菜单与餐桌

万斯周五(2月14日)在慕尼黑安全会议上批评,欧洲“放弃了一些最基本的价值观,即与美国共同的价值观”。他还称,欧洲盟国领导人不与民粹主义政党合作,不仅违背了选民意愿,也扼杀言论自由和民主。
彭博社分析指出,万斯的言论打破了欧洲长期的信念与假象,即美国一定会在他们需要时出手相助。一名资深欧洲官员说,这次讲话是跨大西洋关系的一个分水岭时刻,因为这是对欧洲价值观根本的攻击,少了与美国在价值观上的共识,欧洲自由民主将岌岌可危。
Trump Is Rushing Toward a
Deal With Putin, Leaving Europe in the Dust
-JD Vance’s broadside in Munich shocked European leaders
-European powers are struggling to forge a response to
Trump
By Alberto Nardelli, Ellen Milligan, and Alex Wickham
The groans and the anxious side glances gave way to silence as
Vice President JD Vance took center stage in Munich to pour
contempt on longstanding US allies and cut Europe down to
size.
It was an attack of unbridled ferocity in the name of free
speech that laid bare the long-stewing hostility that Donald Trump
and his most senior aides feel for the European Union — they see
the bloc as a symbol of big government that constrains US
companies.
But as European diplomats from Berlin to London pick through
the rubble of the transatlantic relationship, the reality is that
the continent has had eight years since Trump’s last election
victory to get its house in order and three since Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine. The wake-up call was a long time coming.
“This is existential,” Estonian Foreign Minister Margus
Tsahkna said in an interview on the sidelines of the Munich
Security Conference, where Vance had been speaking. French
President Emmanuel Macron is looking to convene an emergency
meeting of European leaders in an attempt to come up with a
response.
Europe’s fate has turned on events in the Bavarian capital
before, and not only in 1938 when the UK acquiesced to Adolf
Hitler’s claims to part of Czechoslovakia in a doomed attempt to
avoid war. In 2007, Vladimir Putin’s speech at the same annual
gathering of security officials, in hindsight, set out his
rationale for the invasion of Ukraine years later.
The illusion that Vance shattered was the belief, deep down,
that the US would always be there to step in when needed, from
World War II through to the Balkan wars of the 1990s.
“When I look at Europe today, it’s sometimes not so clear what
happened to some of the cold war’s winners,” Vance said. His
disdain for Europe’s mainstream politicians was clear when he
ducked out to see the leader of Germany’s far-right AfD
party.
US officials told some Europeans in Munich that they believe
America and China are the two big powers in discussions over
Ukraine, even though the war is in the EU’s backyard, one European
official said. The US will keep the Europeans abreast on progress
but they’re not seen as significant players.
One veteran official said that Vance’s attack during his debut
abroad was a watershed moment because it was such a fundamental
attack on Europe’s values. It didn’t matter that European nations
were dependent on the US for security when they shared the same
basic principles, the official said. Without that common
understanding, liberal democracy in Europe is at risk.
Europe now finds itself in a desperate race to agree on plans
for Ukraine’s security in the event of a peace deal with Trump
already rushing into negotiations with Russia. The US president is
planning to see Putin as soon as this month.
The fear for many officials gathered for this year’s
conference is that by dialing back support for Ukraine, Trump is
inviting Putin to probe NATO’s willingness to defend the alliance’s
eastern borders.
“If Putin continues, there will be a NATO test,” Tsahkna
said.
Over the years there has been a lot of talk about the need for
a common defense strategy. Macron was among the most vocal about
the need to ramp up European capabilities but that never went far.
Germany remained stubbornly opposed to joint borrowing with
European defense bonds, the key step required to unleash defense
spending to the tune of trillions.
A day after Vance’s address, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
spelled it out when describing his discussions with Trump about US
plans for ending the war: “Not once did he mention that America
needs Europe at that table.”
“That says a lot,” Zelenskiy noted on Saturday. “The old days
are over – when America supported Europe just because it always
had.”
The challenge for Europe goes deeper than a future Russian
threat. In the here and now, Europe can’t afford to be sidelined
from the conversations that will change the way the world
works.
Multilateral forums like the Group of Seven and the Group of
20 are other places where its voice is heard. But if Trump decides
they are not worth going to — a possibility officials are taking
seriously — then their influence will be diminished even
further.
That disrespect was tangible in the US dealings with both the
UK and Ukraine this week.
After David Lammy’s meeting with Vance, the UK Foreign
Secretary told reporters that the conversation had gone very well.
Hours later the vice president was lambasting the British state for
restricting protests outside abortion clinics.
In all this, the US was trying to ram through a one-sided deal
to secure access to Ukraine’s natural resources after the war,
according to two people familiar with the discussions. Treasury
Secretary Scott Bessent presented the terms to Ukrainian officials
in Kyiv earlier in the week and Vance’s team in Munich were
pressuring the Ukrainians to sign, the people said.
One official compared the US approach to the Belgians in
Africa in the 19th century. The parallel there is with Leopold II,
who bought the Congo as his personal fiefdom.
European leaders are clinging to the limited reassurances
they’ve received in private meetings with US officials. Vance, in
bilateral meetings in Munich, left open the possibility of US
involvement in security guarantees if Europe significantly stepped
up its support , people familiar with the matter said.
“The conversation with Vance behind closed doors was very
different from what he said on the public stage,” German Foreign
Minister Annalena Baerbock said in an interview.
One European minister noted that everything is moving fast and
Europe is not good at moving fast. To emphasize that point, another
official insisted that nothing can happen until after next week’s
German election, even though it may take weeks to form a new
government.
The crunch point could come within a few months, according to
one European who speaks to both Zelenskiy and the Trump team.
Russia has prepared for this moment, assembling already its
cast of top-tier negotiators. Europeans are worried that the US has
made too many concessions already and is eager to declare the
problem solved, leaving them with the fallout.
The challenge is that the EU is good at negotiating when
everyone plays by the same rules. In the free-for-all that Trump
has set off, the EU is lost, because its leaders’ hands are
tied.
Multiple officials in Munich said allies needed to agree on
security guarantees among themselves before talks with Putin, but
Trump is moving on a different timeframe.
Sensing the dangers ahead, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk
implored the bloc to come up with a plan now.
In a week where the wheels of history appeared to turn with
potentially massive consequences, it’s unclear whether everyone on
the continent grasps the enormity of the stakes and the need to
deal with reality as it is.
“There are only two things that motivate people to act: sex
and the fear of death,” Tsahkna said. “The fear of death - do we
have enough of it in Europe?”
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