Thursday, February 5, 2026

Carnegie - The Epstein Files and Elite Moral Collapse When America's ruling class operates without shame, the consequences extend far beyond individual crimes. Pratap B Mehta Feb 5 ∙ Guest post

 

The Epstein Files and Elite Moral Collapse

When America's ruling class operates without shame, the consequences extend far beyond individual crimes.

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“Romans during the Decadence,” oil on canvas, Thomas Couture, 1847. (Photo by History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.)

It is perhaps not an accident that an island figures prominently in the horrifically appalling Epstein scandal. The scandal, which now implicates a wide swathe of America’s elite, brings together one fantasy of modernity and one of its most atrocious moral horrors.

Islands have often been the places where modernity has staged its worst delusions. In the 18th century imagination, islands were, symbolically speaking, spaces where one could safely escape all moral norms and sexual prohibitions; they promised unlimited indulgence, but one that did not imperil mainstream society, precisely because they were exceptional and offshore. The image of the exceptional relaxation of norms—i.e. “offshoring”—applies to financial crimes, too. It is a form of evasion that does not imperil the system as a whole. To offshore crime, sexual violence, indulgence and financial perfidy is threatening but also reassuring. After all, it is offshore.

This was, of course, always a delusion. Financial offshoring is not a peripheral matter; it magnifies the crimes of the financial center. Similarly, elite actors apparently thought they could carry out their worst desires without contaminating the center. What those who came into Jeffrey Epstein’s orbit were enacting was not a fantasy of freedom, a revolt against prohibitions or norms. What they were enacting was an aspect of the horrific logic of modernity: An extraordinary pornification of the imagination, sexual exploitation and commodification of bodies, and total abjection in the pursuit of power. And it is an elite that seems to combine violent impunity with emotional immaturity.



There are so many angles to the Epstein files. Have all the files been released? Will the victims’ rights be protected? Given that both Democrats and Republicans are implicated, who stands to benefit? The files provide a sobering x-ray of some of America’s elites: immature, full of impunity, corrupt, venal, venial, and venereal all at once. They also provide a sobering view of global politics: There are no grand purposes, not even a political economy. Instead, what we get is a world run by huckstering middlemen, vulnerable personalities, fragile egos. They’re the perfect embodiment of Oswald Spengler’s figures of moral decline: clever, skeptical, but licentious and morally exhausted.

What decisions are such immature and fragile men capable of? The puzzle is how Epstein managed to put himself at the center of so much geopolitics; the fact that so many global powers felt they had to go through him is remarkable. He comes across as both a figure of great evil and an agony aunt for the powerful, including powerful countries.

The consequences will play out over time. Who knows what skeletons will tumble out? But, as always, the response is revealing. There was initial reluctance to confront the matter in both political parties, and it has taken years—and legislation introduced by Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna—to get the release of the files moving. Yet there is still, arguably, a shroud of silence. Yes, there is gossip and chatter, but it is almost a way of not confronting the central question: How could a society produce an elite of this kind? Imagine if this kind of story had broken about the ruling class of any other country. Every colonial trope of debauchery or orientalism would have shaped the coverage.

But the response is revealing in three deeper ways. First, though there is partisan bickering, there is still a kind of attempt to exceptionalize the behavior of this ruling class. Like earlier colonial and island imaginaries, it functions as a bounded zone in which elite actors can suspend norms without contaminating the moral order of the center.

Second, there is a pathology of modern political life, where power is not legitimized or justified through virtue, but through opacity, brazenness, legalese, propaganda, and procedural shenanigans. So much energy will go into legalese when the horrors are in plain sight.

Third, there is a shadow that haunts modernity—the way in which we make sense of vice in public space. The only great historians who let us grasp this moment are the Romans: Tacitus, Sallust, and Livy. They located sexual decadence and violence at the very center of power, treating excess as a sign, and, in some cases, a cause of political decline. We moderns, of course, are supposedly more sophisticated. We distinguish between public and private. For us, corruption is not about virtue; it is a matter of institutional containment. In The Machiavellian Moment, the historian and theorist of the politics of virtue, J.G.A. Pocock, noted a paradox at the heart of modernity. Unlike the Romans, we do not think decadence, especially sexual decadence, tells us much about the decay of societies. Usually, the causes are structural—economic or political. Yet, Pocock argued, the republican category of virtue survives. It may not have explanatory force, but we cannot entirely abandon the language of virtue, or the sneaking suspicion that, even if sexual decadence is not causal of other issues, it is revealing.

There are, of course, outstanding issues in the Epstein files that need to be addressed—people who committed crimes in legal terms, people who engaged in morally reprehensible behavior, and people who themselves are not individually guilty but who condoned what was happening. The Epstein files are not about individual guilt or innocence; they are about the nature of collective power. And when, within that collectivity, elites abused sexual, financial, legal, political, and even intellectual power without shame and with impunity, one has to wonder whether the Roman historians were onto something: They envisioned empires collapsing when elites could no longer restrain themselves in any aspect of their lives. An elite so needy, greedy, and now so vulnerable can hardly be trusted to exercise good judgment.

