229 comments

  • jacquesm an hour ago

    Of course they were. The United States has never before damaged its own reputation in Europe as much as they did in the last 12 months.

    And the same goes for Canada, possibly worse. You don't go around threatening your allies unless you really have plans and that's why you don't elect senile old guys to positions of power.

    • lynndotpy 32 minutes ago

      I'm really happy these topics are being discussed here on HN, when they weren't ~1 year ago. When considering a post-USA world, we also get to consider a post-Microsoft, post-Meta, post-Google, post-CloudFlare, post-Amazon, etc world.

      I can't say I know much about how the EU operates or how quickly their Open Digital Ecosystems initiative could take shape, but this is a really opportune time to build a better tech industry.

      • AlecSchueler 26 minutes ago

        > I'm really happy these topics are being discussed here on HN, when they weren't ~1 year ago.

        They were being discussed a year ago, too, they just got flagged. Make sure to check /active

        • blurbleblurble 22 minutes ago

          Totally, and they're still being flagged, just not to as great a degree

      • bko 17 minutes ago

        What does post-USA world mean?

        Who is the leader in culture, business, technology? The only other contender I can think of is China.

        And this is better?

        • ndsipa_pomu 4 minutes ago

          Much better.

          China is far more reliable and dependable than dealing with a lying narcissistic paedophile and his cronies.

      • mattmaroon 21 minutes ago

        I feel like it's ruining HN. The internet did not lack places to talk politics. The comments threads are a solid 20% anti-semitic dog whistles now.

    • philipallstar an hour ago

      > that's why you don't elect senile old guys to positions of power.

      Anyone of principle would have been saying this before 2025, and far louder.

      • jacquesm an hour ago

        Note that this is from a country that wouldn't exist if not for the allied countries and that the US has somehow managed to all but erase that reputation. We recognize our debt, we also recognize that this is to a country that no longer exists in a meaningful way. All we have now is multiple variations of the mob.

        • mcv an hour ago

          The way you pay off that debt is not to the original liberator now turned oppressor, but by extending similar help to countries that are now in a similar bind as we were then. Like Ukraine. I really think we are morally obligated to liberate and help Ukraine.

          Our debt to the US has long been paid off. It was paid off when we submitted to their economic world order, when we bought their goods and their entertainment, when we bought their software and let our own software industry dwindle, and finally when we went to war on their side on their questionable military adventures.

          We owe the US nothing. I will still help them when they actually want it, but not like this.

          • jacquesm 39 minutes ago

            > I really think we are morally obligated to liberate and help Ukraine.

            I am doing what I can and then some.

          • gib444 38 minutes ago

            > Our debt to the US has long been paid off. It was paid off when we submitted to their economic world order, when we bought their goods and their entertainment, when we bought their software and let our own software industry dwindle, and finally when we went to war on their side on their questionable military adventures.

            > We owe the US nothing.

            Hear hear. Well said

            • benterix 20 minutes ago

              > when we went to war on their side on their questionable military adventures.

              And then they ridiculed us for that.

              And then asked for help in another war they just started.

        • jjtwixman an hour ago

          Yeah the US we knew is gone. I think about this sometimes when I am listening to American music from the 20th century, how much soft power they had, how great they made America sound either directly or indirectly. That America that we all looked up to and admired is gone. Pity.

          • lnsru an hour ago

            I am the guy who participated in Green Card lottery for few years willing to work in most advanced planet‘s semiconductor companies. I changed my mind recently. Speedboat ambushes, Greenland, public executions by ICE „officers“ and now Iran war. US I knew is definitely gone. That’s not the country sharing culture and values peacefully anymore: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amerika-Haus_(M%C3%BCnchen)

            • lores an hour ago

              To be fair, the US has never been peaceful, and it's the country that started the most wars since WW2. It's just that it used to be in our team, and human nature make the aggressiveness of our team justified, or at least understandable.

          • srean an hour ago

            Did that US really exist without a self imposed convenience of blindness ?

            The brutality of the School of Americas might indicate otherwise.

            Now rebranded as

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Hemisphere_Institute_f...

            • JeremyNT 32 minutes ago

              The US was historically self-interested in empire building, with an excellent PR campaign in front of it, but... it also did useful and good stuff, both for its allies and for unrelated parties. USAID was a testament to this.

              PR spin aside, it was largely a force for global stability (a few notable and disastrous military quagmires aside). "Free trade" isn't much of a philosophy to hang your hat on but it is an ideal of sorts, and it allowed a more connected world.

              Now? Brazen corruption, kleptocracy, hostility towards allies...

              It's certainly fair to say the US never lived up to the ideals it espoused, but now it's not even espousing those ideals and seems to actively be working against them.

              • keybored 16 minutes ago

                > PR spin aside,

                Then the comment repeats the same PR spin.

            • jacquesm an hour ago

              That's a tough question.

              There has always been a meddlesome quality to the USA that the rest of the so called developed world turned a blind eye to. Along the lines of 'their bastards, but at least they're our bastards'. Of course that does not make it good, but the balance calculation worked out in favor of toeing the line and being careful not to get pulled out of joint too much. 9/11 changed all that and effectively Bin Laden forced the USA to lower its mask for long enough that the world could no longer ignore the bad sides of Uncle Sam. Even that would have not been enough to seal it, but Trump has managed to accomplish this in record time.

              • foobarian 2 minutes ago

                I think that a big part of it is the transparency brought on by the vast communication bandwidth that came online starting after the dot com years. This stuff happened before just the same, but was concealed by media gatekeepers.

                Bay of Pigs, regime changes all over including Iran, South Asia wars, Afghanistan (not the recent one, the one in the 80s), all the cold war stuff, etc etc.

              • srean 41 minutes ago

                "Meddlesome" is certainly a light way of labeling torture training.

                What I find more troubling is that Trump has popular support. It's just not Trump. The rot goes far deeper.

                • nxor2 10 minutes ago

                  It's the two party system. If liberals are okay with 'pro lgbt muslims' and say things like 'gang violence isn't a problem' then people no longer vote for liberals.

                • jacquesm 38 minutes ago

                  Fair enough.

                • TheOtherHobbes 26 minutes ago

                  Trump doesn't have popular support. Many of his 2024 voters are furious with him.

                  What Trump has is oligarch support - an unholy alliance of weird and cranky tech billionaires, old(ish) money, foreign money, media owners, and insane white supremacist patriarch-wannabes, some of whom operate through think tanks, some through megachurches.

                  The media are doing an excellent job of normalising this, not least - but not only - sanewashing Trump's obvious mental and physical decay.

                  • srean 21 minutes ago

                    I want to believe this desperately, but from what I see (well, on YouTube videos, surveys and polls) it makes it very hard for me to do so. I still see massive endorsement from the not so well to do in the hinterlands.

                    I will however grant you that my sampling is no where close to uniform.

                    • jacquesm 8 minutes ago

                      Unless all of the useful idiots in this thread are bots there is plenty of popular support. And it's not like they couldn't know better.

                  • nxor2 10 minutes ago

                    Does JB Pritzker, who many people want to run in 2028, have oligarch support?

          • nxor2 18 minutes ago

            You are seeing a side that always existed. Arguably in the past it was worse.

          • imjonse 25 minutes ago

            As a european I see what you mean, but that 'we all' in your sentence probably hasn't included those from Latin America, and large parts of Africa or Asia since long before Trump. The US pulled quite a few less than admirable tricks (to use an euphemism) on non-europeans during the 20th century.

            • srean 10 minutes ago

              Exactly.

