☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

  • 11.7K Posts
  • 12.2K Comments
Joined 6 years ago
cake
Cake day: January 18th, 2020

help-circle




  • That’s precisely why I pointed out that the role of Europe has changed from the American perspective in my original reply. It’s not a question of a specific leader, but the structural change in the material realities of the empire. A future president in the US may be less crass than Trump, but the policy itself isn’t going to change. The US is no longer going to see Europe as being worth the investment. The empire is contracting, and Americans will husband their resources either to dominate their own hemisphere or to try and contain China.



  • The handful examples are incredibly consequential. Europe is basically entirely dependent on the US for energy. And with energy prices in the US being around three times lower, the US is using that as leverage to lure industry away from Europe. The US is also actively meddling in European politics and uses their social media platforms to shape public opinion in Europe.

    It’s kind of hard to see what positive actions the US has taken towards Europe over the past few years. It’s an abusive relationship where Europe continues to accept one humiliation after another.

    Now that the Iran fiasco looks to have failed, it’s entirely possible that Trump will remember about Greenland again. Meanwhile, there’s very little indication that EU actually does much of anything to protect any common interests. The EU immediately folded in the trade war with the US, while China and many other countries held firm.


  • I disagree, Europe simply doesn’t hold the same strategic relevance for the US as it did in the days of the Cold War. The tariffs under Trump and the Inflation Reduction Act under Biden were both direct economic attacks on Europe. Blowing up Nord Stream was also an attack on European economy. Europe is also one of the main victims in the current war on Iran being further cut off from energy. If Europeans still don’t understand that the US is going to cannibalize whatever industry from Europe that it can and turn it into a cheap labor market, then they deserve everything that’s coming to them.




















  • Aside from Iran starting to charge a toll and control traffic through Hormuz, this is the other most consequential outcome of the war. All the infrastructure that the US spent decades building is now useless. Iran proved that none of these bases were defensible, and they destroyed billions, if not trillions, worth of radars and other high tech equipment, not to mention the cost of building these bases themselves. The entire US position in the region has now collapsed, and there’s no going back to the way things were before.













  • I wonder if we might be hitting an inflection point where NATO no longer serves American interests. It used to make sense during the Soviet era because it kept Europe in American orbit. When USSR was the biggest geopolitical challenge to the US, keeping Europe in the American sphere of influence was critical. However, modern Russia doesn’t pose any sort of ideological challegne to the US, and China is seen as the new ideological adversary.

    In that context, Europe doesn’t really have the same value to the US. On top of it, the economic dynamic is very different today. Back during the Cold War, the US was by far the biggest economic engine in the world, and propping up Europe was worth the cost. However, today, China is the bigger economy in productive terms, and the US simply cannot offer Europe anything competitive economically. Europe needs affordable goods that China manufactures, it needs renewable energy, and the ability to export its own goods to a nation of 1.4 billion people. So, if the US can’t offer a convincing economic alternative to China, then it will inevitably lose political hold on Europe going forward.

    If that is the case, then there’s little value to continue dumping resources into Europe. Hence why I think we’re seeing the US changing its strategy to open predation. The US successfully destroyed European economy by cutting Europe off from Russian energy and imports from the Gulf. As input costs in Europe continue to climb, companies are starting to flee, and a lot of that business ends up going to the US where energy costs are a third of what they are in Europe.

    Should the US leave NATO, then there would be a panic they can exploit as well. Europeans will be desperate to arm themselves, and given that Europe lacks a serious military industry of its own, a good chunk of that money would end up in the US.

    So, that’s what I think is happening. The US is basically taking a scorched earth approach here by knee capping Europe to make sure it doesn’t turn into a competitor aligned with American adversaries, and grabbing anything of value that’s available in the process.