The dilemma, as the Romans knew, is this: An elite of this kind has no authority left. Even in power, it is fearful; who knows what violence it enacts to cover its own tracks? On the other hand, if the elite gets away with it, the road is open to moral nihilism, a point we are dangerously close to reaching.

Pratap Bhanu Mehta is a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Policy Research and a Visiting Professor at Princeton University.

version of this article was originally published at Indian Express.Carnegie  - 

 CB İletişim Başkanlığı 

Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı Sisi ile ortak basın toplantısında konuştu

Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan: "Toprak bütünlüğü korunmuş, siyasi birliği sağlanmış bir Suriye'nin en büyük kazananı tüm bölgemiz olacaktır. Biz, Suriye'deki büyük dönüşümün destekçisiyiz." dedi.


Cumhurbaşkanı Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı Abdulfettah es-Sisi ile baş başa ve heyetlerarası görüşmeyle anlaşmaların imza töreninin ardından düzenlenen ortak basın toplantısında konuştu. 


Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, ilk toplantısını 2024 Eylül'de Ankara'da yaptıkları Yüksek Düzeyli Stratejik İşbirliği Konseyinin ikinci toplantısı vesilesiyle Kahire'de bulunmaktan büyük memnuniyet duyduğunu dile getirdi. Şahsına ve heyetine gösterdikleri sıcak misafirperverlik için Sisi ile kendilerini büyük bir muhabbetle karşılayan Mısırlılar’a teşekkür eden Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, "Bin yıllık ortak mazimizle yoğrulan kardeşlik bağlarımızdan sadece halklarımızın refahı için değil Filistin ile bölgemizin istikrarına katkı için de faydalanmak istiyoruz. Sayın Sisi'yle belirlediğimiz bu ortak vizyon sayesinde ilişkilerimizin her alanda daha ileri taşındığını memnuniyetle müşahede ediyoruz." diye konuştu.


Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, Yüksek Düzeyli Stratejik İşbirliği Konseyinin ilk toplantısından bu yana yaklaşık 16 ayı geride bıraktıklarını anımsattı.


Bu dönemde çeşitli vesilelerle Mısır'ı iki kez ziyaret ettiğini anlatan Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, "Dışişleri bakanlarımız ise yedi defa bir araya geldiler. Diğer bakanlarımız ve üst düzey zevatı ekleyince karşılıklı ziyaret sayısı 50'ye yaklaşıyor. Bugün kabul ettiğimiz ortak bildiri ve muhtelif belgelerle inşallah ilişkilerimizin ahdi zeminini pekiştiriyoruz." ifadelerini kullandı.


Ticari ilişkiler


"Mısır, Türkiye'nin Afrika'daki en büyük ticaret ortağı olmayı sürdürüyor. Son üç yıldır 8 ila 9 milyar dolar aralığında seyreden ticaret hacmimizi 15 milyar dolara yükseltmeyi hedefliyoruz." diyen Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, sözlerini şöyle sürdürdü:


"Türk firmalarının Mısır'daki yatırımlarının 4 milyar dolara yaklaşmasından ziyadesiyle memnunuz. Bugün iş insanlarımızla bir araya geleceğimiz iş forumunda karşılıklı yatırım ve iş birliği imkânlarını ele alacağız. Enerji ve ulaştırma alanlarında ortak projeler geliştirmek istiyoruz. Türkiye-Mısır arasında güçlenen ilişkiler turizme de olumlu yansımıştır. Geçtiğimiz yıl 500 binden fazla turist ülkelerimizde karşılıklı olarak misafir edilmiştir. Temennimiz bunun önümüzdeki dönemde iki katına çıkmasıdır. Mısır halkı, Türk kültürüne ve diline yoğun ilgi gösteriyor. Türkiye olarak bu ilgiyi karşılıksız bırakmak istemiyoruz. Yunus Emre Enstitümüzün İskenderiye şubesinin, TİKA ve TRT gibi kurumlarımızın ülke temsilciliklerinin yeniden açılmasını bu bakımdan önemli görüyoruz."

Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, Mısır ile Doğu Akdeniz'de en uzun kıyı şeridine sahip iki komşu ülke olduklarını, ikili deniz ticareti taşımacılığı seyrüsefer serbestisi ve deniz güvenliği alanlarında iş birliğini arttırmak arzusunda olduklarını dile getirdi.


