala Harris in Germany, France, Italy and the U.K. -- as well as in South Korea and Japan. By contrast, she was supported by only 12% of surveyed people in Russia.

Despite lofty promises of "Zeitenwende" -- a historic turning point -- made by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz after the events in Ukraine in February 2022, Europe hasn't expanded its security capabilities by nearly as much as it would need to defend itself. The Continent remains highly dependent on American protection that is no longer guaranteed.

Now, as Trump's support for European security is very much in doubt, Europe faces a test of whether it will have the political will to protect its future.

When asked about dealing with Trump, senior officials in allied capitals said they first need to see what kind of administration he assembles and who fills key national-security and foreign-policy positions. Many national-security professionals from Trump's first term have publicly broken with him and won't return to the new administration.

Trump's current orbit includes people such as former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, an old-school Republican hawk on Russia and China, JD Vance, his vice-presidential pick, who favors cutting commitments to Europe and focusing on Asia, as well as outright isolationists and backers of a purely transactional approach. "Everything will depend on who gets what job," a senior European official said. "The bench is thin."

While Trump has promised to negotiate a peace in Ukraine within 24 hours, he hasn't indicated how. European officials expect him to try to seek some kind of grand bargain with Russian President Vladimir Putin -- but wonder whether he will have the persistence to actually reach a deal or will give up, as he did after a failed summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in 2019.

In a way, the better option for Europe would be Trump simply stopping American military aid for Ukraine, saying it is a European problem and putting Europe in front of its own responsibilities, said Norbert Rottgen, a leading lawmaker from Germany's center-right CDU party. Far worse for Europe would be a Trump who is actually determined to strike a deal with Putin, Rottgen said: "Such an agreement can only come at the expense of Ukraine's, and therefore Europe's, security."

Among the large European countries, only Poland has massively invested in its military, and plans to spend more than 4% of its GDP on defense this year. Over the past three years, total delivered and pledged German military aid to Ukraine -- some of which won't arrive until 2028 -- amounted to 28 billion euros, or $30.6 billion, roughly $2 a week per German citizen.

Officials in France, Poland and several other European nations worry that Germany is increasingly inclined to work with Trump on a deal that would erode Ukrainian sovereignty -- as Scholz positions himself as the "candidate of peace" ahead of national elections that must be held next year at the latest.

In the Middle East, many American allies and partners are sanguine or outright thrilled by Trump's victory. With checkered human-rights records, many of these governments look forward to not being lectured by Washington.

Turkey hopes Trump will withdraw U.S. troops from Syria, abandoning the Kurdish enclave there. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is counting on Trump's support for more-aggressive actions against Iran, while the Saudis and other Gulf states believe Trump would provide more credible guarantees of their own security. Many in the Arab world also believe Trump would force Netanyahu to scale back fighting in Gaza, where tens of thousands of Palestinians have been killed by Israeli military action over the past year.

Israel has repeatedly defied the Biden administration's demands.

"There is a sense of relief that Trump has won," said Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, a political scientist and commentator in the United Arab Emirates. "We need a strong U.S. president rather than a weak U.S. president that Biden has proven to be, and that Harris would have been, too. A weak U.S. president is bad for the region -- and is even bad for the Palestinians."

This leaves Iran as the only major Middle Eastern nation that sees Trump's return to the White House as a clear threat. Trump, during his previous term, authorized the killing of Iranian Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani, and pulled the U.S. from a nuclear deal negotiated by the Obama administration.

"The way the Iranian authorities will read this outcome will be, I think, to try to accelerate their nuclear program so as to acquire a nuclear deterrent to protect the safety of their regime -- because of the fear that there could be an agenda of regime change inside Iran," said Sinan Ulgen, director of the Edam think tank in Istanbul.

In Asia, the betting is on what shape the second Trump administration will take. A Chinese former official pointed out that, despite the presence of China hawks in Trump's orbit, Trump -- unlike Biden -- never explicitly said the U.S. will go to war over Taiwan, and is more likely to listen to the business lobby that wants a detente with China.

