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Conservative Voices
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38 w

Larry Kudlow: Liberals never seem to learn
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Larry Kudlow: Liberals never seem to learn

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38 w

Economist says it’s been ‘glorious’ watching Trump attack income tax
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Economist says it’s been ‘glorious’ watching Trump attack income tax

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38 w

VP Harris' 'coronation' was an 'epic disaster,' says DNC official
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VP Harris' 'coronation' was an 'epic disaster,' says DNC official

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38 w

SHE NEEDS TO GO': GOP rep blasts FTC chair's partisanship
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SHE NEEDS TO GO': GOP rep blasts FTC chair's partisanship

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38 w

MAJOR MESSAGE': Pollsters explain how Trump flipped the script on key voting blocs
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MAJOR MESSAGE': Pollsters explain how Trump flipped the script on key voting blocs

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38 w

Joe Biden had ‘zero credibility’ on immigration
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Joe Biden had ‘zero credibility’ on immigration

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38 w

The Biden Legacy: War With Russia?
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The Biden Legacy: War With Russia?

Foreign Affairs The Biden Legacy: War With Russia? The administration’s decision to allow strikes on Russian territory brings the U.S. to the brink. Credit: image via Shutterstock President Joe Biden approved another escalation in his administration’s long march to turn an already extravagant proxy fight into a hot war. He reversed more than two years of policy, easing range limits on Ukraine’s use of American-supplied missiles against Russia. The mentally diminished president justified his decision as retaliation for North Korea’s dispatch of troops to aid Russia’s war effort. He reportedly hopes to dissuade the North from sending more men, apparently by stoking Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un’s fear of additional casualties.  Yet before the first North Korean entered the battlefield, Pyongyang reportedly had sent Russia 8 million artillery shells plus short-range ballistic missiles, a far more important piece of assistance for the Russian military than a few thousand inexperienced soldiers. The latter aren’t going to change the military balance, which already is running strongly against Ukraine. Trying to deter the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea from participating in the war is closing the barn doors after the animals have fled. In any case, Kim’s totalitarian rule seems unlikely to be threatened by any casualty increase. Moreover, such losses would increase Vladimir Putin’s debt to Pyongyang. As a result, Russia would probably do whatever is necessary to strengthen Kim’s control. Ironically, so too would Beijing. Although the People’s Republic of China is unhappy with the renewed Moscow-Pyongyang axis, and potential for triggering a regional allied response, Beijing can’t afford to let either Russia or North Korea fail. Indeed, the North’s intervention on Moscow’s behalf has actually increased the DPRK’s public standing in China, which long has been dismal. Despite being presented as a calculated response in the grand geopolitical chess game unfolding in Europe, the missile decision looks more like a political strike against President-elect Donald Trump. First, Biden is inflating Ukrainian and European expectations, increasing pressure to eliminate all restrictions on U.S.-supplied weapons. Second, he is encouraging Russian retaliation and making Moscow less amenable to negotiation, and especially to agreement on anything short of a veritable Ukrainian capitulation. Third, he is deepening the sense of abandonment if Washington backs away from the war. All complicate any Trump effort to disengage. Unfortunately, Biden’s last-minute machinations undermine American security. He is continuing Washington’s reckless post–Cold War campaign to dominate territory up to Russia’s border. The decision for war is on Vladimir Putin. Nevertheless, American and European officials share abundant blame. It is no “Putin talking point” to note that the U.S. and allies made and then broke multiple assurances to both the Gorbachev and Yeltsin governments not to expand NATO.  