"Ortak gündemimizin başlıca konusunu Filistin davası teşkil ediyor"


Atılacak ortak adımların hem bölgesel barışa hem de iki ülkenin ekonomik ve stratejik çıkarlarına ciddi katkılar sağlayacaklarına inandığını vurgulayan Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, şunları söyledi:

"Ortak gündemimizin başlıca konusunu Filistin davası teşkil ediyor. Şurası bir gerçek ki ateşkes tesis edilmiş olmakla birlikte Gazze'deki insani dram hâlen devam ediyor. 11 Ekim'den bu yana 500'ün üzerinde Gazzeli, İsrail saldırılarında hayatını kaybetti. Geçen hafta aralarında çocukların da olduğu 30 kardeşimiz şehit oldu. Şarm el-Şeyh Deklarasyonu'nu sabote etmeyi amaçlayan bu saldırıları ve ihlalleri reddediyoruz. Gazze'de barışı mümkün kılacak girişimlerde Mısır'la birlikte çalışıyoruz, inşallah bunu da devam ettireceğiz. İsrail saldırılarıyla tahrip edilmiş olan Gazze'nin yeniden imarı için de aynı şekilde elden gelen katkıyı sağlayacağız. Bu vesileyle Gazze'ye gönderdiğimiz insani yardımların bölgeye ulaştırılmasında gösterdikleri iş birliği için Mısır makamlarına bugün bir kez daha teşekkür ediyorum."


Bölgesel gelişmeler


Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, bugünkü görüşmelerde Libya, Sudan ve Afrika boynuzu başta olmak üzere bölgesel konulara da değindiklerini aktardı. "Libya'da kalıcı istikrarın tesisi için ülkede birlik bütünlüğün korunması, Mısır'la ortak hedefimiz olmayı sürdürüyor." ifadesini kullanan Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, şöyle devam etti:


"Libyalılar’ın önderlik ve sahipliğinde yürütülecek süreçleri desteklemek noktasında fikir birliği içindeyiz. Sudan'da öncelikle ateşkesin sağlanmasını ve ardından sürdürülebilir bir barışın tesis edilmesini ümit ediyoruz. Somali'nin egemenliğini ve toprak bütünlüğünü hedef alan İsrail'in Somaliland'ı tanıma kararını kabul etmiyoruz. Somali Federal Cumhuriyeti'nin ve Somaliland bölgesinin geleceğine yönelik adımların tüm Somalililer’in iradesini yansıtacak şekilde atılması gerekiyor. Toprak bütünlüğü korunmuş, siyasi birliği sağlanmış bir Suriye'nin en büyük kazananı tüm bölgemiz olacaktır. Biz, Suriye'deki büyük dönüşümün destekçisiyiz. Bu desteği sürdürmekte kararlıyız. Mısır tarafından Suriye'nin birliğinin muhafazasına yönelik yapılan açıklamaları isabetli buluyor ve destekliyoruz. Komşumuz İran'la, özellikle dış müdahalelerin tüm bölge için önemli riskler teşkil edeceği kanaatindeyiz. İran'la nükleer dosya dâhil meselelerin diplomatik yollarla çözümü en isabetli yöntemdir."


Misafirperverliği için Cumhurbaşkanı Sisi'ye ve Mısırlı yetkililere teşekkür eden Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, toplantılarda aldıkları kararların iki ülke başta olmak üzere bölgenin barış, refah ve istikrarına katkı sunmasını temenni etti.


Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı: “İş birliğini pekiştirmemiz lazım ki çözümlere ulaşabilelim”


Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı Abdulfettah es-Sisi, ülkesinin başkenti Kahire'deki Al-İttihadiye Sarayı'nda resmî törenle karşıladığı Cumhurbaşkanı Recep Tayyip Erdoğan ile heyetler arası ve ikili görüşmenin ardından bir dizi ikili anlaşmaya imza attı.


İmza töreninin ardından düzenlenen ortak basın toplantısında konuşan Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı, Türkiye ile olan çeşitli alanlardaki işbirliğine dikkati çekerek "Mısır, Afrika Kıtası'nda Türkiye'nin birinci ortağı sayılır. İki ülke arasında 9 milyar dolar olan Ticaret hacmini 15 milyar dolara çıkarmak için çalışıyoruz, hedefimiz bu." diye konuştu.


Orta Doğu'daki duruma ilişkin Sisi, "Bölgemiz çok hızlı bir şekilde krizlere ve çalkantılara gebe kalıyor. (Mısır-Türkiye) Bu iş birliğini derinlemesine pekiştirmemiz lazım ki (bölgede) sürdürülebilir siyasi çözümlere bir an önce ulaşabilelim" ifadesini kullandı. İş birliği geliştirmenin önemine vurgu yapan Sisi; Türkiye, Mısır, Katar ve ABD'nin çabalarıyla Gazze'de ateşkes ilan edildiğini hatırlattı.


Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı "Gazze'de şimdi önemli olan insani yardımların bir an önce bölgeye ulaştırılmasıdır. Bu arada sükunetin sağlanması büyük önem taşımaktadır. Uluslararası ve Birleşmiş Milletler kararları doğrultusunda iki devletli çözüm ve Filistin devletinin kurulması son derece önemlidir. Filistinliler’e karşı uygulanan tüm tek taraflı uygulamalar sona erdirilmeli ve başta Kudüs olmak üzere kutsal mekanlar korunmalıdır." değerlendirmesinde bulundu.


Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan'la Sudan'daki gelişmeleri ele aldıklarını aktaran Sisi, "Sudan'ın devlet kurumlarının bütünlüğünün korunması önemli. Erdoğan'ın da diplomatik çabaları sürmekte, Sudan'ın birliği ve dirliğinin korunması önemlidir." şeklinde konuştu. Sisi, ülkesinin Somali'nin bölünmesine karşı olduğunun altını çizerek Libya'da da istikrarın sağlanmasının önemine vurgu yaptı.


Suriye'deki duruma ilişkin Sisi, "Mısır, Suriye'nin birliğini ve egemenliğini desteklemektedir. Son olarak hükûmetle SDG arasında bir anlaşma imzalandı. Bu anlaşmaların ve çabaların tüm kesimlerin haklarını korumasını umuyoruz." dedi.
İran'daki gelişmelere değinen Sisi, "İran'daki gelişmeleri de ele aldık. Mısır, İran'da nükleer dosyanın bir çözüme varılması, ülkede ve bölgede barışın sağlanması gerekiyor." diye konuştu.


Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı Abdulfettah es-Sisi, "Türkiye ile hem bölgesel hem uluslararası iki ülkeyi ilgilendiren konularda iş birliğini artıracağız. 3. toplantımızı Ankara'da olacak. Kardeşim Erdoğan, Mısır'ın en aziz misafiridir, ilişkilerimizin daha iyi düzeye ulaşmasını, bölgemizde barış ve istikrarın egemen olmasını Allah'tan temenni ederim." ifadelerini kullandı.


Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı Sisi'ye Togg hediye etti


Cumhurbaşkanı Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Mısır Cumhurbaşkanı Abdulfettah es-Sisi'ye Türkiye'nin yerli elektrikli otomobili Togg'u hediye etti.

Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, anlaşmaların imza töreni ve ortak basın toplantısının ardından, Sisi'ye "Anadolu" renginde Togg armağan etti.

Al-İttihadiye Sarayı bahçesinde Togg'un içinde fotoğraf çektiren iki lidere, Sanayi ve Teknoloji Bakanı Mehmet Fatih Kacır da eşlik etti.

Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, daha sonra, Sisi'nin kullandığı Togg ile Türkiye-Mısır İş Forumu Kapanış Oturumu'nun yapıldığı otele geçti.

Öte yandan Mısır Cumhurbaşkanlığından yapılan yazılı açıklamada da Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan'ın Sisi'ye hediye ettiği Togg'a vurgu yapıldı.

Açıklamada, "Sisi, Al-İttihadiye Sarayı'nın bahçesinde aracı inceledikten sonra, Cumhurbaşkanı Recep Tayyip Erdoğan'ı yanına alarak Nasır bölgesinde bulunan ve Mısır-Türkiye İş Forumu'nun düzenlendiği El-Massa Oteli'ne kadar aracı bizzat kullandı." ifadelerine yer verildi.


FP (Foreign Policy) February 05, 2026 - Kyriakos Mitsotakis(Greek PM) on Trump, NATO, and how Athens thinks about strategic autonomy. By Ravi Agrawal, the editor in chief of Foreign Policy.

 FP (Foreign Policy)

February 05, 2026

ON DEMAND NOW


Kyriakos Mitsotakis: “I’m not yet ready to call the post-World War II order dead.”


As Europe wakes up to the reality of a nakedly transactional United States, its leaders are more openly declaring the need to spend more on defense and imagine a world without Washington’s guaranteed embrace. One country that has long been talking up such a path is Greece, a NATO member that spends more than 3 percent of its GDP on defense in part because of its perceived threat from neighboring Turkey.


“I haven’t given up on the trans-Atlantic relationship,” said Kyriakos Mitsotakis, the prime minister of Greece, speaking on FP Live. “I do believe that the bonds that connect us and that have essentially established the post-World War II order may be weaker, but they’re still there.”


Mitsotakis has long advocated for strategic autonomy—a wonkish term to describe a country or region being able to set its own priorities. Now, he thinks the rest of Europe is getting on board. But he wants to do so while staying friends with Washington. “I’m not yet ready to call the post-World War II order dead. And I will continue to engage constructively with the U.S., to also explain to my U.S. friends and our U.S. partners that at the end of the day, if you look at the global landscape, it is in the interest of the United States to have a strong economic security defense relationship with Europe,” he said.


