America is No Longer the Leader of the Free World

March 4, 2025

Many of us watched the February 28th White House meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is abject horror. One of our most heralded allies was being attacked by Trump and Vance like a child being berated for breaking a window with a baseball. Then it became clear that it was the set up. An ambush for Trump’s Russian bosses. Vance badgering him to apologize. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s boyfriend chiding him about not wearing a suit (when few of Trump’s White House chums have). I wanted Zelenskyy to just say to Trump, “Mr. President, are you aligned with America’s ally, Ukraine, or Putin?”

We know what Trump would have said – “I’m not aligned with anybody.” 

In that moment, it was clear that America was no longer the leader of the free world. That our allies could no longer rely on us and that we weren’t going to lift a finger to defend democracy. In that moment, Trump gave Putin the green light to obliterate Ukraine. At the United Nations, we voted with Russia (and North Korea) against the condemnation of Russia’s 2022 invasion. The following actions backed that position up, including halting support of military aid to Ukraine, ceasing cyber operations against Russia, mass firings at the CIA and FBI, and Trump asking to end U.S. sanctions against Russia. What more could Vladimir Putin ask for? (I’m sure we’ll find out.)

Trump’s capitulation to Russia and the falling in line of the MAGA cult rings familiar. In the years before the attack on Pearl Harbor, there were Americans, including in Congress, that thought the United States sending billions of dollars to our European allies to fight Nazi Germany was a big ol’ waste. Those nations weren’t sufficiently “grateful.” This included after Germany began their brutal blitzkrieg of Great Britain in 1940. They wanted England to at least give us some of their islands in the Caribbean for helping them. But FDR said, F that. We’re all in for freedom.

What launched the American century began in the first global conflict. During the “war to end all wars” (aka WW I), isolationist voices had the day, until it was clear that Britain and France REALLY need our help (and a ton of American merchant ships were being sunk by U-boats). On April 6, 1917, we declared war on Germany and shut that shit down. By November of the following year, the war was over. And the United States was the new hot shot defender of freedom, our perfect hair blowing in the wind. Ever since that moment in 1918, lovers of freedom and democracy knew we were their ride or die. Sure there were some ethical lapses, Central America, Vietnam, but for the most part we were the good guys on the planet.

That ended last Friday. The global realignment, long envisioned my MAGA architects, has jettisoned its long held alliance with Europe, viewed as decadent by Steve Bannon and white nationalists, in favor of an allegiance to authoritarian regimes like Russia. France is “socialist” and Moscow has clean subways. Sure, political dissidents are thrown into Siberian prisons, but Moscow has clean subways. We are now a part of the axis of evil and Trump and his handlers could not be happier.

I often tell the story of the time I was at a meeting at the U.S. embassy in London in 2018. I was there as a part of a government-funded trip to study how the British respond to violent extremism. We just happened to be at the embassy the day President Trump was attending a summit in Helsinki, Finland with the Russian leader. We all watched the press conference where Trump famously said that he trusted Putin’s assertion that Russia didn’t interfere in the 2016 election, over the evidence presented by his own intelligence agencies. The shock among the career diplomats I was watching with was palpable. They immediately scrambled to craft a response to the fact that the U.S. President and had just publicly chosen loyalty to the biggest dictator on the planet over his own nation.

We don’t know if Putin has some serious kompromat on Trump (perhaps the pee pee tapes are in a vault in the Kremlin) or Trump just really wants to be an authoritarian (or both), but Trump’s mandate is clear. He’s out for himself. He’s never read the Constitution, or The Bible for that matter. I’d lay odds he’s never read a complete book. He’s the transactional president. If it serves him and the sycophants that kiss his ass, he will throw Americans and their security under the bus. He will wage war on our allies, like Canada and Mexico, and sing the praises of dictators like Turkey’s Erdoğan and Hungary’s Orbán. Whatever fluffs his fragile ego.

Trump is murdering America.

So, sorry Ukraine, and other nations fighting to be free and democratic, we now have our own fight to win.

3 thoughts on “America is No Longer the Leader of the Free World

  1. This is a BS and unabashedly biased take on the exchange. Zelenskyy had already agreed to the deal prior to the meeting and then tried to relitigate and renegotiate the deal with the cameras running. I don’t blame Zelenskyy for trying to get the best deal he could get for Ukraine, but if you want to champion diplomacy, Randy, that isn’t the way to do it. President Clinton once remarked that the key to diplomatic negotiations was that you speak very frankly and very directly IN PRIVATE, and you never, ever try to embarrass your partners in public. Zelenskyy, who was probably acting on some very bad advice, thought he coud break that protocol and paid for it. Add in his eye-rolling and exasperated body language, and now you have the row nobody except the Russians wanted. He grievously miscalculated the US response to his posturing, and he paid for it by getting kicked out of the WH and the humiliation for him and his people. Zelenskyy immediately knew he had fucked up, and he still knows, which is why he’s had a marked change in tone over the last few days and is asking to come back to the table with his hat in his hand. We’re all lucky that Putin didn’t offer to negotiate peace between Zelenskyy and Trump after that debacle brought on by Zelenskyy.

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  2. It SHOULD NOT have taken place in public. I agree! Zelenskyy came in very gracious and then Trump and Vance attacked him. In public. Was he just supposed to sit there with a smile on on his face? He was also sending a message to Putin that he will not be bullied.

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  3. I don’t think Zelenskyy came in graciously. He challenged Trump by asking how he could count on the US. Not an unfair question, but one that should not have been asked in front if the cameras – that’s when Vance jumped in and we know that he’s not a big Ukraine fan. I think Zelenskyy has more than proved that he won’t be bullied by Putin, if the last few years are any indication. That said, knowing how Trump and/or Vance will react to a public challenge, means Zelenskyy very much misread the room and weakened his bargaining position. He should have paid more attention to President Clinton – we’d all be better off at this point.

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