The Clinton administration bears special blame, deciding that Moscow had been defeated so its objections were of no account. However, that changed as the U.S. and its allies continued to fuel the conflict to come. In his famous speech to the 2007 Munich Security Forum, Putin bluntly stated:  Today we are witnessing an almost uncontained hyper use of force—military force—in international relations, force that is plunging the world into an abyss of permanent conflicts. … We are seeing a greater and greater disdain for the basic principles of international law. And independent legal norms are, as a matter of fact, coming increasingly closer to one state’s legal system. One state and, of course, first and foremost the United States, has overstepped its national borders in every way. This is visible in the economic, political, cultural and educational policies it imposes on other nations. He also criticized the transatlantic alliance: I think it is obvious that NATO expansion does not have any relation with the modernization of the Alliance itself or with ensuring security in Europe. On the contrary, it represents a serious provocation that reduces the level of mutual trust. And we have the right to ask: against whom is this expansion intended? And what happened to the assurances our western partners made after the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact? Where are those declarations today? No one even remembers them. But I will allow myself to remind this audience what was said. I would like to quote the speech of NATO General Secretary Mr. Woerner in Brussels on 17 May 1990. He said at the time that: “the fact that we are ready not to place a NATO army outside of German territory gives the Soviet Union a firm security guarantee.” Where are these guarantees? The following year, the national intelligence officer Fiona Hill, who later served in the Trump administration, briefed President George W. Bush, predicting “that Mr. Putin would view steps to bring Ukraine and Georgia closer to NATO as a provocative move that would likely provoke preemptive Russian military action.” CIA Director William Burns, then U.S. ambassador to Russia, warned the Bush administration that “Ukrainian entry into NATO is the brightest of all redlines for the Russian elite (not just Putin).” Such a step would “create fertile soil for Russian meddling in Crimea and eastern Ukraine.” The allies knew the stakes when Putin increased military forces along Ukraine’s border. NATO’s then-Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg acknowledged, “The background was that President Putin declared in the autumn of 2021, and actually sent a draft treaty that they wanted NATO to sign, to promise no more NATO enlargement. That was what he sent us. And was a pre-condition for not invade [sic] Ukraine. Of course we didn’t sign that. … So he went to war to prevent NATO, more NATO, close to his borders.”  Even Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky admitted: “Security guarantees and neutrality, the nuclear-free status of our state. We are ready to agree to it. This is the most important point. This was the first fundamental point for the Russian Federation, as far as I remember. And as far as I remember, they started a war because of this.” Yet the U.S. then opposed a negotiated settlement. In retrospect the allies’ decisions constitute vainglorious stupidity. Even the administration admits that Biden’s action won’t revive Kiev’s military fortunes. No allied Wunderwaffe is likely to bring victory. Although Russians as well as Ukrainians are suffering, the latter are much worse off. Ukraine, likely to run out of manpower well before Moscow, is resorting to desperate measures to round up new soldiers. The Zelensky government is seeking to embrace the incoming administration, hoping to turn Trump Kiev’s way.  Today allied governments are increasingly discussing the need to negotiate. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz controversially called Putin last week, for their first exchange in two years. Many Ukrainians acknowledge, however reluctantly, that the war is unlikely to be won and will require territorial concessions to end. Continued international support for Ukraine is increasingly being presented as a means to increase its “leverage” in expected talks. (Even some Trump advisers advocate hiking U.S. aid to Ukraine to pressure Russia.) Kiev’s situation is far worse today than before the war. All this probably could have been avoided had the U.S. simply announced that Kiev would not be joining NATO, not now and not ever. What of Moscow’s response? Ukraine partisans dismiss fear of Russian retaliation and escalation, suggesting that Putin has proved to be a paper tiger, full of bluster rather than action. Yet prudence should not be confused with timidity. As long as Moscow appears to be winning, Putin has an incentive to avoid the vagaries of an expanded war. But he need not respond directly. Indeed, Russia already has answered asymmetrically.  Relatively minor so far are sabotage and other disruptive operations in Europe, which could be expanded to energy and electrical facilities, as well as other civilian infrastructure. (Two undersea cables linking Germany and Finland have just been cut, by unknown parties.) More serious is the possibility of Russia arming America’s and Europe’s enemies. Observed Putin: “we believe that if someone is thinking that it is possible to supply such weapons to a war zone in order to deliver strikes at our territory and to create problems for us, why can we not supply our weapons of the same class to those regions around the world where they will target sensitive facilities of the countries that are doing this to Russia? The response could be symmetrical.” He acknowledged that this was not ideal, but “Ultimately, if we see that these countries are being embroiled into a war against us, and this constitutes their direct involvement in the war against the Russian Federation, we reserve the right to respond in kind.” Moscow is believed to be aiding Yemen’s Ansar Allah in targeting Western shipping in the Red Sea. Washington is spending billions and devoting significant naval resources in response. There may be more to come. Warned the Atlantic Council’s Elisabeth Braw: “Russia’s provision of targeting data may be followed by yet more support for the Houthis. According to Disruptive Industries (DI), a UK technology company that specializes in the closed-source discovery of global risks, there is extensive and unseen Russian activity in Houthi-held parts of Yemen, and there has been for some time.” William LaPlante, under secretary of defense for acquisition and sustainment, allowed that the Houthis’ weapons “can do things that are just amazing,” which suggests the possibility that Moscow is already providing hardware as well. Even more ominous is Russian cooperation with North Korea. It is unknown what Kim receives in return for his assistance; presumably enough money, food, and energy to relieve Pyongyang’s dependence on the PRC. Worse would be technical assistance as the North seeks to improve its nuclear arsenal and refine its ICBMs, with the ultimate goal of targeting American cities. Russia has much to offer, and its aid would be difficult to detect. Putin might see such assistance as appropriate payback for U.S. support to Ukraine that has killed thousands of Russians. If Washington can extend the range of its missiles, Moscow can do the same for North Korea’s missiles. Unfortunately, Biden’s ill-considered move makes such a course more likely. Putin would like to discourage future allied escalation. Moreover, Kim can increase his price if the DPRK’s costs of intervention increase. And the impact of such assistance cannot be reversed. Extended deterrence might seem relatively costless against an adversary unable to reach the U.S. homeland. Once millions of Americans are at risk from a North Korean nuclear attack, Washington’s policy toward Northeast Asia will have to be reconsidered.  Donald Trump has the opportunity to play peacemaker after he takes office on January 20th. Biden has made his successor’s job more difficult, but also more essential. It is important to end a conflict that is literally destroying Ukraine. It is vital to end a proxy war-plus between nuclear powers. The post The Biden Legacy: War With Russia? appeared first on The American Conservative.
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38 w