While officials in Taiwan, South Korea and Japan are concerned about stiff tariffs potentially coming their way, some also see new opportunities in a Trump presidency. Takashi Kawakami, the foreign-policy adviser to Japan's new prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, made headlines this month by saying in an interview with the Daily Cyzo publication that a Trump victory would finally allow Japan to reclaim sovereignty curtailed since the end of World War II, returning control over much of Japanese airspace and reclaiming land occupied by U.S. military bases.

"We can take the initiative and become a truly independent country," he said, and instead of following the U.S. lead, "find a skillful way to manage the power balance with China, Russia and North Korea."

In any case, Trump's comeback -- and the scale of his victory -- will force America's allies to recalibrate their approach, said Gordon Flake, CEO of the Perth USAsia Center at the University of Western Australia.

"I don't think anybody can predict how those recalibrations will take place because we also live in democratic societies here," he said. "And in a democratic society, you can no longer take support for the U.S. for granted in a way we have always had."" [1]

1. Election 2024: U.S.'s Allies Brace for Policy Shifts as Threats Mount. Trofimov, Yaroslav.  Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 07 Nov 2024: A.9.

TRUMPAS VĖL TRIUMFUOJA --- Buvęs respublikonų partijos prezidentas pirmasis per daugiau, nei šimtmetį atkovojo Baltuosius rūmus po to, kai juos prarado


  „Respublikonas Donaldas Trumpas naudojo nerimą dėl pragyvenimo išlaidų ir nelegalios imigracijos, kad pasiektų lemiamą pergalę prieš demokratę Kamalą Harris, atkovodamas Baltuosius rūmus per rinkimų triumfą, kuris neabejotinai pakeis JAV prioritetus ir santykius su pasauliu.

 

 Trumpas, 2016 m. laimėjęs rinkimus, kaip 45-asis prezidentas, dabar turėtų tapti 47-uoju ir tik antruoju kandidatu JAV istorijoje, laimėjusiu Baltųjų rūmų kadencijas ne iš eilės. Jo istorinė pergalė sugriovė lūkesčius dėl ilgesnio balsų skaičiavimo, nulemto labai plonais skirtumais, kaip rodė apklausos savaites.

 

 Harris trečiadienį kalbėjosi su išrinktuoju prezidentu, norėdama jį pasveikinti. Trumpas kalbėjosi su prezidentu Bidenu, kuris „išreiškė jo įsipareigojimą užtikrinti sklandų perėjimą ir pabrėžė, kad svarbu stengtis suburti šalį“, nurodė Baltieji rūmai. Bidenas pakvietė jį į Baltuosius rūmus „artimiausiu metu“.

 

 Trumpas ėmė sparčiai nušluoti mūšio lauko valstijas, užimti lyderio poziciją populiariajame balsavime ir aplenkti jo ankstesnę paramą tarp jaunų žmonių ir kai kurių mažumų grupių, pavyzdžiui, lotynų vyrų. Trumpui atsidūrus respublikonų bilieto viršūnėje, partija gavo daugumą Senate ir atrodė, kad gali nedrąsiai išlaikyti valdžią Atstovų rūmuose.

 

 Kampanijos metu Trumpas paprašė rinkėjų pagalvoti, ar jiems buvo geriau, kai jis pirmą kartą prezidento pareigas, nes viceprezidentė Harris sunkiai atsiribojo nuo nepopuliaraus Bideno per kovinę ir brangią kampaniją, kuri atskleidė gilų tautos partizanų susiskaldymą. Trečią kartą iš eilės pretenduodamas į Baltuosius rūmus, Trumpas dažnai stumdavo tamsią retoriką ir ne kartą grasindavo atpildu savo politiniams priešams, stengdamasis parodyti jėgą pokyčių alkanam rinkėjui.

 

 Pergalė sutvirtina Trumpą, kaip istorinę politinę figūrą, kuri nugalėjo, nepaisant įžūlumo ir nepagrįstų kaltinimų apie sukčiavimą rinkimuose, kurie atstūmė daugelį, ir įrodė, kad jo 2016 m. pergalė prieš Demokratų partijos kandidatę Hillary Clinton nebuvo atsitiktinumas. „Tai nuostabi Amerikos žmonių pergalė“, – anksti trečiadienį per šventę Vest Palm Biče, Fla. sakė jis.