And how will Europe expand defense production without taking money away from other sectors? Mitsotakis: “If our growth rates are stuck at around 1 percent and if our leading economies are growing under 1 percent, it will be difficult to finance the investments that we need to create a European defense market. We need to change the competition rules in Europe. We need to allow for more mergers. We need to nurture the defense ecosystem. We have amazing start-ups. In Greece, this is not just about the big platforms: the ships, the airplanes. It’s also about innovation. And Europe, and Greece for that matter, has incredible talent in which we would like to invest. But we will not reach our defense targets if we cannot agree on how we will fund our defense spending. And improving our competitiveness and strengthening our fiscal position is an absolute prerequisite to do that.”

-----------------

Q&A

Greek PM: ‘I haven’t given up on the trans-Atlantic relationship.’

Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Trump, NATO, and how Athens thinks about strategic autonomy.

By Ravi Agrawal, the editor in chief of Foreign Policy.


No audio? Hover over the video player, and tap the Click to Unmute button. Subtitles are also available. Closed captioning provided by Vimeo and may contain minor inconsistencies.


February 5, 2026, 2:13 PM

As Europe wakes up to the reality of a nakedly transactional United States, its leaders are more openly declaring the need for increased defense spending and a broader shift toward what is known as strategic autonomy—a wonkish term for a country or region to be able to set its own priorities. One country that has long been talking up such a path is Greece, a NATO member that spends more than 3 percent of its GDP on defense in part because of its perceived threat from neighboring Turkey. Greece is also responsible for around a quarter of global shipping, making it especially reliant on international trade.


On the latest episode of FP Live, I spoke with Kyriakos Mitsotakis, a center-right and liberal politician who has served as Greece’s prime minister since 2019. We discussed the trans-Atlantic relationship, how Greece navigates the Trump administration, the country’s challenges with immigration, security, and much else. Subscribers can watch the full interview on the video box atop this page or download the free FP Live podcast. What follows here is a condensed and lightly edited transcript.


Ravi Agrawal: I have to start with the trans-Atlantic relationship. U.S. President Donald Trump seems to have pulled back from his recent demands to buy Greenland. How much has that incident—that drama that we all saw in Davos last month—hurt the relationship between Europe and the United States?


Kyriakos Mitsotakis: First of all, let me point out, as we discussed a couple of years ago, that President Trump was right when he pointed out that Europe was not contributing its fair share when it came to defense spending, and that we had essentially outsourced the security of our continent to the United States. Greece was an exception to the rule. We’ve been spending more than 2 percent of our GDP [on defense] for many years, due to our peculiar geographic and geopolitical challenges. We’re now above 3 percent. But most of the continent only woke up to the realization that we need to take our strategic autonomy more seriously since President Trump was reelected to the White House.


So I think that in that sense, this “rude awakening” was necessary in order for us to take our own security seriously. And we have made significant progress with the commitments to spend significantly more within NATO but also a general understanding that regardless of what happens in NATO, Europe as a whole needs to develop its own defense architecture. I’ve been calling for more European defense spending for quite some time. And I’m quite happy that most European leaders have realized, maybe slightly later than I would have wanted them to, that this is now becoming an indispensable necessity for Europe.


RA: I agree on the defense issue, and we’ll come back to it. But this is about more than that. On an issue like Greenland, Stephen Miller, the president’s deputy chief of staff, has called international law “international niceties.” The United States has also overstepped when it comes to international law on Venezuela, for example. How does that resonate in a place like Greece?


KM: Greece has been a firm believer in international law ever since the post-World War [II] international security and defense arrangement was put into place. We are a nonpermanent member of the [United Nations] Security Council. And when it comes to our regional geopolitical disputes, we always put forward the fundamental premise that they can only be resolved by reference to international law, and in particular, the law of the seas. But at the same time, we’re not naive. We do understand that in these turbulent times, it is important to build our own defense and security capabilities. So without changing our fundamental premise, we do recognize that international relations have become, in a sense, more transactional and that we need to build our own strength. Speaking for my country: our own economic strength, our own defense strength, our own soft-power strength in terms of completely rebranding a country that was hit very, very harshly from the financial crisis. So, we will continue to maintain that the rules-based international order is in our broader interest while not being naive about a changing world, which, frankly, as a medium-sized European country, we cannot really influence.


RA: Well, let’s talk about strategic autonomy then. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s speech in Davos seemed to resonate globally with his broader point that there’s a rupture in the world order and that we’re entering a world in which might is right and where size matters. He cited Thucydides, which I imagine was popular in Greece. And of course, Canada is a bigger economy than, for example, Greece is. What is your sense of a world that moves in a direction that favors size over rules? How does a country like Greece think about that scenario?