How the Democrats Became the War Party
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How the Democrats Became the War Party

Politics How the Democrats Became the War Party Today we witness the endgame of an eight-decade Democratic internal debate. Credit: Vitaliy Holovin/Shutterstock The hysterical and vitriolic attacks made by Massachusetts’s Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren and Florida’s Democratic Representative Deborah Wasserman Schultz against Donald Trump’s nominee to be director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, only serves to confirm what many voters have come to realize in the eight years since Donald Trump was first elected President: That the Democratic Party has become captive to a kind of Cold War mania. It has, in the span of years following Hillary Clinton’s defeat at the polls in 2016, become a War Party, and many of its members, very much including Warren and Schultz, speak as though they are the proud heirs of Joe McCarthy.  On foreign affairs, the Democrats brook no dissent. Part of the reason for this is that the party has fallen prey to a kind of absolutist group-think with regard to America’s role in the world. Not content with, or even, frankly, interested in, traditional roles of the state, such as border security and diplomacy, the Democrats have conjured up a world of absolute good and absolute evil outside outside the supremely insular urban bubbles in which they live and work. As such, they seek to wage a cold culture war, whereby American power is exercised on behalf of their pet social causes. Another reason behind the Democratic Party’s devolution into a War Party has to do with the current lack of debate, of competition within the party. During the 80 years following the end of the Second World War, there existed a healthy, sometimes fierce competition within the Democratic Party with regard to America and its role in the World: On one side there were what I would call the Rooseveltians; on the other side, the Achesonians. The competition between the two helped shape American policy throughout the Cold War. It was only with the arrival of the post–Cold War world that the competition dried up—and turned into a rout.  History changed on April 12, 1945.  The death of Franklin D. Roosevelt brought Harry Truman to the White House. In the space of only five years, Truman and his second secretary of state, Dean Acheson, with the help of the original coterie of cold warriors such as James Forrestal, Frank Wisner, and Paul Nitze engineered a radical break with Roosevelt’s postwar vision of Great Power reciprocity as embodied in the UN Charter. The launch of the modern national security state in 1947, followed by the adoption of National Security Council Memorandum 68, militarized George Kennan’s vision of containment and set the course for much of America’s conduct during the succeeding 40 years. Following the debacle in Korea and Truman’s decision not to run for a second full term, the Rooseveltians made a comeback of sorts (within the party at least) by way of Governor Adlai Stevenson’s two bids for the White House. But by the 1960 election Stevenson was out and John F. Kennedy, touting a vision of an America that would “bear any burden and pay any price” was in. The 1960 election was ultimately a contest between two hawks, Kennedy and Nixon; but with Kennedy’s victory and the appointments of Acheson proteges such as Dean Rusk and other hardliners, the Achesonians were back in business—or so they thought. To an extent, John F. Kennedy embodied both the Rooseveltian and Achesonian traditions. Until the near-catastrophe of October 1962, his administration governed in the Achesonian style. But after successive crises, in Berlin in 1961 and Cuba in 1962, Kennedy realized that a new approach was needed. This approach was announced at the American University commencement on June 10, 1963. This marked the end of Kennedy’s Achesonian period. And this rejection perhaps, as recent scholarship by James W. Douglass and David Talbot indicates, accounts for what unfolded in Dallas the following November. There are parallels between what occurred after FDR died and what occurred after Kennedy was assassinated. What is clear is that Kennedy’s successor, the Texan Lyndon Johnson, expanded the disastrous war in Vietnam with the support of the Achesonian establishment Kennedy himself put in place. Ultimately, the pattern that was established in the early 1950s prevailed again the late 1960s: After unwise overreach in Asia, the Achesonians were once again challenged by the Rooseveltians for the Democratic presidential nomination.  Yet in 1968, that quest ended not just in electoral loss, but in tragedy.  