          • ekianjo 17 minutes ago

            > how much soft power they had,

            Soft power? Have you been sleeping during the 20th century? The formidable military power of the US comes from a constant state of war.

          • keybored 40 minutes ago

            Reminder that “Born in the USA” was not a “patriotic” song.

            • srean 27 minutes ago

              Neither was "This land is your land"

              Where is Guthrie's guitar ?

        • zabzonk an hour ago

          > Note that this is from a country that wouldn't exist if not for the allied countries

          Which allied countries? And (I assume we are talking about the USA) why would it not exist?

          • fodmap an hour ago

            'Until early in 1778, the American Revolution was a civil war within the British Empire, but it became an international war as France (in 1778) and Spain (in 1779) joined the colonies against Britain. The Netherlands, which was engaged in its own war with Britain, provided financial support for the Americans as well as official recognition of their independence. The French navy in particular played a key role in bringing about the British surrender at Yorktown, which effectively ended the war.'

            https://www.britannica.com/question/Which-countries-fought-o...

          • jacquesm an hour ago

            NL (where I live), BE, FR, ES, IT, a good chunk of Germany, Austria, possibly the UK.

            We'd have been part of the German Reich or the USSR for sure.

            I make a point of visiting the war graves every year, just to remind me not to take anything for granted.

          • disiplus an hour ago

            The post mentions, france, germany and nordic nations. France, Holand and nordic nations helped in the early stages of US.

      • outside1234 33 minutes ago

        C'mon, everyone was saying this in 2024. It is just that people hate women and people of color more.

      • drcongo an hour ago

        Lots of us were, but we were mostly shouted down as being hysterical for warning that fascism was coming.

        • jfengel an hour ago

          The people who said that are still saying it. Few minds appear to have really changed. Everyone just believes the same positions, harder.

      • lo_zamoyski 17 minutes ago

        Men of old age are indeed generally ill-suited for the presidency (as are the young; middle age best balances vigor with prudence and wisdom). The elderly function better as advisors where they may be consulted for their experience, or as amici curiae.

        That being said, I don't think we can pin this particular expression of derangement on age, or at least not age alone. Trump has nothing to lose. He cannot run again. He doesn't care one whit about the common good or even tawdry partisan interests. This is his unhinged narcissism at work, abetted by a cultish, smarmy, obsequious coterie of yes-men that surrounds him.

      • chewbacha an hour ago

        Jake Tapper was on the case… against Biden.

        • dspillett an hour ago

          Aye. Though those making a big noise about “Sleepy Joe” didn't seem to have a problem electing Drooling Dementia Drone Don.

          • bregma 36 minutes ago

            There is no evidence that dozy Donny the paedo president has dementia. It's just that one of his personality traits is "Arbitrary".

            I can just imagine him saying, as he walks into the TV room in the Whitehouse, "I went to Glitterhoof's chamber and gave him a good tumble! It is good to be the king!"

            • dspillett 24 minutes ago

              > There is no evidence […] Donny […] has dementia.

              Oh, there is plenty of circumstantial evidence, but nothing that would constitute proof without access to the results of a detailed medical examination. Source: watching the decline of family members, and others in the care home my mother is currently in.

              The increasing randomness and apparent lack of concentration, the “resting his eyes” in some meetings, the leaning, etc. A lot of the signs could be other things of course, like just plain ol' age related decline. But if the people close to him don't at least have concerns, would he have been subject to the cognitive tests he is so proud of “winning”?

            • jacquesm 32 minutes ago

              You can bet that it is exactly what his defense will be if he's ever in court for all of his crimes. I can dream, no?

          • chewbacha 29 minutes ago

            Totally! I intended to imply that hypocrisy :)

      • zeroCalories an hour ago

        And partisan hacks will say that a stubbed toe and terminal cancer are both bad.

    • srean an hour ago

      I think learned wisdom has institutional memory of a few generations only, unless mythologized.

      Thus, some lessons need to be learned again and again. Some rights fought for again and again.

    • equilibrium an hour ago

      Europe and the rest of the world.

    • DivingForGold 44 minutes ago

      The Anti-NATO pact.

    • empath75 an hour ago

      The only way the US can fix our reputation will be to try and imprison our current leadership after they are eventually removed from power. And in particular, the Trump family needs to have all of its assets seized.

      • srean 44 minutes ago

        Nuremberg style judicial proceedings.

        Not necessarily with similar judicial executions. Fair trials and fair and exemplary punitive measures would be enough for me.

        I lost respect when Obama let Bush Jr administration off the hook. It essentially set the tone that it is ok to behave like that, that there would be no consequences.

        • red-iron-pine 6 minutes ago

          nah the world needs to see there are consequences, and that the US can be trusted to follow through on them.

          this kind of corruption and extortion, if in China, would see executions, e.g.

          https://nordictimes.com/world/china-executes-senior-official...

        • iso1631 23 minutes ago

          Bush wasn't great with Iraq, but it was hardly the first bad foreign policy move the US has made, and Obama wasn't squeaky clean.

          Jan 6th 2021 was the turning point.

      • mcv an hour ago

        I don't know why this is voted down, because it's absolutely true. The only way for the US to regain the lost trust is to finally clean house, hold its corrupt leadership accountable. Throw them in prison, seize their illegitimately gotten assets, reform that broken political system, and educate your people so this doesn't happen again.

      • sschueller 7 minutes ago

        And change the constitution to fix the issue of an administration just ignoring the law.

      • bregma 21 minutes ago

        Following the precedents of imprisoning and persecuting the previous regime on "corruption" charges established by the likes of much of Latin America, Pakistan, the Phillipines, and other similar countries will definitely mark the USA as a second-rate tin-pot dictatorship.

        Maybe the predecessor regime is corrupt. Maybe not. But the first thing the new regime always does is to arrange the show trials to establish their own bona fides.

      • ramon156 an hour ago

        Lets also include the Rothschild and BlackRock then

      • i80and an hour ago

        The absolute lack of consequences Trump faced after his first go-around all but guaranteed the crime spree we're now seeing, and will probably go down in history as the primary blunder of Biden's DOJ.

        • mcv 31 minutes ago

          The precedent was already set by Nixon's pardon. The signal was clear: presidents suffer no consequences for their crimes.

      • nxm an hour ago

        Imprison based on what and seize assets based on what exactly? You not liking the administration is not a valid reason for asset seizure

        • JoshTriplett an hour ago

          Open bribery and corruption (both the direct pay-for-play and the indirect via insider information), openly violating the law and ignoring the courts, betrayal of public trust, mishandling of confidential information, war crimes, take your pick of the many different choices.

          And the asset seizure would be for the proceeds of all the open bribery, at the very least.

          • niels8472 an hour ago

            Sadly, these are all fairly "safe" things for a US president to do. Either because there's no law against it and if there is he can just pardon himself and his partners in crime. I know a presidential self-pardon is controversial but realistically Trump will be dead before that legal question is settled.

            • mcv an hour ago

              There should be a law against it. It's blatant corruption. The fact that lawmakers and supreme judges have the power to make their own corruption legal, doesn't make it any less corrupt. The Nazis made their crimes legal, and they were tried anyway.

              • Jensson 40 minutes ago

                > The Nazis made their crimes legal, and they were tried anyway.

                They were tried after being beaten militarily, who will lead the rebellion against Trump and the American military backing him? The military doesn't dislike what he does and those are the main ones that could oppose him.

                • mcv 8 minutes ago

                  Plenty of soldiers and veterans hate what he does. The current leadership doesn't because Trump purged them and promoted loyalists.