KM: Well, first of all, let me point out that I haven’t given up on the trans-Atlantic relationship. And I do believe that the bonds that connect us and that have essentially established the post-World War II order may be weaker, but they’re still there. And especially when you look at NATO and how instrumental the U.S. still is in terms of providing critical capabilities to Europe, one would be naive to argue right now that Europe can all of a sudden defend itself without relying on our U.S. partners.


And I do also need to point out that Greece has a privileged strategic partnership with the United States. We have a very strong security and defense arrangement. We may talk a little bit about energy because I think it is playing a critical role in the new geopolitical and geoeconomic landscape.


I speak as a proud Greek, a proud European, but also as someone who will continue to work to mend the rifts and the tension in the trans-Atlantic relationship. So, I’m not yet ready to call the post-World War II order dead. And I will continue to engage constructively with the U.S., to also explain to my U.S. friends and our U.S. partners that at the end of the day, if you look at the global landscape, it is in the interest of the United States to have a strong economic security defense relationship with Europe.


There are ways to find win-win solutions when you come to Greenland. I think Europe made it very, very clear, and I think it was important, that there are red lines which simply cannot be crossed. But we need to do that, I’d say, in a non-dramatic manner, a non-escalatory manner, and to also convince the United States that its legitimate security concerns in the Arctic can be addressed without crossing these red lines. And my sense is that, when it comes to Greenland, we are moving in that direction.


RA: But when you said that Europe cannot take care of itself right away—that it can’t suddenly do without the United States—that implies that 10 years from now, it would like to get there. So what does Europe need to do to up its defense spending? And where does the money come from, given the continent’s history with overshooting its fiscal balance sheets, and then having problems with austerity?


KM: Let me point out that the U.S. is also not in a very enviable fiscal position, but the U.S. is the U.S. and can afford to fund its own deficits.


The flip side of a robust defense is a robust economy. This whole discussion around European competitiveness, of how will we establish higher growth rates, how can we be more competitive, is necessary not only to create more jobs, to improve disposable income, but also to create the fiscal space within our national balance sheets to fund and increase spending and defense, which is going to come from public money, potentially European money, but it’s also going to come from private investments. We will have an absolutely critical European Council take place in a week from now. And competitiveness is going to be the sole issue that we will discuss. Mario Draghi produced an excellent report a year ago. Have we implemented it? Not really. We have not really moved in that direction at the speed that I would like. So, this is a time to really increase our speed, shift gears.


If I look at the example of Greece, we’re spending more than 3 percent of our GDP on defense, but we are producing surpluses. We are also bringing down our debt at the same time. And we still have enough fiscal space to also cut taxes. Why can we do that? Because we have a high growth rate.


So, what we have been doing in Greece, we need to replicate at the European level. If our growth rates are stuck at around 1 percent and if our leading economies are growing under 1 percent, it will be difficult to finance the investments that we need to create a European defense market. We need to change the competition rules in Europe. We need to allow for more mergers. We need to nurture the defense ecosystem. We have amazing start-ups. In Greece, this is not just about the big platforms: the ships, the airplanes. It’s also about innovation. And Europe, and Greece for that matter, has incredible talent in which we would like to invest. But we will not reach our defense targets if we cannot agree on how we will fund our defense spending. And improving our competitiveness and strengthening our fiscal position is an absolute prerequisite to do that.

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A tanker is shown in the water, adjacent to a terminal. There are mountains in the background.

A tanker is shown in the water, adjacent to a terminal. There are mountains in the background.

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Italian soldiers attend the opening ceremony of NATO's Trident Juncture exercise at the Italian Air Force base in Trapani, Sicily, on Oct. 19, 2015.

Italian soldiers attend the opening ceremony of NATO's Trident Juncture exercise at the Italian Air Force base in Trapani, Sicily, on Oct. 19, 2015.

NATO Is Thinking About Defense Spending Wrong

Prioritizing GDP-based targets doesn’t necessarily strengthen military capabilities, as Italy shows. This article has an audio recording


Argument | Gabriele Natalizia, Matteo Mazziotti di Celso

French President Emmanuel Macron delivers remarks during a meeting with leaders of artificial intelligence companies during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 20.

French President Emmanuel Macron delivers remarks during a meeting with leaders of artificial intelligence companies during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 20.

Europe Is Prepared to Create Its Own Army

As the United States blusters and threatens, European leaders are making tough choices. This article has an audio recording


Analysis | Luke McGee


RA: Let’s move this one step further. Tell us how countries agree on creating that base of defense spending and funding. Europe, of course, over the last 80 years has built this great welfare state, but it’s come at the price of relying on the United States for its defense and relying on Russia for its energy. As those things are taken away, there’s a theory that the money has to come from somewhere. And this is, at its heart, a tough conversation that leaders need to have with their citizens. How do you have that conversation?


