Europe

Restraint: A post-COVID-19 U.S. national security strategy

Restraint: A post-COVID-19 U.S. national security strategy

The COVID-19 pandemic and efforts to manage it ravaged the U.S. economy and government finances, raising demand for domestic spending, cutting revenue, and increasing debt. U.S. grand strategy—long overly ambitious—should be restrained to manage these budgetary pressures. Domestic needs should take greater priority because the U.S. is fundamentally secure. Restraint prioritizes vital interests, abandons peripheral missions, shifts the burden of securing other regions to allies, and ends military overstretch—it provides more security at lower cost and aids the difficult task of domestic rebuilding.

Risks of lethal aid to Ukraine

Risks of lethal aid to Ukraine

Supplying weapons to Ukraine, which is neither a U.S. ally nor NATO member, damages U.S. relations with Russia—a nation with 6,500 nuclear weapons. It also incentivizes the continuation of the conflict in the Donbass rather than its political resolution, and it absolves European powers of responsibility for their neighbor. Russia’s strong security interests in Ukraine mean it would use as much force as necessary to prevent Ukraine from joining the West. Ukraine’s future is best guaranteed by supporting the current peace process between Kiev and Moscow and declaring Ukraine a neutral nation—allied with neither Russia nor the West.

U.S. interests in Europe and the future of NATO

U.S. interests in Europe and the future of NATO

U.S. allies must be held responsible for defending themselves and the global commons. During the Cold War, defending the free world from communist conquest and domination while they rebuilt their economies was necessary and proper. As those countries prospered, however, the justification for American protection waned. The Cold War’s end further eroded the foundations of perpetual alliances backed by foreign-deployed U.S. troops. Other advanced nations should share America’s global burdens instead of free-riding on us.