                  But ultimately, it's the people of the US who have to do this. You're absolutely right that nobody else is going to do it for them.

        • InsideOutSanta 44 minutes ago

          It's peculiar to me that after Nixon, Americans just don't hold their presidents accountable for their illegal actions anymore. It seems like they've just given up; they no longer behave as if the president was the head of the executive branch. They behave as if he was a king with absolute power.

          This is such a long-standing problem that people no longer even notice the crimes happening right in front of their eyes. It's just become normal.

        • _bohm an hour ago

          Starting illegal wars and engaging in extreme corruption, for starters.

          • terminalshort 34 minutes ago

            The war isn't illegal. The president has that power. I don't like it either, but since the Korean War this is simply a statement of fact.

            • jacquesm a minute ago

              > The war isn't illegal.

              You're going to have to specify a framework if you want to make statements about legality.

            • _bohm 19 minutes ago

              The war is certainly illegal. Our systems are just so atrophied at this point that we treat congressional approval as a formality. This is a choice we make over and over again that we need to stop making.

            • vrganj 21 minutes ago

              The president of the US does not have the power to start a war without getting it approved by the UN security council. You're arguing internal implementation details, but the legality is not determined by your courts.

        • HighGoldstein 22 minutes ago

          If you hold the belief that the Trump administration (and Trump himself personally) have not commited a rather long list of crimes openly, you are either willfully ignorant or complicit. I do not care if this statement irritates you in any way. After a certain point, we are firmly in the realm of personal responsibility.

        • ivan_gammel an hour ago

          There’s probably a huge case for corruption. And of course he can be declared national threat and foreign agent. I mean, just look what Putin does within his constitutional limits. When there’s choice between the bad (block Trump and allies) and the worse (his ideas stay alive even if he is no longer in business), you have to choose something and then reflect not on what you just did, but how did you get there in the first place. Legal matters are secondary, as long as majority is convinced that justice is served.

          • terminalshort 29 minutes ago

            > There’s probably a huge case for corruption

            Yes

            > And of course he can be declared national threat and foreign agent

            There is no evidence of that he is a foreign agent and there is no legal procedure (nor should there be) for declaring someone a "national threat."

            > When there’s choice between the bad (block Trump and allies) and the worse (his ideas stay alive even if he is no longer in business)

            This is inevitable and any government that tries to act against holders of an idea is a tyranny

            > Legal matters are secondary, as long as majority is convinced that justice is served.

            That is mob justice

        • fzeroracer an hour ago

          Well, his administration has ignored the constitutional rights of this country multiple times at best, and at worst outright violated them resulting in killing American citizens with zero justice or recourse. There's a million different alternative reasons people could come up with, but we can just go with the classic 'treason' and line them up accordingly.

          • terminalshort 27 minutes ago

            Yes I know that president Obama ordered the military execution of multiple US citizens, but I think that's a bit extreme.

            > just go with the classic 'treason' and line them up accordingly.

            You sound like a Nazi

        • goodpoint an hour ago

          Treason.

        • aaomidi an hour ago

          Epstein files for one

        • FpUser an hour ago

          >"You not liking the administration is not a valid reason for asset seizure"

          Civil forfeiture would do just fine. Such a wonderful tool. /s

      • roenxi an hour ago

        On what principle would the Trump family's assets be seized? Just to pre-empt the idea that he corruptly became rich in office, that is actually fairly usual for US presidents to become suspiciously wealthy after their time in office [0, 1]. That's never been a reason to start talking about asset seizure.

        Although given the current lunatic escapade it does seem like a good moment to remove him from office. There must be someone somewhere in the administration that thinks another forever war is a bad idea, even if they aren't worried about WWIII. I've never seen a presidency implode so quickly - this has to be the most illegal, unconstitutional, unmandated, immoral and ill-advised war of choice the US has launched in decades.

        [0] https://www.newsweek.com/chart-shows-net-worth-us-presidents...

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_presidents_of_the_Unit...

    • kingleopold an hour ago

      This is why two party system is really great. because they both don't try to put old guts into power in last decade. /s

      Younger people are not fit to power in 300M country with lots of smart and rich people. Instead these smart and rich people back these old guys because when it comes to election they use half of their brain or sometimes not use their brain at all. One of these rich one was recently bl00mberg and he tried to get elected at age of 500 year old but couldn't do it.

    • bko 30 minutes ago

      I'm sure this will be very unpopular but no one else is going to say it so here goes,

      I don't think a country should make decisions based on how it affects their "reputation" among other countries.

      Most of Europe has been riding on American security guarantees and under-invested in their own defense. And then there's other things like straight up theft from American companies mostly through "antitrust" or "data privacy" laws. This is thankfully changing due to Ukraine war. People say Europe is an ally but when America pays for their protection and gives them innovations in tech and subsidized drug discovery, what does America get in return?

      The fact is Europe hasn't offered America much of anything other than a vacation spot over the last 100 years. And there's the cookie banners too. They're essentially irrelevant in culture, technology and pretty much everything else. It's a shame and I hope it changes, but that's where we are. It's a stagnant culture, basically a museum, no economic growth or prosperity. The poorest US state rivals Germany in GDP per capita.

      So I don't think the US should give much consideration about it's reputation across Europe.

      https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/poorest-us-state-rivals-ge...

      https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/americans-are-generally-richer...

  • vrganj an hour ago

    > As a source puts it, the French said: "Would you like more soldiers? You could have them. Would you like more naval support? You could have that. Would you like more air support? You could have that too."

    Thank God for the French. I long thought their strong Gaullist stance on sovereignty was a bit silly in today's world, but turns out they were right along.

    Europe can't trust any outside powers. Any external dependency can and will be used against us. We used to be wide-eyed believers in international corporation and global alliances, but those are, as it turns out, always a risk and a liability.

    I sure as hell am glad the French kept being stubborn enough to build most capabilities in-house, so now we have our own nuclear deterrent, aircraft carrier and fighter jet programs. Imagine if we had gone all-in on American weapons tech! They'd have us, excuse my French, by the balls!

    • mamonster 36 minutes ago

      >I long thought their strong Gaullist stance on sovereignty was a bit silly in today's world, but turns out they were right along.

      Every single French president since Mitterand (with a brief exception for Iraq that was more than made up by Libya) spent a large part of their time liquidating Gaullism.

    • ifwinterco 14 minutes ago

      The French took basically the exact opposite approach to the British in terms of post-WW2 foreign policy.

      I think partly because of the shared language British elites were able to convince themselves that the US is just like us, and the so called "special relationship" sort of preserved British power albeit as an extremely junior partner riding on the coattails of the US.

      With the French there was no such delusion and they've never seen eye to eye with the Americans, they've just been biding their time waiting for this all to play out.

      In hindsight, the French were right of course (they usually are as much as it pains me to say it)

    • ekianjo 15 minutes ago

      > Thank God for the French

      France has nowhere the military power to resist a country like the US. They have not invested in the military for a very long time and most of their equipment is completely outdated.

      • estearum 6 minutes ago

        Ah but alas: have you considered that the US is increasingly run by actual idiots?

        It turns out even Iran has the power to resist a country like the US.

      • vrganj 7 minutes ago

        France has completely sovereign nukes and the only first-strike nuclear doctrine in the world. It has the military power to resist any country.

    • terminalshort 26 minutes ago

      History shows that Europe can't trust any inside powers either...

      • vrganj 22 minutes ago

        pre-EU history shows that, which is why we founded the EU in the first place.