KM: Very much so. First of all, in Greece, this sort of dilemma was not really that relevant because of the fact that we had our own security concerns with Turkey. There was a generally accepted social contract that we needed to spend more on defense. What I’m doing is not just spending more on defense, but also nurturing a Greek defense ecosystem, so that we don’t just buy weapons and systems from abroad, but we also have significant domestic contribution.


In other European countries, it’s more difficult. If you don’t face a direct threat, that discussion becomes more complicated. But I would look at what we did after COVID. We created a big pot of money. We borrowed, at the European level, 750 billion euros to address the COVID crisis. And I think it was a very successful project. And I do still believe that there are European projects of common interest—let’s say missile defense—where we could imagine creating a dedicated European defense facility that would benefit all countries. This is the ultimate European common good, after all. And it would benefit the entire continent. So why not create a special instrument that will allow us to borrow at the European level to fund these types of projects? We’re not there yet, but I do sense that there’s more interest in having this discussion at the European level, because you’re right to point out our budgets are stretched. Our citizens demand that we maintain our welfare state.


In Greece, I do need to point out that we’ve made the difficult reforms that other European countries have not yet made. Our retirement age, for example, is already at 67 years old. So we know that we can fund our social state through our own budgets. Other European countries are still struggling to do that. But these sorts of discussions need to take place.


And I would also add one more point, and this relates to European collective defense arrangements. We have a clause in our European treaties. It’s Article 42, paragraph 7. This is the equivalent of [NATO’s] Article 5 in the European Union. It’s a mutual assistance clause, actually phrased even more strongly than Article 5. We talk very little about it in Europe. The time has come to really put it at the forefront and to say, “Look, regardless of what happens with NATO, we in Europe have agreed that if a member state under any circumstance is attacked, we have our own collective mutual assistance clause.” So all this is not at the expense of NATO, because I think NATO is going to become stronger if we take our defense more seriously, and the United States is going to take us more seriously if we start upping our game and spending more on defense and taking our collective European security more seriously.


RA: There are of course fissures within Europe; it’s not a monolith. There are fissures within NATO as well. You mentioned Turkey here. You’re meeting [Turkish] President [Recep Tayyip] Erdogan later this month. Erdogan is a leader who, four years ago, said he no longer even recognizes your existence. What are you hoping to get out of this meeting?


KM: I’ll be visiting Ankara next Wednesday, leading a high-level Greek delegation, so we have a G2G format which we have created. Of course, we’ve had our differences with Turkey. One major difference that we recognize in Greece is the delimitation of our maritime zones in the Aegean and the eastern Mediterranean. This difference goes back decades. But I think we’ve worked constructively over the past years to diffuse tensions and to recognize that, even if we cannot solve this major problem, which hasn’t been resolved for many decades, we can still have a working relationship, a constructive relationship on certain fronts. I’ll be going to Ankara, making our very clear points with regards to our main difference, but also trying to build upon the progress that we have made over the past year.


RA: There was a tragedy on your shores this week, in which 15 migrants died in the Aegean Sea. Do you have a clear account of what actually happened? Reportedly, the Coast Guard vessel collided with a boat, and then that boat capsized—


KM: Let me say that it is my obligation—it’s a tragedy—we need a full investigation. My preliminary, and I stress this, information is that essentially our Coast Guard ship was rammed by a much smaller boat. We don’t know why this happened.


People found themselves in the sea; people died; people were rescued. But I do expect a full investigation, and I will leave it up to the competent authorities to determine exactly what happened.


But this is the situation that happens quite frequently in the Aegean. You have smugglers putting people without life vests, let me point that out. You have 40 people crammed in a 30-foot boat with very strong engines; the sole purpose is to get to a Greek island. My Coast Guard, we’re not a welcoming committee. Our job is to protect our borders, but our job is also to save people whose lives are threatened. And if it were not, I can tell you, but for the Coast Guard, we would have more people die after this accident.


RA: But prime minister, if I may, part of the job is also transparency. And so I have to ask, will any video that emerges from the government side be released? I bring this up because in 2023, there was a much bigger tragedy where hundreds of migrants died. Videos later emerged of the Coast Guard attempting to bump into a trawler, not the other way around. So if there is any official video, will that be released?


KM: The incident you are referring to was not under my watch. At the time, we had a provisional government in power. There is again a full investigation. If there is any video footage, I make a full commitment that this investigation will take place with full transparency.


RA: That’s good to hear.


Zooming out from the tragedy of this week, I want to ask you more broadly about the concept of asylum and where immigration is today. In country after country, including Greece and the United States, there is a real backlash against immigration. Your own policies, which are tougher on illegal immigration, seem to be quite popular, even when you face criticism from rights groups. How do you think about what is the right thing for a country to do?