 

 Jis padėkojo rinkėjams už grąžinimą į Baltuosius rūmus ir sakė, kad kovos už kiekvieną pilietį, pakartodamas savo kampanijos pažadą stiprinti ekonomiką ir spręsti kitus prioritetus. „Tai tikrai bus Amerikos aukso amžius“, – sakė jis.

 

 Harris trečiadienį Howardo universitete sakė, kad pasiūlė Trumpui ir jo komandai jos pagalbą, pereinant ir taikiai perduodant valdžią. Tačiau ji sakė, kad rodo „lojalumą ne prezidentui ar partijai, o Jungtinių Valstijų Konstitucijai“.

 

 „Nors aš pripažįstu šiuos rinkimus, nepripažįstu kovos, kuri paskatino šią kampaniją“, – sakė ji.

 

 78 metų Trumpas, išgarsėjęs kaip Niujorko nekilnojamojo turto magnatas ir realybės televizijos žvaigždė, yra seniausias žmogus, kada nors išrinktas prezidentu – keliais mėnesiais vyresnis, nei Bidenas, kai laimėjo 2020 m. Groveris Clevelandas, Niujorko demokratas, yra vienintelis kitas buvęs prezidentas, laimėjęs Baltuosius rūmus po ankstesnio pralaimėjimo perrinkimuose ir pasiekęs antrąją pergalę 1892 m.

 

 Lenktynių baigtis baigia beprecedenčio perversmo kampanijos sezoną, kai D. Trumpas išgyveno du bandymus jį nužudyti. Jis agitavo, net spręsdamas daugybę teisinių problemų, įskaitant kaltinimus dėl federalinių rinkimų kišimosi ir valstijos teisme pripažintas kaltu dėl 34 nusikaltimų dėl įrašų klastojimo, siekiant nuslėpti pornografinei žvaigždei skirtus pinigus.

 

 Jo pergalė kelia abejonių dėl kaltinimų kišimosi į rinkimus ir kitos federalinės bylos, nes Trumpas gali įvykdyti grasinimą atleisti specialųjį advokatą Jacką Smithą ir panaikinti baudžiamąjį persekiojimą.

 

 Tikėtina, kad laimėjimas pakenks D. Trumpo nuosprendžiui vėliau šį mėnesį Manhetene ir tikimasi, kad sutrukdys Džordžijos prokuroro pastangoms pateikti kaltinimus reketu, teigiančiu, kad Trumpas dalyvavo nusikalstamame sąmoksle, siekiant panaikinti valstijos 2020 m. rinkimų rezultatus.

 

 Buvęs prezidentas užsitikrino savo pergalę, pasinaudojęs stipriu palaikymu Amerikos kaimo vietovėse, kaip ir per pirmąjį laimėjimą. Trečiadienį jis buvo prognozuojamas laimėjusiu Šiaurės Karolinos, Džordžijos, Pensilvanijos, Mičigano ir Viskonsino mūšio laukuose; jis turėjo pranašumų Nevadoje ir Arizonoje. Trumpas surinko 292 rinkikų balsus. Trumpas taip pat sulaukė didelio palaikymo tarp darbininkų klasės rinkėjų.

 

 Harris stengėsi suburti įvairiapusę koaliciją, kuri 2020 m. išrinko Bideną, ir ją slėgė neigiamas požiūris į ekonomiką, valdant Bidenui.

 

 Harris veikla tapo konkurencingesnėmis lenktynėmis, kai ji prisiėmė demokratų kandidatūrą po to, kai Bidenas nusprendė pasitraukti po šlubuojančio pasirodymo diskusijose su Trumpu. Buvęs prezidentas rinkimuose pirmavo prieš Bideną, tačiau Harris, norinti tapti pirmąja moterimi, užimančia aukščiausias pareigas šalyje, sumažino tarpą.