        To quote one of our founding fathers, Robert Schuman, the point of tightly interweaving our economies this way is to "make war not only unthinkable, but materially impossible"

        • applfanboysbgon 12 minutes ago

          Unfortunately it doesn't seem like that thought will actually hold up to the real world. The US's economy is tightly interweaved with and dependent upon many parties, but they have no qualms about utterly destroying themselves to satisfy the ego of one man they worship as their supreme leader. Schuman's quote supposes a base minimum of rationality in the world, which we are discovering does not actually exist.

  • matsemann an hour ago

    Russia's invasion ironically strengthened NATO, with more countries joining or feeling the usefulness of it. Somehow the US managed to break down all that good will in such a short amount of time.. I think it's hard to overstate how much more hostile people look at the US the last few years. So much soft power has been lost.

    • originalvichy an hour ago

      Covid, Russia and the axis of US+Israel has done massive damage to the European psyche.

      Covid showed us how economically dependent we are to major manufacturing countries like China. Paper money != ability to manufacture.

      Russia broke any notion of peace that can be funded by cheap energy. It will always be a tool used against you, and Russia will not change.

      The axis of US+Israel is breaking down the international system of laws and diplomacy. It’s going to be in a state even worse than the heights of the Cold War. Nukes are now a more favored instrument of peace compared to diplomacy.

      Is it worth fighting for what we had, or should we fight for something better? Who knows.

      (Edit: I don’t think non-Europeans can appreciate the whiplash suffered in our populations. In the span of around two years, European leaders drew red lines on political, economical and cultural decoupling from Russia based on human rights and the rule of law, then had to explain why preventable atrocities happening to civilians in the Mideast is not against our values and laws concerning human rights.)

    • fluidcruft an hour ago

      I'm of pretty mixed feelings about this. It certainly strengthened Europe's collective defense priorities and awareness. That response happens to include NATO but primarily because Europe is too weak without NATO. Europe used to be full of world powers and now they collectively can't manage collective defense without the US? There's something very learned-helplessness about that.

      And yes, it certainly has served America's interests to have a weak Europe that's dependent on it. But seeing that as "good will" seems like a distortion.

      • mcv 26 minutes ago

        Europe's weakness is mostly in their heads. The US is the most powerful military in the world, but the second most powerful military is NATO without the US. If the rest of NATO pulls together and reorganises into an effective military that doesn't depend on the US, it would be a force to be reckoned with.

        Europe could easily defeat Russia without outside help (look at how well Ukraine is doing with far less!), but we still fear Russia because that's what we're used to. That's what we were told to do and what we have embraced. We need to grow out of that and stand on our own feet again.

      • energy123 32 minutes ago

        Kissinger warned about this in 1969:

        > Tutelage is a comfortable relationship for the senior partner, but it is demoralizing in the long run. It breeds illusions of omniscience on one side and attitudes of impotent irresponsibility on the other

      • fifilura 42 minutes ago

        Maybe a bit of learned helplessness, but what people tend to forget is that an all-in Russia is a formidable enemy.

        This is the moment it helps to have allies. Like an insurance. Even if you can manage without, it hurts less if you have them.

        To me it makes more sense to focus on that perspective.

    • kqr an hour ago

      The Apollo missions were the greatest scientific accomplishment by the Soviet Union. History repeats.

    • fortyseven an hour ago

      > I think it's hard to overstate how much more hostile people look at the US the last few years.

      True both outside AND inside the country.

    • Imustaskforhelp an hour ago

      > So much soft power has been lost.

      The worst part to me feels like US has lost trust and such soft power loss is irrecoverable no matter what happens now :/

      A common statement I hear from people, or maybe its just what I think, but its like "How can we trust US after this" and hey mind you, Trump still has 3 years in office, but even if political parties change, how can we trust the whole system for not having another Trump moment.

      So this loss of soft power is quite a permanent loss. US has to now condition itself to live with it accordingly and live with some shame (which is something that I am observing too of people not being proud of being american anymore seeing the devastation caused by it)

      Countries across the world will have to treat US as unpredictable from now on and treat its financial markets in the same way as well.

      The worst part out of all of this is that it hurts the average day american the most not the people at the top who are doing all of this and the average person has no say in all of this seeing their country being destroyed by wreckless actions.

      The sad part is that people did have many wake up calls to be honest, greenland was first joked about and then became so serious that denmark was preparing only to then move to iran now impacting the normal people's everyday life with oil price increases all across the world..

      I do think that the people of US tried to stand up against the oppression by protests but some were shot (rest in peace) and others were detained.

      The sad part is that the people tried their best but it still wasn't enough to stop all of this from happening. It was maybe too late after the election.

      • keiferski 12 minutes ago

        I am equally dismayed at recent US behavior; but this is a short sighted view.

        1. Geopolitics is always unpredictable. Maybe the US has been unreliable lately, but the idea that there are states out there which have been bastions of reliability is not historically accurate. All great powers have screwed people over or made disastrous decisions. It’s mostly just the US’s turn now.

        2. This all happened 20 years ago with Iraq. All it really took was a charismatic president (Obama) to undo the 8+ years of bad international relations. All it will probably take again is a charismatic reliable president to set things back on track.

        3. Which leads me to my third point, which is that most foreigners understand that the American government is separate from the people and separate from the corporations. And more importantly, changing the world system dramatically is really hard, and has a lot of friction. It will be a lot easier for states to go back to the pre-2024 status quo than to embark upon something entirely novel.

      • doom2 39 minutes ago

        > Countries across the world will have to treat US as unpredictable from now on

        Anyone who has studied American history knows the US has been unreliable. Just look at how they made and then broke treaties with Native Americans. It's part of the foundation of the country.

        • Imustaskforhelp 31 minutes ago

          Within Geopolitical commentaries that I used to watch, A famous quote by Henry Kissinger is often repeated.

          "to be an enemy of america can be dangerous, but to be a friend is fatal"

          So yeah, America has never been trustworthy in a way but it still had its upsides and it still had some laws and checks and people still believed in some aspects of the American dream somewhat, Not anymore.

          But now?,it has never been this less trustworthy either in a way to the whole world.

    • varispeed an hour ago

      > Somehow the US managed to break down all that good will in such a short amount of time

      Because US administration is compromised. Putin says jump, Krasnov asks how high.

      • terminalshort 23 minutes ago

        Yes that is clearly the case. Obviously Putin told Trump to start seizing his oil tankers recently.

  • bryanlarsen 40 minutes ago

    Keep in mind that militaries are always preparing for war. They have to. A military exists in large part to always be prepared for the unthinkable.

    And in the case of countries like Denmark who have few realistic enemy choices, that means they must be prepared for unrealistic invasions, even if the US isn't threatening to invade.

    Yes the Danes probably spend most of their time preparing to fight the Russians, but always wargaming the same thing leaves them unprepared for different enemies or unexpected approaches from expected enemies.

    Yes, the actions in the links are more than just wargaming, but a large part of it is stuff the military should be doing anyways.

    • estearum 5 minutes ago

      Hot take: Preparing to defend your country from an ally invading you is actually very bad and indicative of inexcusable behavior from your "ally."

      > that means they must be prepared for unrealistic invasions, even if the US isn't threatening to invade.

      It's not unrealistic to think the US would invade Greenland. We've now had 10+ years of this "it's a joke... no it's a bargaining chip... well it's overstated... okay it's temporary... ahh yes well this is Good, Actually."

