Opinion | A Day of American Infamy
In August 1941, about four months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Franklin Roosevelt met with Winston Churchill aboard warships in Newfoundlandâs Placentia Bay and agreed to the Atlantic Charter, a joint declaration by the worldâs leading democratic powers on âcommon principlesâ for a postwar world.
Among its key points: âno aggrandizement, territorial or otherâ; âsovereign rights and self-government restored to those who have been forcibly deprived of themâ; âfreedom from fear and wantâ; freedom of the seas; âaccess, on equal terms, to the trade and to the raw materials of the world which are needed for their economic prosperity.â
The charter, and the alliance that came of it, is a high point of American statesmanship. On Friday in the Oval Office, the world witnessed the opposite. Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraineâs embattled democratic leader, came to Washington prepared to sign away anything he could offer President Trump except his nationâs freedom, security and common sense. For that, he was rewarded with a lecture on manners from the most mendacious vulgarian and ungracious host ever to inhabit the White House.
If Roosevelt had told Churchill to sue for peace on any terms with Adolf Hitler and to fork over Britainâs coal reserves to the United States in exchange for no American security guarantees, it might have approximated what Trump did to Zelensky. Whatever one might say about how Zelensky played his cards poorly â either by failing to behave with the degree of all-fours sycophancy that Trump demands or to maintain his composure in the face of JD Vanceâs disingenuous provocations â this was a day of American infamy.
Where do we go from here?
If thereâs one silver lining to this fiasco, itâs that Zelensky did not sign the agreement on Ukrainian minerals that was forced on him this month by Scott Bessent, the Treasury secretary whoâs the Tom Hagen character in this protection-racket administration. The United States is entitled to some kind of reward for helping Ukraine defend itself â and Ukraineâs destruction of much of Russiaâs military might should top the list, followed by the innovation Ukraine demonstrated in pioneering revolutionary forms of low-cost drone warfare, which the Pentagon will be keen to emulate.
But if itâs a financial payback that the Trump administration seeks, the best place to get it is to seize, in collaboration with our European partners, Russiaâs frozen assets and put them into an account by which Ukraine could pay for American-made arms. If the United States wonât do this, the Europeans should: Let the Ukrainians rely for their arms on Dassault, Saab, Rheinmetall, BAE Systems and other European defense contractors and see how that goes over with the âAmerica Firstâ-ers. Hopefully that could serve as another spur to Europeans to invest, as quickly and heavily as they can, in their depleted militaries, not simply to strengthen NATO but also to hedge against its end.
There is a second opportunity: While Trumpâs abuse of Zelensky might delight the MAGA crowd, it isnât likely to play well with most voters, including the almost 30 percent of Republicans who, even now, believe itâs in our interest to stand with Ukraine. And while most Americans may want to see the war in Ukraine end, they almost surely donât want to see it end on Vladimir Putinâs terms.
Nor should the Trump administration. A Russian victory in Ukraine, including a cease-fire that allows Moscow to consolidate its gains and recoup its strength before the next assault, will have precisely the same effect as the Talibanâs victory in Afghanistan: emboldening American enemies to behave more aggressively. Notice that, as Trump has ratcheted up pressure on Ukraine in recent weeks, Taiwan reported a surge in Chinese military drills around the island, while Chinese warships held live-fire exercises off the coast of Vietnam and came within 150 nautical miles of Sydney.
Those are points honorable conservatives should press: Can Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Representative Don Bacon of Nebraska â two Republicans who havenât sold their souls on Ukraine â lead a delegation of like-minded conservatives to Kyiv?
More so, this should be an opportunity for Democrats. Joe Biden was right when he called this a âdecisive decadeâ for the future of the free world; he just happened to be too feeble and cautious a messenger.
But there are tough-minded Democrats with military and security backgrounds â Representative Jason Crow of Colorado, Representative Seth Moulton of Massachusetts and Senator Elissa Slotkin of Michigan come to mind â who can restore the spirit of Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy to the Democratic Party. Itâs a message of toughness and freedom they might also be able to sell to at least some Trump voters, who cast their ballots in November for the sake of a better America, not a greater Russia.
Still, thereâs no getting around the fact that Friday was a dreadful day â dreadful for Ukraine, for the free world, for the legacy of an America that once stood for the principles of the Atlantic Charter.
Roosevelt and Reagan must be spinning in their graves, as are Churchill and Thatcher. Itâs up to the rest of us to reclaim Americaâs honor from the gangsters who besmirched it in the White House.
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