 

 Trumpas turėjo naudos iš rūgščios rinkėjų nuotaikos, nepaisant mažo nedarbo. Paskutiniojoje „Wall Street Journal“ apklausoje prieš rinkimus beveik du trečdaliai rinkėjų teigė, kad tauta eina neteisinga kryptimi. Nors infliacijos lygis mažėjo, jos skausmas sukėlė ilgas pagirias, kurios sustiprino Trumpą ir įskaudino Harris.

 

 Per savo beveik dešimtmetį nacionalinėje politinėje arenoje Trumpas pakeitė GOP toną, padarydamas ją populistiškesnę ir mažiau susietą su tradiciniais konservatyviais fiskalinės drausmės ir nacionalinio saugumo kovos idealais. Šie pokyčiai, sulaukę vietos partijos pareigūnų atgarsio Kongresui, neabejotinai turės įtakos Vašingtono prioritetams per ateinančius ketverius metus.

 

 Senatorius JD Vance'as iš Ohajo (40), kitas viceprezidentas, parodė talentą išreikšti trumpizmo principus, dažnai disciplinuočiau, nei judėjimo lyderis, ir, greičiausiai, ateityje bus pagrindinis pretendentas į GOP prezidento nominaciją. Konstitucinė riba reiškia, kad Trumpas po ketverių metų turės palikti Baltuosius rūmus.

 

 Neabejotinai stipriausias Trumpo kreipimasis atkartojo Ronaldą Reiganą. „Norėčiau pradėti nuo labai paprasto klausimo“, – pradėjo jis spalio 27 d. kalbą „Madison Square Garden“ Niujorke. – Ar tau dabar geriau, nei prieš ketverius metus?"

 

 Trumpas vartojo šiurkščią, dažnai menkinančią, kalbą, dėl kurios kai kurie respublikonai baiminosi, kad jam bus sunkiau laimėti tuos, kurie nėra jo bazėje. Jo kampanija sulaukė net respublikonų pasipriešinimo dėl Madison Square Garden renginio, kurio metu kai kurie pranešėjai reiškė rasistinius, seksistinius ar kitaip menkinančius komentarus apie Harrisą, demokratus, puertorikiečius ir imigrantus. Tokie mitingai suteikė daug peno jo kritikams, tačiau jie buvo didžiausia vieta susisiekti su, jį dievinančiais, gerbėjais – daugelis iš jų teigė, kad jo netradicinis politinis tonas ir stilius jiems labiausiai patinka.

 

 Demokratai turėjo pranašumą, išlaidaujant lenktynėse, kaip ir tada, kai 2016 m. laimėjo D. Trumpas. Jis gavo naudos iš Elono Musko vėlyvos didelės investicijos į laiką ir pinigus. „Tesla“ generalinis direktorius, dalyvavęs kampanijoje su D. Trumpu, paaukojo mažiausiai 118 mln. dolerių.

 

 Abu kandidatai baigė savo kampanijas prie baimės persmelktų žinučių. Harris pavadino Trumpą „fašistu“, pabrėžė buvusius padėjėjus, kurie sakė, kad jis neturėtų vėl būti įleidžiamas į Ovalųjį kabinetą, ir tvirtino, kad jis pakenkė moterų reprodukcinei sveikatai dėl Aukščiausiojo Teismo paskyrimų pirmajai kadencijai. 

 

Trumpas teigė, kad Harris yra atsakinga už infliaciją ir neteisėtus migrantus, kurie įvykdė nusikaltimus JAV.

 

 Sausio 20 d. prisaikdintas D. Trumpas paveldės susiskaldžiusią šalį, kuri vis dar atsigauna po pandemijos vėlesnių smūgių, kenčiančią, dėl ilgus metus trukusios, infliacijos ir uždarytą genčių politikoje.

 

 Kaip ir 2016 m. siūlydamas kandidatūrą, Trumpas nupiešė niūrų tautos trajektorijos vaizdą, laikydamas save vieninteliu, galinčiu tai išspręsti. Jis teigė galintis greitai išspręsti daugelį tautos problemų – kartais paskambinęs telefonu. Pirmojoje jo administracijoje dažnai taip nebuvo.