    • halJordan 14 minutes ago

      No thats not what this was. These are the actions that the Russians did before invading Ukraine and were the specific actions that the military pointed out and said "these aren't normal actions everyone is always doing"

  • smcin an hour ago

    Source cited by @chriso-wiki.bsky.social is this article on DR.dk, the Danish public broadcaster:

    https://www.dr.dk/nyheder/indland/groenland/danmark-forbered...

  • KaiMagnus an hour ago

    And this is, in my opinion, why support at Hormuz shouldn’t even be on the table. How can you possibly hold joint patrols when you were just months ago planning full scale war between each other?

    • verelo an hour ago

      Also, the "was" in this title feels misleading. If they're not still, they're crazy.

      • freehorse 41 minutes ago

        The original title is better translated as "prepared". The tweeting reposter translated to continuous past tense somewhat erroneously imo, because it sounds as if the preparation was interrupted by something.

    • lm28469 an hour ago

      > And this is, in my opinion, why support at Hormuz shouldn’t even be on the table

      Shouldn't? it's not on the table at all lol

  • silvestrov an hour ago

    > * The Danish public broadcaster DR reports ...*

    This is the source article (in Danish) for the bluesky posts:

    https://www.dr.dk/nyheder/indland/groenland/danmark-forbered...

  • polotics an hour ago

    Tu as le droit de perdre, mais tu n'as pas le droit de te faire surprendre. (You have the right to lose, but you do not have the right to be caught off guard.)

  • Peritract an hour ago

    That is a very reasonable response to the threats they faced.

  • nickdothutton 26 minutes ago

    I think there is a pretty good chance US is in the late empire phase. This is not about a single President or party, or even single geopolitical event/development.

    • iso1631 13 minutes ago

      > This is not about a single President or party

      I've seen roughly two types of American commentators over the last year. The ones that cheer this stuff going on, which HN has plenty of, and the ones that think "come the midterms/2028/impeachment everything will go back to normal"

      The latter are massively mistaken, it would take decades for the US to rebuild its standing in the eyes of the world, and there is no evidence that it even wants to.

      Trump is a symptom of what America truly is, not the cause.

      • tartuffe78 6 minutes ago

        He is also a singular political figure. I don't think things will go back to normal, but they won't stay the way there are now.

  • torginus 24 minutes ago

    The F-35 is mentioned in the article as being readied for the defense of Greenland. I wonder what the 'easter-eggs' Danes would've found out about it if they went up against the US.

    (I think I know, it has to do with how its 'stealth' works.)

  • pogue 39 minutes ago

    The source of this post is this article from a site called dr.dk. Maybe someone can double check the validity of it.

    Danmark forberedte sig på muligt angreb fra USA [Danish language - no native translation] https://www.dr.dk/nyheder/indland/groenland/danmark-forbered...

    Google translated URL: https://www-dr-dk.translate.goog/nyheder/indland/groenland/d...

    • fasterik 35 minutes ago

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DR_(broadcaster)

      >DR is a Danish public-service radio and television broadcasting company. Founded in 1925 as a public-service organization, it is Denmark's oldest and largest electronic media enterprise.

    • hagbarth 36 minutes ago

      Danish public broadcaster. Probably the best reputation in the world on Danish news.

  • jeroenhd 40 minutes ago

    Every week, the USA finds a new way to lose credibility as a serious nation. If it weren't for the observably fair elections, you'd almost think America was being taken over from the inside by foreign infiltrators.

    It's ludicrous to see the USA threaten to invade a well-connected European country, invade a South American country weeks after, and then now, three months later, beg its European allies to help with the invasion of Iran because ostensibly American leadership couldn't foresee that war in the Middle East might impact fuel prices. I still think it's a ruse to distract the European military by sending the navy to the Middle East but who knows with the current idiot in charge.

    I hope the country will recover some normalcy in post-Trump decade(s), but I fear we're witnessing the slow collapse of a world power. Regardless of anyone's feelings on grip the East/West dichotomy has had over the world in the past 90 or so years, such shifts in world power rarely go calmly and peacefully.

  • fergie an hour ago

    Thats probably what this was all about then (use Google Translate) -> https://www.nrk.no/norge/gradert-sak-behandlet-i-ekstraordin...

    • mailund 31 minutes ago

      I don't think it's very likely that the emergency meeting in the Norwegian government yesterday was called because of the security situation in Denmark 3 months ago. Not unlikely that it is related to US-Europe/NATO relations ofc (although there are plenty of other things that would cause an emergency meeting as well, king has been hospitalized plenty of times lately, wife of the next in line is deep in drama due to both being revealed to have been close with Epstein and having a son that is currently in court for some pretty serious allegations, and sharing a border Russia that is currently waging hybrid warfare across europe)

      Just for some additional context, these meetings are held every week, but this caused headlines because there was held an additional one outside of the normal schedule due to some classified time sensitive case, i.e. not something that happened in another country many months ago.

  • throwa356262 an hour ago

    Those Danes should study the Falklands war.

    Using F35 in this situation is like brining in a billion dollar paperweight to the battle.s

    • jacquesm an hour ago

      That doesn't matter. It is not so much about whether the USA could do this and expect to win, of course they can. Nobody has any doubt about that. It is about gross miscalculation of consequences. Attack Greenland ->attack Denmark, attack Denmark -> Attack the EU.

      So you don't attack Greenland. Because that would be wrong.

      Unless all that stuff about shining cities on hills was nonsense. Instead of making America great again the US has ceded power to China.

      • petterroea an hour ago

        Living in Japan, I meet and talk to Chinese when out drinking. Many of them are almost literally ROFLing about how the US practically just gave away everything they had to China. It's as if the US is playing poker with their cards facing up on the table. Chinese already consider themselves the defacto superpower.

        If mainstream media in the US showed this, I bet the politics would look different.

        • steinvakt2 an hour ago

          Seems weird. China is definitely falling behind. India is not.

          • petterroea an hour ago

            They are pretty happy with having superiority on high tech manufacturing and robotics. You basically cannot manufacture something without using China - even if you try. I don't think they consider the TSMC EUV monopoly a long term threat. Doing good on AI as well, you bet the OSS chinese models causing stock panic in the US makes them laugh.

            On the topic of manufacturing outside China, the YouTuber "Smarter Every day" (Destin Sandlin) has a series on manufacturing and feels strongly about manufacturing having moved out of the country. As an experiment he tried to manufacture something without China, but was unable to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZTGwcHQfLY

            • aprentic 9 minutes ago

              And he's just making a grill scrubber.

              I just ordered a bunch of drone parts. The majority of those part were only available from China.

              • jacquesm 7 minutes ago

                If you want: motors, ESCs, flight controllers and radios those can be sourced from outside of China, and competitively priced too (if you're in Europe, outside you'd still have to add taxes).

                • petterroea 3 minutes ago

                  Yeah tbf I wouldn't underestimate Eastern Europe. The drone industry there must be booming nowadays, pun not intended.

            • jacquesm an hour ago

              I have some friends who are doing things 'China free' and it is possible but it comes at a very substantial premium.

              • petterroea 43 minutes ago

                I think the most interesting takeaway from this video in question is that he tried to buy material from an Indian seller, who promised it was Indian. When the box arrived, it had the name of a Chinese factory on it.

      • eunos 40 minutes ago

        > Attack Greenland ->attack Denmark, attack Denmark -> Attack the EU.

        Rhetoric and public support aside, I honestly very much doubt that there will be a solid EU military response. For many countries like Baltic, Eastern Europe and Nordic countries (ironically DK included). US military support means life or death of their countries. I imagine they'd stall response like what Hungary did and hope that Greenland annexed become fait accompli.