From 1968 to 1992 the Republican Party held power for all but four years. This period saw the defeat of George McGovern (a Rooseveltian) in 1972, and, later, the internecine battles between President Jimmy Carter’s hardline Achesonian national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and his more cautious Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. It was during the wilderness years that the Achesonians, chief among them a Georgetown socialite and scholar named Madeleine Korbel Albright, began laying the groundwork for the Achesonians return to power. Albright, who was once a member of Brzezinski’s NSC, along with a former Assistant Secretary of State named Richard Holbrooke, went on to play a pivotal role in the formation and practice of American foreign policy under Bill Clinton. The principal foreign policy power brokers under Clinton-Albright, Holbrooke and the former Time magazine Russia correspondent Strobe Talbott, helped mold the next generation of Achesonians. Talbott became an important patron and mentor to the future under-secretary of state, Victoria Nuland, and to the Russia policy adviser to Trump’s national security advisers H. R. McMaster, John Bolton, and Fiona Hill. Holbrooke was an important mentor to USAID administrator and selective humanitarian Samantha Power. Albright’s contributions in this area include former Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and the current Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs James O’Brien. During Clinton’s term the Achesonians consistently prevailed over the Rooseveltians—NATO expansion, intervention in the Balkans, and the 78-day bombing of Serbia were among their most lasting, and questionable, achievements. The effort to oppose NATO expansion in these years, led by the likes of Kennan and Daniel Patrick Moynihan, marked what amounted to the Rooseveltians’ last stand. During the debate on the Senate floor over NATO expansion the learned Moynihan—the holder of a PhD from Tufts, a former U.S. ambassador to India, and a one-time aide to Averell Harriman—was hectored by none other than Senator Joseph R. Biden of Delaware. By the turn of the century, the game was nearly up for the Rooseveltians. Congresswoman Barbara Lee was the sole dissenter from the Bush administration’s plan to invade Afghanistan. George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq won 29 Democratic votes in the Senate—among them three future Democratic nominees for president (2004, 2016, 2020). During this period the Rooseveltians put up token, ineffectual opposition to Bush’s wars of choice in the presidential candidacies of Howard Dean and Dennis Kucinich.  Again, the pattern of the early 1950s and the late 1960s repeated itself: After a period of presidential overreach, this time under the Republican Bush, the Rooseveltians offered a corrective in the person of Barack Obama. Yet their influence fizzled within mere days of Mr. Obama’s historic election. Hillary Clinton was named secretary of state; Robert Gates remained at his post at the Pentagon; and Leon Panetta was handed the reins at CIA. In terms of both personnel and policy, the Achesonians triumphed during the Obama years and set the stage for a new Cold War. In an October 2016 retrospective piece on Obama’s foreign policy in The Nation, I observed, It was widely assumed that Obama would pick up the pieces of the Bush years and exorcise hegemonic fantasies from the body politic. Instead, over his two terms in office, the convergence of the neoconservative and Wilsonian interventionist creeds has solidified into orthodoxy. No better evidence of this exists than the fact that the neocons who served as the instigators and defenders of George W. Bush’s foreign policy have become devoted supporters of Hillary Clinton. Robert Kagan, Max Boot, and Eliot Cohen, among others, have all voiced their preference for [Hillary] Clinton over the Republican nominee, Donald Trump. The bitterness and rank hysteria that Trump’s surprise victory over Clinton engendered within the ranks of the Democratic Party establishment then pushed it toward a near-total adoption of Cold War, Achesonian-style policies.  Our story ends where it began: With a perilous Cold War between nuclear armed powers. The difference this time is that the New Cold War involves the United States, Russia, and China in addition to, as of this writing, a proxy war between NATO and Russia in Eastern Europe. Under President Biden the Achesonian vision has triumphed: Last weekend the Ukrainians were handed long range missiles—missiles that require US servicemen to operate. And the Rooseveltians are nowhere to be found on the national stage. Even, sadly, Barbara Lee and the few progressives in Congress have joined the ranks of the new Cold Warriors.  Dissenters such as Tulsi Gabbard are now branded “Russian assets” by Democrats channeling Tailgunner Joe. There are now no elements within the Democratic Party who might serve as a brake on the U.S. foreign policy establishment’s dangerous delusions.  The post How the Democrats Became the War Party appeared first on The American Conservative.
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38 w