 

 Trumpas pareiškė, kad sieks įvesti griežtus muitus, kad sudarytų geresnius prekybos sandorius ir paveiktų kitų šalių užsienio politiką. 

 

Per ankstesnę kadenciją jo agresyvų požiūrį į Kiniją pabrėžė tarifai, kurie įstūmė abi tautas į prekybos karą." [1]


1. TRUMP TRIUMPHS AGAIN --- Republican former president is first in more than a century to reclaim the White House after losing it. McCormick, John; Leary, Alex; Thomas, Ken. 
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 07 Nov 2024: A.1.

TRUMP TRIUMPHS AGAIN --- Republican former president is first in more than a century to reclaim the White House after losing it


"Republican Donald Trump leveraged anxieties about the cost of living and illegal immigration to score a decisive victory over Democrat Kamala Harris, reclaiming the White House in an electoral triumph certain to alter the U.S.'s priorities and relationship with the world.

Trump, who won election in 2016 as the 45th president, now is set to be the 47th and just the second candidate in U.S. history to win nonconsecutive White House terms. His historic win blew away expectations for a prolonged vote count decided by razor-thin margins, as polls indicated for weeks.

Harris spoke to the president-elect on Wednesday to congratulate him. Trump spoke to President Biden, who "expressed his commitment to ensuring a smooth transition and emphasized the importance of working to bring the country together," the White House said. Biden invited him to the White House "in the near future."

Trump was on pace to sweep the battleground states, take the lead in the popular vote and outperform his previous support among young people and some minority groups such as Latino men. With Trump at the top of the Republican ticket, the party won a Senate majority and looked in position to narrowly keep power in the House.

On the campaign trail, Trump asked voters to consider if they were better off under his first presidency as Harris, the vice president, struggled to distance herself from an unpopular Biden during a combative and expensive campaign that exposed the nation's deep partisan divisions. In his third consecutive White House bid, Trump often pushed dark rhetoric and repeatedly threatened retribution for his political enemies as he sought to project strength to an electorate hungry for change.

The victory cements Trump as a historic political figure who prevailed despite a brashness and unfounded claims of election fraud that alienated many, proving his 2016 victory over Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton wasn't a fluke. "This is a magnificent victory for the American people," Trump said in a celebration in West Palm Beach, Fla., early Wednesday.

He thanked voters for sending him back to the White House and said he would fight for every citizen, repeating his campaign pledge to strengthen the economy and address other priorities. "This truly will be the golden age of America," he said.

Harris, in remarks at Howard University on Wednesday, said she offered Trump and his team her help with the transition and the peaceful transfer of power. But she said they owed their "loyalty not to a president or a party, but to the Constitution of the United States."

"While I concede this election, I do not concede the fight that fueled this campaign," she said.

Trump, 78 years old, who rose to fame as a New York real-estate mogul and reality-television star, is the oldest person ever elected president -- a few months older than Biden was when he won in 2020. Grover Cleveland, a New York Democrat, is the only other former president to win the White House after an earlier re-election defeat, claiming the second victory in 1892.

The outcome of the race caps a campaign season of unprecedented upheaval, with Trump surviving two assassination attempts. He campaigned even as he worked through many legal problems, including being indicted on federal election-interference charges and being found guilty in a state court on 34 felony counts for falsifying records to cover up hush money to a porn star.

His victory throws the election-interference charges and another federal case into doubt as Trump could follow through on a threat to fire special counsel Jack Smith and have the prosecutions dropped.

The win is likely to throw a wrench into Trump's sentencing later this month in Manhattan, and is expected to hamper a Georgia prosecutor's efforts to pursue racketeering charges alleging that Trump engaged in a criminal conspiracy to overturn the state's 2020 election results.

The former president secured his win by tapping into strong support in rural America, as he did in his first win. As of Wednesday, he was projected to be the winner in the battlegrounds of North Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin; he held advantages in Nevada and Arizona. Trump had 292 electoral votes. Trump also won strong support among working-class voters.