      • 1over137 an hour ago

        >It is not so much about whether the USA could do this and expect to win, of course they can. Nobody has any doubt about that.

        Um, lots of us have doubts about that. The USA couldn't win against Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq; why do you think it could win against Greenland? Greenlanders actually have a lot of guns; and likely most of Europe and Canada would also go to war against the USA.

        • gregw2 25 minutes ago

          Not the parent poster but, while I acknowledge your point on Canada and Europe entering the conflict (and I'd add that the highly motivated Dutch punch well above their weight in intelligence and economic spheres and this whole scenario of US invasion is a Putin dream), when you ask "why do you think it could win...", the 50k population of Greenland is smaller than Granada (100k) and three orders of magnitude smaller than Vietnam/Afghanistan/Iraq (~40m). So I find its insurgency potential hard to compare to those examples you give.

        • Quothling 43 minutes ago

          I'm Danish. There are 56k people in Greenland and almost half of them live in Nuuk. The USA could frankly "take" greenland simply by putting a warship there and saying it was theirs. Not really sure why it was ever on the table though. The USA has basically free reign to expand it's military bases there, aside from the ban on nuclear weapons. Sure it would need approval by both Greenland and Denmark, but up until recently we were frankly more allied with the USA than the EU, and I doubt we've ever really said no before. We even bought the damn f35's despite them being so much more expensive than the alternatives, primarily because our history with the F16's. Which would probably have been a possiblity considering we're now debating whether or not to have french nuclear weapon carrying planes stationed on Danish soil in the fallout of the USA no longer being a trusty NATO ally.

          If it was because of resources, then American companies are frankly free to extract them as long as they reach deals with Greenland about it. If the USA had waited a few years for Greenland to gain more independence then it would have been even easier.

        • iso1631 10 minutes ago

          Doesn't need to. America can just leave the towns alone and do whatever it wants elsewhere.

          It will cost a fortune, but nobody is going to go 500 miles over an ice pack to raid a US mining settlement.

          • aprentic 6 minutes ago

            I suspect its easier to find Greenlanders willing to do that than it will be to find Americans willing to work in that mining settlement.

            Unless we go full evilmode and just run them with slave labor.

      • ericmay an hour ago

        The US wouldn’t even need to “attack” Greenland. What is there to even attack? 50 Danish soldiers? They could just say “that’s ours”, ignore whatever Europe says, and start doing whatever they wanted to do and instead force the EU to attack American forces or civilian business interests.

        I’m not suggesting this is a good idea or anything but there’s a ton of other ways that something like this could play out which involves more difficult ways to counter than you might think.

        > Instead of making America great again the US has ceded power to China.

        What power has the US ceded?

        • KaiserPro an hour ago

          > What power has the US ceded?

          Before this, we (large multinational infra company) were happily using AWS, microsoft and a bunch of other US based companies.

          Now we are beginning the migration away, not because its cheaper or better, but because we just don't think that we can trust the contracts we have with them any more.

          This isn't a sudden thing, we are not going to do it over night. But we are not renewing multi-million dollar contracts in the coming years for stuff that would have been a no brainer last year.

          • ericmay 17 minutes ago

            It’s interesting how these conversations always start and end with “my company isn’t buying XYZ American cloud provider services” while ignoring other incredibly important products and services that you can’t or are unwilling to boycott. Are you turning in your MacBook Pro and iPhone, or are you putting a bumper sticker on it saying you bought it before you knew America was crazy?

            Similarly, while it's great to take a principled stand here (it's yet again interesting how it's always a principled stand against American companies but never others), while you are busy spending time and money migrating away from AWS to a competing product that has worse features and is more expensive as you said, you should hope your competitors are too because if not, they're going to be delivering features faster and more cheaply. Something worth thinking about there.

            I don't think Microsoft losing some European contracts is an example of the US ceding power.

            • iso1631 5 minutes ago

              Macbooks are built in China.

              Personally I have a Lenovo laptop (China) running Ubuntu (UK), on an LG monitor (Korea) with a logitech (Switzerland) mouse on an Ikea (Denmark) desk connected to a Mikrotik (Latvia) router.

          • traceroute66 21 minutes ago

            > not because its cheaper or better

            Actually, in a number of cases EU cloud is cheaper and better.

            In terms of "better", spec wise it is not uncommon to get more bang for your buck in the EU cloud, especially around compute.

            In terms of "cheaper", that too. AWS, Azure etc. will happily sit there all day nickle and diming you through obscure pricing structures with all sorts of small-print. Good luck, for example, figuring out if you're going to go over your "provisioned IOPS-month" on AWS EBS, whatever the hell that is. And have fun with all the nickle-and-diming on AWS S3. Meanwhile on EU providers a lot of stuff is free that the US providers nickle and dime you for, and the stuff that is charged is done in a manner where you actually CAN forecast your spend.

            And then of course there is the real EU sovereignty. Not the fake US-cloud-in-Europe which despite what the US providers salesdroids try to tell you is still subject to CLOUD, PATRIOT and everything else.

        • Eupolemos an hour ago

          What power?

          Economic power (US will no longer be the world reserve currency).

          The power of allies (see Trump begging for help in Hormuz).

          All the soft power it ever had.

          • ericmay 9 minutes ago

            > Economic power (US will no longer be the world reserve currency).

            As a reminder, reserve currencies are just currencies that are held in large amounts by national banks and other important institutions. The USD, like the EU, Yen, Pound, and others are all reserve currencies.

            The USD is the dominant currency, in part because the US is in the Middle East right now doing exactly what is is doing by using the military to enforce trade for oil in USD. But if the US loses that "status" it just.... reverts to being more like the EU? Doesn't seem so bad to me.

            There's also pros/cons with being "the reserve currency".

            > The power of allies (see Trump begging for help in Hormuz).

            See Europe begging for help in Ukraine. I don't think this is a good argument. If 4 years of Trump being mean was all it took to erase all soft power the US ever had, then it never had it in the first place and it wasn't worth caring about.

        • jacquesm an hour ago

          > What power has the US ceded?

          Seriously?

          You live in a multi-polar world, there are three major power blocks and Europe isn't one of them, though that may change now (we're sick of war, but we're also sick of the threat of war, which one of the two will win out is up for grabs). There is - or rather, was, by now - Russia, China and the USA. Russia is unacceptable for many reasons, China is too clever for its own good in the longer term and the United States was historically our ally.

          The United States has thrown away 80 years or so of very carefully and very expensively built up soft power because someone didn't understand the concept (apparently just like you). That doesn't translate into ownership and it doesn't in any way give you control but it ensures that things will, at least most of the times, go your way because of momentum and because it makes sense by default. Just like you may disagree on some stuff with your friends but you're not going to rob their homes, just because you can (and maybe just because they gave you the key to the back door).

          You throw that away at your peril and because Russia is in no way capable of capitalizing on that the Chinese are. I wouldn't be surprised at all if in a decade or two the US$ is no longer the reserve currency. It could happen a lot faster than that. The US economy is teetering on the edge of the abyss and if you think that your ability to project power isn't diminished then maybe by the end of the Iran war you'll get it.

          The US maximized its post-war power on the 10th of September 2001. Since then it has gone down hill very steadily and the fall rapidly accelerated with Trump. I see no reason to believe this will change, all institutions that were supposed to provide checks and balances have failed. And all China has to do is to look sane in comparison, that's not super hard.

        • enoint an hour ago

          It wasn’t even about Greenland, but a distraction from the extent of Trump’s knowledge of Epstein.