Ukraine Should Have Heeded Milley’s Warning
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Ukraine Should Have Heeded Milley’s Warning

Foreign Affairs Ukraine Should Have Heeded Milley’s Warning Kiev should have seized the opportunity at the end of 2022. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley speaks during a press briefing after a virtual Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting at the Pentagon on November 16, 2022 in Arlington, Virginia. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images) The day the first U.S. ATACMs from Ukraine landed in Russia, making it the first time in the postwar era a U.S.-guided and U.S.-target-coordinated weapons system landed anywhere within Russian landmass, another bomb dropped without much fanfare but far more significance. Gallup released a poll showing that, for the first time since the conflict began, a majority of Ukrainians want to negotiate with Russia and end the conflict.  Within that group, a large portion wants to cede territory to Russia. “A fair share of Ukrainians who favor negotiating a quick end to the war believe Ukraine should be open to ceding some territory in exchange for peace. More than half of this group (52 percent) agrees that Ukraine should be open to making some territorial concessions as part of a peace deal to end the war, while 38 percent disagree and another 10 percent don’t know,” Gallup reported. To contrast, in 2022, 73 percent of Ukrainians preferred fighting until victory, without, of course, defining what victory is. That has obviously changed. The penny has clearly dropped, even though the narrative remains wobbly. President Volodymyr Zelensky, who campaigned with Kamala Harris and Governor Josh Shapiro, got on Fox News to say that Ukraine stands to lose the war if Washington, its main military backer, pulls funding. Only a few days ago, he signaled that he is ready to end the war with Russia through diplomacy next year. His embassy is still toeing the “any negotiation is appeasement” line. On this side of the Atlantic, however, that sentiment has decreasing purchase. Representative Keith Self (R-TX) tweeted, “Americans do not want WWIII. I am demanding a classified briefing from @POTUS regarding Ukraine’s use of US-supplied ATACMS. If the White House does not comply, I will move to conduct immediate oversight.” Senator-elect Bernie Moreno agreed: “Americans overwhelmingly voted for Trump, sent a loud and clear message: we want Ukraine war to end, for killing to stop, and for peace. Trump will do that. Biden dramatically escalated the war and set up Trump to inherit a greater conflict. Disgraceful and extremely dangerous.” The Biden administration’s decision to allow Ukraine to use long-distance weaponry in Russia seemed to be one borne out of malice rather than strategy. An intention to box the incoming president to an escalatory path, although neither the theater nor the threat assessment changed in the past few months per the Biden administration’s own intelligence assessment. It is of course not going to improve Ukraine’s position, even while it might influence Russian disproportionate reaction and a lowering of the nuclear threshold.  Ukrainians have read the writing on the wall, as evident from the Gallup poll. The Europeans have made overtures to reach out to Moscow. The only plausible reason for the latest massive surge is to sabotage the president-elect’s desire to deescalate the conflict, which is the mandate of the American people, if not the intentions of Biden’s own coterie of uber-hawks. The responsibility for this conflict falls squarely on those who ignored Russia’s redlines about Ukraine joining NATO. The perpetuation of that is a recurrence of the same strategic impulse that led to 20 years of nation-building in the sands. As Elbridge Colby tweeted, “Those whose assessments and counsel have proved woefully erroneous and have materially and culpably contributed to this grievous situation in Ukraine now resort to distortion and falsehood for those of us whose diagnoses and recommendations were more sound.” It shouldn’t have been. Speaking at a meeting of the Ukraine Contact Group at the tail end of 2022, General Mark Milley, then the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, wanted Ukraine to sue for peace when they were ahead in the battlefield. That year ended badly for Russia, with their major ships sunk, their advance on Kiev thwarted, and their defensive lines stretched thin. “You want to negotiate at a time when you’re at your strength, and your opponent is at weakness. And it’s possible, maybe, that there’ll be a political solution. All I’m saying is there’s a possibility for it,” Milley said. “When there’s an opportunity to negotiate, when peace can be achieved, seize it.” The reaction was immediate and overwhelming. Facing criticism from the White House, Ukraine, and an array of think tankers, Milley had to clarify his comments. But his instinct was always correct. Months later he still stuck on to his original assessment.  “When you cannot achieve your political objective through military means, then the moral thing to do is to seek an alternative means, which is diplomacy,” Milley said in an in-depth interview. “You have two core vital international security interests at stake for Russia and for Ukraine, for Ukraine, it’s existential. It’s the very survival of the state. For Russia, it’s different, but they defined it as a core national security interest. What the Russians are trying to do is re-establish a buffer and so on.”  As it currently stands, Ukraine cannot sustain a long conflict, and there is no incentive for a NATO–Russia general war. A continuation of this conflict will needlessly kill many thousands, and lead to escalation with NATO. “The war is devoid of moral purpose,” Milley said.  He was right then. When one thinks of conservative realism, Milley’s face isn’t the one that comes to mind. But on this one particular subject, an instinct to negotiate and sustain an equilibrium and avoid a great power general war, he seems to channel his inner Lord Lansdowne. On this point, history demands an apology for Milley. The post Ukraine Should Have Heeded Milley’s Warning appeared first on The American Conservative.
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38 w Politics

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Will the Senate Confirm Trump's Picks?
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