With Trump, the EU Must Pay for Its Own Defense

Published in La Razon
(Spain) on 2 January 2025
by Jorge Fernández Díaz (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Patricia Simoni. Edited by Michelle Bisson.
Giorgia Meloni and Viktor Orban are going to be more credible interlocutors than those now in place, led by Ursula von der Leyen, who is quite satisfied with Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.

Although we are already on the first working day of this new year 2025, the Christmas holiday spirit will continue until after the great feast of the Three Wise Men next Monday, Jan. 6, which will be more like an aqueduct rather than merely a festive bridge.

Official “politics as usual” will not be resumed in Spain until then, when a year of great tension will begin. The king alluded to that in his Christmas speech — as almost all the autonomous presidents have done in their end-of-year speeches — unanimously referring to the political situation we currently face as a particularly serious problem.

Unfortunately, it should come as no surprise that this should happen, given that the politics of Sanchezism has polarization and confrontation implicit in its DNA.

It is trying to justify its existence in an effort to prevent the ultra-right from gaining access to the government. Inherent in this strategy are political polarization and social fragmentation into divided and opposing factions. In addition to other circumstances, it is striking, to put it mildly, that a partisan coalition made up of separatist groups — successors of Euskadi Ta Askatasuna, communists and extreme left-wing populists, all of them accredited "moderates” — allows itself to disqualify its opponents as ultra-right-wing.

With Donald Trump’s arrival at the White House, the EU, dominated from Brussels by a coalition of popular and socialist parties, will be forced to adapt its official discourse and strategy to this new reality: Giorgia Meloni and Viktor Orban are going to be more credible interlocutors than those parties presently led by Ursula von der Leyen, who is so comfortable with Pedro Sanchez.

NATO is going to take on new leadership, with the EU assuming that its defense should not be in the hands of the U.S. but in its own and that security "has to be paid for.”

Sanchez followers face in Trump a political adversary too powerful for them to believe that everything will remain the same. There will be head-on confrontation in two arenas: in the cultural, with the woke phenomenon, and in the political, with defense spending.

To Pedro Sanchez and cabinet members Yolanda Diaz, Ernest Urtasun, Ione Belarra, Maria Montero and company — all, such pacifists: We have just ranked last among contributors to NATO, with 1.2% of GDP. Trump is already saying that Europe must pay for its own defense, and is talking about 5% of GDP. The problem is that this will be paid for not only by the Sanchez followers out of their own pockets, but by all Spaniards. And we will also be faced with addressing the woke culture.


Giorgia Meloni y Viktor Orban van a ser interlocutores más acreditados que los actuales encabezados por Úrsula von der Leyen tan complaciente con Pedro Sánchez



Aunque ya estamos en el primer día laborable de este nuevo año 2025, el espíritu de estas fiestas de Navidad perdura hasta la gran fiesta de los Reyes Magos del próximo día 6 lunes, en lo que constituye de hecho un acueducto y no un mero puente festivo. La normalidad política oficial hasta entonces no se reanuda en España y preludia un año de intenso voltaje, al que el Rey se refería en su discurso de Navidad al igual que han hecho casi todos los presidentes autonómicos en los suyos de final de año, en los que se han referido a la crispación política unánimemente como un problema de especial gravedad al que nos enfrentamos. Por desgracia no debiera sorprender que ello suceda, dado que el sanchismo político lleva implícito en su ADN la polarización y el enfrentamiento, al intentar justificar su existencia en la necesidad de impedir a la ultraderecha el acceso al gobierno. Esa estrategia conlleva la necesidad de la polarización política y la fragmentación social en bandos divididos y opuestos. Además de otras circunstancias, no deja de ser llamativo -por calificarlo suavemente- que una coalición partidista formada entre formaciones separatistas golpistas, sucesores de ETA, comunistas y populistas de extrema izquierda –todos ellos acreditados «moderados»– se permita descalificar a sus opositores como ultraderechistas. Con la llegada de Trump a la Casa Blanca, la UE dominada desde Bruselas por una coalición de partidos populares y socialistas va a verse obligada a adaptar su discurso oficial y su estrategia a esa nueva realidad. Giorgia Meloni y Viktor Orban van a ser interlocutores más acreditados que los actuales encabezados por Úrsula von der Leyen tan complaciente con Pedro Sánchez. La OTAN va a tomar un nuevo protagonismo, asumiendo la UE que su defensa no debe estar en manos de EEUU sino en las suyas y que la seguridad «hay que pagarla». El sanchismo tiene en Trump a un adversario político demasiado poderoso para creer que todo va a seguir igual. En dos ámbitos la batalla va a ser frontal: en el cultural, con el fenómeno woke y, en el militar, con el gasto en Defensa. A los Sánchez, Yolanda, Urtasun, Belarra, Montero y compañía, tan «pacifistas de salón», se les acaba seguir siendo los últimos en el ranking de contribuyentes a la OTAN, con un 1,2% del PIB. Trump ya avanza que «Europa debe pagar su defensa» y habla de un 5% del PIB. El problema es que eso no lo pagan los sanchistas de su bolsillo, sino todos los españoles. De la cultura woke hablaremos también.
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Mexico: From Star Wars to Golden Domes

Germany: Peace Report 2025: No Common Ground with Trump

Japan: Will the Pressure on Harvard University Affect Overseas Students?

Germany: Trump’s Tariff Policy: ‘Dealmaker’ under Pressure

Topics

Russia: Trump Is Shielding America*

Germany: Peace Report 2025: No Common Ground with Trump

Australia: America’s Economic and Political Chaos Has Implications for Australia

Ireland: The Irish Times View on Turmoil in Los Angeles: Key Test of Trump’s Power

Germany: Friedrich Merz’s Visit to Trump Succeeded because It Didn’t Fail

Russia: This Can’t Go On Forever*

Related Articles

Russia: Trump Is Shielding America*

Germany: Peace Report 2025: No Common Ground with Trump

Australia: America’s Economic and Political Chaos Has Implications for Australia

Ireland: The Irish Times View on Turmoil in Los Angeles: Key Test of Trump’s Power