          Anyway, there’s actually an index for soft power. Eliminating USAID halved that index. China built the highways, hospitals and water treatment instead.

        • ta20240528 an hour ago

          The UK only had to send a single officer to Greenland to stop Trump's previous attempt to annex Greenland.

          That was a signal, thankfully there are still adults in the USA who recognised it.

          • ericmay an hour ago

            You’re naive if you think that was what stopped Trump there lol

            • thesquandered 4 minutes ago

              It's clear that you're projecting by not understanding the point presented.

            • ta20240528 an hour ago

              You clearly don't know British understatement.

              Firing on one British officer would be as bad a firing on 10000.

              It's about lines.

              • ericmay an hour ago

                This kind of stuff masked you feel good to say but the UK isn’t going to stop the US if it (somewhat foolishly in my opinion) decided that it was going to take Greenland. Neither is the EU.

                • ta20240528 39 minutes ago

                  You are mistaking the battle for the war: Denmark / EU would no doubt lose the BATTLE for Greenland. Within hours.

                  But the sun would rise the next day and the USA won't like the 'non-kinetic' consequences. Too many to enumerate.

                  Eventually the adults in USA would just return it.

                  • ericmay 7 minutes ago

                    No it would be a point of no return. But the "non-kinetic" consequences would go both ways.

                    It's not an exercise we should entertain, though the EU needs to step up in a very serious way and spend billions of Euros adding new equipment to Greenland to beef up detection and defense.

    • KaiserPro an hour ago

      They did study the falklands war, thats why they were planning to blow up the runway should shit go wrong.

      The idea was to make it as difficult as possible to invade, not to stop it, because that’s largely impossible.

    • WinstonSmith84 an hour ago

      Argentina didn't lose the war because they came with fighter jets, but because their fighter jets were throwing scrap metal at British boats. Had these detonated, the outcome would have been different, and expensive for UK. I don't doubt that F35 are working very well in comparison to the junk Argentina was using.

      • throwa356262 an hour ago

        Wasn't there a kill switch in the missiles?

        Didn't UK get really really annoyed with France in the one instance their kill switch Didn't work?

        • zelos an hour ago

          Argentina only had 6 Exocets. I think the parent is referring to the failure of the fuses in the bombs the Argentinian pilots dropped on British ships.

  • crispyambulance an hour ago

    There's a difference between "posturing" for show and actually "preparing for war".

    They're wise to the fact that "the Stable Genius" isn't going to try anything violent with Denmark/Greenland, but they still want to prevent him thinking about just stealing territory "peacefully."

    • jnwatson an hour ago

      Ukraine thought Russia was just posturing and look where it got them.

      • schnitzelstoat 44 minutes ago

        Yeah, tbh I was in the camp of 'nothing ever happens' too and I was shocked when they actually invaded.

      • __bjoernd 43 minutes ago

        I'm pretty sure Ukraine were taking the Russian preparations as what they were. And they had plans to counter them. Proven by the fact that Putin's 3 days war has now surpassed the Russian involvement in WWII.

    • jacquesm an hour ago

      Trust me, Denmark wasn't posturing.

      The assumption was - and still is - that the USA wasn't posturing either.

      We (and I realize I obviously don't speak for all of Europe but I have my finger on the pulse in many places here) are also not assuming that when Trump is gone the USA will go back to normal.

      • NikolaNovak an hour ago

        USA cannot go back to normal. The internal damage / changeover is massive - everybody disagreing with current administration policies has either been removed or departed - whether in health or defense (I'm sorry, War) or science or education or other departments.

      • Insanity an hour ago

        And even if they did go back to normal for the next presidency - why trust it? Their entire political system is set up so that the winds can change entirely every 4 years.

        If the people voted Trump in to office twice, it’ll happen again. It’s a divided country where propaganda has a strong hold.

        • dspillett 43 minutes ago

          Useful stability can be achieved again, either “back to normal” as mentioned elsewhere in this thread or “forward to something different but better (and not crap like it is now)”, but it is going to take at least a few terms, maybe several. Even if it did happen more quickly, it will take that long for those of us on the outside to trust it, reputational damage like this can not be undone quickly.

      • easytiger an hour ago

        This is absurd in the extreme. In actual war there is absolutely no possibility of success for Denmark, even with the help of allies. Failure to capitulate results in nothing but death and destruction with no hope of strategic gain to begin with. What you are likely experiencing is a modern belief that screaming and shouting will bring popular diplomatic pressure to bear on the opponent, thus arresting their actions.

        There was similar tough talk in 1940 and Denmark lasted 6 hours. Without capitulation the country would have been razed. But surrender saw it able to keep some level of control and thus extricate the Jewish population in relative safety which would not otherwise have been possible.

        • jacquesm an hour ago

          No, what is absurd is the number of people that can't wait to go back to a world with endless wars of conquest. We already know what that looks like.

          If you have never seen war up close then I am happy to forgive you, but trust me, in 'actual war' there is no possibility of success for anybody, there are only degrees of damage and degrees of grief and illusions to the contrary are focused on the few people that manage to get out of war with the profits in their pockets. Everybody else suffers.

          • easytiger an hour ago

            I'm sorry but you are not interacting with the rational suppositions of posters in various threads here. No one is arguing for a war except you. People are explaining to you the strategic reality and you are espousing rhetoric that I honestly can't decipher.

            1. Denmark cannot win militarily

            2. You are suggesting Denmark would not capitulate and indeed enter into a state of war

            What do you think happens in this situation?

            • vrganj an hour ago

              France has a nuclear deterrent it has stated has "a European dimension".

              Don't go around poking hornets nests if you don't want to get stung.

              • easytiger 40 minutes ago

                You think there's a game theory scenario in the book where France launches a nuclear weapon at mainland USA over a land dispute between them and Denmark?

                • vrganj 35 minutes ago

                  France has the only first strike nuclear doctrine in the world, with the specific policy of shooting nukes to "protect it's vital interests", a term Macron has recently clarified "has a European dimension".

                  Make of that what you will, but if I were you I wouldn't go around poking the hornets nest that has an explicit sign "these hornets will sting" attached to it.

                • jacquesm 36 minutes ago

                  Would you like to find out?

                  See, this is what is so dumb about this: you are treating this as if it is some kind of board game. It is exactly why the US gets into these messes over and over again, the incredible overconfidence that because they somehow have battlefield superiority they can do whatever they want. You are exemplifying precisely where the rot in the USA is located.

            • jacquesm 43 minutes ago

              > I'm sorry but you are not interacting with the rational suppositions of posters in various threads here.

              The one thing that is common about 'rationalists' is that they share a lot of the viewpoints with other ra*ists and that's not the world many of us want to live in.

              Sure, you can take it. But can you afford to take it?

              The answer is most likely you can't. And so far every attempt to show John Mearheimers superiority has been the equivalent of 'just relax and enjoy it'.

              Guess what? We won't. Alliances are made voluntarily, not through conquest.

              • easytiger 39 minutes ago

                You have ignored any questions put to you in this thread. You are speaking in some kind of fervour I can't decrypt.

        • dspillett 38 minutes ago

          > What you are likely experiencing is a modern belief that screaming and shouting will bring […]

          I wonder which particular set of states that are united might have given people the impression that might work in recent times!

          > There was similar tough talk in 1940

          If your comparison there is intentional, we agree which side of history the current US regime is on. Unless it gets to write that history, of course.

        • KaiserPro an hour ago

          I mean the same was said about Ukraine.

          What are we supposed to do, just fucking give up?

