Goodbye, America: Britain must choose Europe over Trump’s rogue United States

I love America. I was lucky enough to work for a wonderful American company for 16 years, and cherished the friendships of many fine American colleagues. But the transformation of the leader of the free world into a cheerleader for brutal dictatorship and the far right cannot be ignored.

In 1776, 13 American colonies declared independence from Great Britain. Just short of the 250th anniversary of that historic event, the perfidious actions of the 47th president of the resulting United States of America make it essential for Britain itself to break free.

Trump bullies the man who defied his friend Putin’s invasion

Like millions of Europeans, I was appalled to see President Trump bully and humiliate Ukraine’s President Zelenskyy in what looked like a hostage video staged in the White House. Trump and Vance constantly interrupted the beleaguered Ukrainian leader, who valiantly tried to cope with the flood of invective. At the very same time Trump was abusing his counterpart, the American president’s friend Vladimir Putin’s forces were killing Zelenskyy’s fellow citizens, as they have been since 24 February 2022.

“You are gambling with the lives of millions of people. You’re gambling with world war three,” Trump told a man whose country had been invaded by a brutal dictator intent on wiping Ukraine off the map. Fortunately, America’s greatest president, Franklin Roosevelt, took a different line in 1941 with Winston Churchill. Rather than bullying Britain’s wartime prime minister into accepting an armistice with Hitler, Roosevelt gave extraordinary support for his fight for national survival. Alongside the heroic efforts of the Soviet Union, that ensured that Europe was liberated from the tyranny of Nazi rule less than four years after America entered the war.

I am usually very reluctant to mention the Nazis (people do this all too often), but the shocking encounter at the White House reminded me of the humiliation in 1938 of Austria’s chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg, subjected to a terrifying two hour tirade by Adolf Hitler in the dictator’s mountain retreat at Berchtesgaden, Bavaria. ‘You have done everything to avoid a friendly policy!’ Hitler screamed. ‘And I can tell you right now, Herr Schuschnigg, that I am absolutely determined to make an end of this.’ The Anschluss – the Nazis’ forced union of Germany and Austria – came the following month, with appalling consequences for Austria’s Jews and countless others. Austria only became an independent country again in 1955, 10 years after the second world war.

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In praise of the EU – Nobel peace prize winner

The Tory Eurosceptics and Greek protesters may not like it. But the Nobel committee today named the European Union as the 2012 peace prize winner for helping transform Europe “from a continent of war to a continent of peace”.

It’s well deserved. Back in 1945, Europe was in ruins after six years of indescribable carnage. That followed four years of the Great War. France, Germany and the Low Countries vowed never again to go to war. The result was what we now call the European Union. It’s far from perfect, and overreached itself with the euro. But it’s infinitely better than what the continent inflicted on itself between 1914 and 1945. (And how appropriate that the prize came the day after David Cameron announced plans to commemorate the Great War centenary.)

It reminds me of a wonderful BBC series from my childhood. The Mighty Continent, narrated by Peter Ustinov, told the tale of how Europe was the world’s powerhouse in 1914. By 1945, it had destroyed and impoverished itself, and ceded leadership to the United States. The European Union may not have returned Europe to its 1914 dominance, but it has been a force for good in Europe and beyond.