Harris struggled to pull together the diverse coalition that elected Biden in 2020, and she was weighed down by negative views of the economy under the Biden administration.

Harris made it a more competitive race when she assumed the Democratic nomination after Biden's decision to drop out following a faltering performance in a debate with Trump. The former president had held a commanding lead in polls over Biden, but Harris, looking to become the first woman to hold the nation's highest office, quickly narrowed the gap.

Trump benefited from a sour voter mood, despite low unemployment. In the final Wall Street Journal poll before the election, almost two-thirds of voters said the nation was headed in the wrong direction. While the rate of inflation has been coming down, its pain provided a long hangover that boosted Trump and hurt Harris.

Over the course of his nearly decade on the national political stage, Trump reshaped the GOP's tone, making it more populist and less tied to the traditional conservative ideals of fiscal discipline and national-security hawkishness. Those changes, with resonance from local party officials to Congress, are certain to influence Washington's priorities over the next four years.

Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, 40, the next vice president, showed a talent for articulating the tenets of Trumpism, often with more discipline than the movement's leader and is likely to be a top future contender for the GOP presidential nomination. A constitutional limit means Trump will need to vacate the White House in four years.

Trump's arguably strongest appeal echoed Ronald Reagan. "I'd like to begin by asking a very simple question," he started an Oct. 27 speech at Madison Square Garden in New York City. "Are you better off now than you were four years ago?"

On the stump, Trump used harsh, often derogatory language that some Republicans feared would make it more challenging for him to win over those outside his base. His campaign faced backlash even from Republicans for the Madison Square Garden event, during which some speakers made racist, sexist or otherwise derogatory comments about Harris, Democrats, Puerto Ricans and immigrants. Such rallies provided much fodder for his critics, but they were his biggest venue to connect with his adoring fans -- many of whom said his unconventional political tone and style were what they liked most about him.

Democrats had the spending advantage in the race, as they did when Trump won in 2016. He benefited from a major late investment in time and money by Elon Musk. The Tesla chief executive, who campaigned with Trump, donated at least $118 million and is expected to get a role helping the new administration cut government costs.

Both candidates closed their campaigns on messages infused with fear. Harris called Trump a "fascist," highlighted former aides who said he shouldn't again be allowed in the Oval Office and argued he had hurt women's reproductive health because of the Supreme Court appointments of his first term. Trump suggested Harris was responsible for inflation and undocumented migrants who committed crimes in the U.S.

When sworn in on Jan. 20, Trump will inherit a divided country still recovering from the aftershocks of a pandemic, pained by years of inflation and locked in tribal politics.

As he did during his 2016 bid, Trump painted a bleak picture of the nation's trajectory, casting himself as the only one able to fix it. He said he could solve many of the nation's problems in short order -- sometimes with a phone call. In his first administration, that often didn't prove to be the case.

Trump has said he would push through stiff tariffs to get better trade deals and influence the foreign policy of other nations. During his previous term, his aggressive approach toward China was underscored by tariffs that plunged the two nations into a trade war." [1]

1. TRUMP TRIUMPHS AGAIN --- Republican former president is first in more than a century to reclaim the White House after losing it. McCormick, John; Leary, Alex; Thomas, Ken. 
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 07 Nov 2024: A.1.  

Amerikiečiai ir Ukraina

 

Kaip ir bet kuris amerikietis, p.Trumpas nemėgsta pralaiminčio. P. Zelenskis šiuo metu pralaimi. P. Trumpui, kad jis laikytųsi taikos pažado ir sutaupytų daug, daug pinigų, kelias yra lengvas: pralaimėjusiam Zelenskiui duoti lazdų (pavežėjimą iš Ukrainos), o laimėjusiems rusams – morkų (visiškai panaikinti visas sankcijas, kurios ir taip neveikia).

Americans and Ukraine


Like any American, Mr. Trump does not like a loser. Mr. Zelensky is losing right now. For Mr. Trump to keep his promise of peace and save big money the path is easy: give the loser Mr. Zelensky the sticks (a ride out of Ukraine), and the winning Russians give carrots (full cancellation of all sanctions that do not work anyway).