          • jacquesm an hour ago

            Ukraine is rapidly becoming one of the hardest countries in Europe. They fought a former superpower to a stand still and are innovating on weapons systems and integration at a pace that makes LM's skunkworks look like sloths. And on a budget that is insane.

            Just like Ukraine, Europe does not want war, doesn't want to see their kids die for the umpteenth time so that fat cats can line their pockets. But if push comes to shove we would be absolutely capable of doing it, either outright or by slower guerilla like means. Bombing shit is easy. Taking over territory and holding it is much, much harder, infinitely more so if the population holds a grudge. Note that the Dutch resistance killed more German soldiers than the army ever did. Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, lots of countries in Europe. Examples aplenty.

    • Trasmatta an hour ago

      This is the type of thinking that convinced people that Trump would never be stupid enough to start a full on war with Iran. And yet here we are.

  • 0xcb0 an hour ago

    The United States are not longer an allie nor a friend to to EU. Under Trump, they have turned into a Terror regiem, ignoring international law, human rights. They have to be international isolated together with Israel. They are the enemy of a free and civilized world!

    • Ekaros 39 minutes ago

      I think that started with Bush and continued with Obama. Who with his financial donators still walk free after committing mass murders.

  • apexalpha 33 minutes ago

    We all were... they wouldn't speak it but reading between the lines you could see the leaders were very nervous Trump would unilaterally decide to just 'try it' like in Venezuela and now Iran.

  • wewewedxfgdf an hour ago

    What else would they be doing, watching TV?

  • hermannj314 an hour ago

    France offering support to little ententes to prevent facist revanchism. Seems familiar.

    World tension continues to increase.

  • seydor an hour ago

    You mean, they are not anymore?

    • Havoc an hour ago

      The goldfish prez seems to have moved on to Cuba now

  • SideburnsOfDoom an hour ago

    Si vis pacem, para bellum.

  • rishabhaiover an hour ago

    Hate to be that guy but

    > What to Submit

    > Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, or celebrities, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon. If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic.

    Reference: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

    • originalvichy 36 minutes ago

      This news concerns the biggest shift in Trans-atlantic relations in decades – possibly ever. The US is not losing relationships with single countries such as France. It’s not just scaring a small population like Denmark. The entire ”Western world” has started decoupling from the US. Tech is one of the first targets.

    • hosteur 13 minutes ago

      > Hate to be that guy but

      I do not believe you. I think you quite like to be that guy.

    • Trasmatta an hour ago

      The US threatening to invade European territory, and Europe preparing to fight a war against the US, is absolutely "some interesting new phenomenon".

      • pembrook 44 minutes ago

        It would be an interesting new phenomenon if it were true. But it requires unquestionably pretending a country of 5 million people was going to go to "war" with one that has 70X that and a military hundreds of times larger. C'mon.

        This is just vaguely frustrated venting into the void using a piece of months-old fantasy erotic fan fiction from a hyper-political filter bubble (bluesky).

        • Jensson 27 minutes ago

          Denmark is a part of NATO, attacking them would mean the entirety of NATO would go against USA, not just Denmark. It is reasonable to assume the entirety of NATO would put up enough resistance that USA had to withdraw from that war without getting Greenland, because Trump would get removed from office by being so hated by the people before the rest of NATO gave up.

    • mirekrusin 44 minutes ago

      Top class comedy is allowed though.

    • __bjoernd 44 minutes ago

      No one forces you to be that guy :)

    • pembrook an hour ago

      Sad to see HN crumbling under the weight of hysterical political polarization.

      I saw bluesky in the url and immediately knew what this thread was going to be, and it's even sillier and dumber than I thought.

  • Trasmatta an hour ago

    The US president wanted to start a full on war with Europe over Greenland of all places. And he still might. And some people will still claim I just have "TDS".

    • breakyerself an hour ago

      TDS is an apt description for anyone supporting this senile, psychopath.

      • Trasmatta an hour ago

        Yes. The only TDS is the one exhibited by those that are so brainwashed by his cult of personality.

  • the_af 34 minutes ago

    I have no doubts they took US threats seriously; anyone who doesn't these days is a fool (of course, this doesn't mean Trump will do anything he claims, but he's dangerous enough you can never tell for sure).

    What I find harder to believe is that they were preparing for "full-scale war". That makes no sense. Using F-35, American made and very likely with kill switches or otherwise susceptible to American interference? And where would they get their American made parts and supplies? And Denmark stands no chance at all against US military might, with or without assistance from France.

    I'm sure they were prepared to engage in token resistance, and also more serious diplomatic and economic struggles, but "full-scale war" is hyperbole.

  • kelipso an hour ago

    Lol there is posturing and there is whatever this is.

  • beanjuiceII 42 minutes ago

    lol Denmark yea i'm sure no one was concerned

  • ZeroGravitas an hour ago

    The billionaire oligarch who put that (stupid) idea in Trump's head is still out there. His son-in-law will probably be the next head of the Federal Reserve.

    If the oligarchs don't feel any pushback they'll continue to wreck the US and Europe.

  • emmelaich an hour ago

    The idea that the US would attempt to take Greenland by force is utterly ludicrous.

    • bell-cot an hour ago

      Unfortunately, that adjective applies to many things which the US has attempted, often "successfully", recently.

    • 1over137 an hour ago

      Lots of what Trump says is utterly ludicrous. But he does lots of what he says (though not everything), so the rest of the world is right to prepare.

    • vrganj an hour ago

      So is the idea that the US would start bombing Iran without a plan, goal, or any thought to the consequences, yet here we are...

  • krona an hour ago

    I live very close to one of the USAF's largest European airbases.

    While Trump was trolling European leaders about their security posture (by threatening to relieve them of sovereign territory which the US already has extensive access to) the USAF was already moving assets in the opposite direction to the middle east (this was mid-january).

    It's fairly easy to work out what's happening if you ignore the orange man and listen to what serious people are saying, what they've briefed on, how they contradict one another, and where the assets are moving.

    Obviously European leaders have to pretend to take the orange man seriously, but the reaction in the media was bordering on hysterical.

    • techterrier 38 minutes ago

      > It's fairly easy to work out what's happening

      off you go then, what is it?

      • krona 16 minutes ago

        Dunno, start by reading the national security strategy and count the number of times it mentions the words "Arctic" or "Greenland"? (hint: it's zero).

        Then maybe look at the Nato chain of command and who was interviewed and what was said in mid-Jan?

        • thesquandered a minute ago

          Please lessen the snark and dictate what you're saying here. Sources to published docs would be even more preferable.

        • enoint 11 minutes ago

          Amazing how outdated that document became. We all knew it was written for an audience of one, but still such transparent Emperors New Clothes vibe.

        • techterrier 3 minutes ago

          im still waiting to find out whats happening...

    • enoint an hour ago

      This is exactly right. The liar who lies to control the narrative is lying again. The chance he’s lying is high but as adults the (likelihood * hazard) of an invasion is worth preparing for.

      The narrative he wanted to control was about Epstein. Denmark could have simultaneously prepared for that, but it wouldn’t be on OSInt Twitter.

      • InsideOutSanta 42 minutes ago

        The problem is that his "lies" and "jokes" sometimes suddenly turned out to be not lies and jokes.

        • enoint 16 minutes ago

          More precisely, propaganda is always fake. After verification it’s possibly true, but it still began fake. Trump could try supporting his utterances with fact, but he doesn’t.

          It’s rational to prepare for his propaganda to sometimes accidentally turn out true. Hence this relatively modest response. But the narrative most reliably supported by fact is that Trump hasn’t kept his story straight about Epstein.