KM: First of all, let me point out that back in 2020, Greece was the first country to suffer from a hybrid operation, where migrants were pushed in an organized manner to reach our land borders and to enter into European territory. At the time we said, “This is not going to happen.” We protected our borders. So my approach is very, very simple. Tough on illegal migration—make it very difficult for people to come into the country illegally—but also be generous and offer legal pathways to migration. And of course, those people who do enter and who are entitled asylum can stay in Greece. We have numerous examples that we take care of these people. We try to integrate them.


But if you enter Greece illegally and you’re not entitled asylum, I will do whatever I can to send you back, either to the country of origin or to the country of transit. So it’s very open.


When I came into power, unemployment was at 18 percent. Now, it’s dipped under 8 percent. We have labor shortages. We need skilled and unskilled labor. We would like to welcome people from abroad to work and live in Greece, but we want to do it on our own terms.


RA: Let me bring up one last region of the world in this discussion, and that is the Middle East. President Trump recently proposed a Board of Peace for the future of Gaza. You were one of many European leaders to reject that invitation. Why is that?


KM: We did not join the Board of Peace for legal reasons, voicing some concerns which were shared by other European partners. But my proposal to the U.S. and to my European partners was very straightforward: Let’s find a way for those European countries that are interested in Gaza to find a way to opt in to the Board of Peace, but only for Gaza. Because what was presented as a Board of Peace was not just about Gaza; it was a new organization. And that made us skeptical, because the initial U.N. resolution was just about Gaza. So, if there’s a way to opt in to the structure, but only for Gaza, in a time-defined manner and under the auspices of a U.N. Security Council resolution, I’d be happy to do that. And I think many other European countries would be happy to do this as well.


RA: Have you heard back from the United States having voiced those concerns?


KM: No, not yet, but I think it’s a work in progress.


RA: I’m going to return to where we began this interview, and that is the United States, especially under President Trump in his second term. Prime minister, you’re incredibly diplomatic. You seem to have figured out a way to work with the United States on energy and security. It’s very clear to me as well that you are hedging your bets for the future of the continent. What is the right way to deal with the Trump administration right now?


KM: First of all, I wear two hats. I’m a national leader, and again, I cherish the relationship with the U.S. I’m going to make sure that it’s as constructive as possible. But I’m also a European leader who will stand firm when it comes to making sure we hold the European line, when at times, things get dodgy in our relationship. Being honest and transparent, and making sure that we set clear boundaries and limits in terms of what can be accepted and what cannot be accepted, seems to me to be the best path forward. Again, I’m one of the few European leaders who worked with President Trump during his first administration, and I had a very constructive relationship.


RA: But if I may, analysts like me have pointed out that Trump 1 is very different from Trump 2.


KM: To a certain extent, that’s true, and I’ve not met him in person. We’ve not had a proper bilateral relationship. But again, as Europe, we need to be very clear in terms of what will happen if things were to escalate out of control. If tariffs were to be imposed, for example, as threats were made—this would not be productive because it would elicit a reaction. I think the moment we made that very clear, I think it became also obvious to the administration that there’s more to lose than to win in terms of pursuing this path of action.


So again, setting our boundaries, being very clear, being engaging, but certainly being non-escalatory and not provoking a fight with the U.S. This is the path we are taking. And when it comes to the bilateral relationship: making sure that we find win-win deals like the energy deal, which work for both countries, and for Europe as a whole. If we have made a decision to move away from Russian gas, we need to replace it with something. And I’m quite happy to replace it with American LNG.


Ravi Agrawal is the editor in chief of Foreign Policy. X: @RaviReports


Read More On Donald Trump | Europe | Greece | NATO | Turkey | United States

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EURONEWS - THE bRİEFİNG BY Jorge Liboreiro - Who wantsto call Putin first?

 

TheWatch


EURONEWS

Who wants to call Putin first?

By Jorge Liboreiro


Should the European Union pick up the phone and speak with Vladimir Putin? Well, depends on who you ask.


The idea of re-engaging diplomatically with the Kremlin as part of the ongoing efforts to end the war in Ukraine has sharply divided member states. As you might recall, the EU abruptly closed off direct communications after Putin gave the green light for the full-scale invasion on 24 February 2022. Since then, the strategy of isolation has held steady, barring Hungary and Slovakia, which broke ranks to foster closer ties with Moscow, prompting accusations of disloyalty.


But last year, something shifted. Shortly after his re-election, Donald Trump shocked Western allies when he launched negotiations with Putin. It was a unilateral, uncoordinated decision that left Europeans scrambling to secure the famous “seat at the table.” Tough Europeans, thanks to the “Coalition of the Willing,” managed to gradually carve a space in the process, they remain today at the mercy of the White House, which is the main interlocutor with the Kremlin.


Cue Emmanuel Macron.


The French president raised eyebrows when he suggested relaunching communications with Russia. Macron argued direct talks would be “useful” to avoid depending on Washington’s diplomacy, which, as Europeans have noticed as of late, is not always predictable and stable. After all, the thinking in Paris went, the peace process is poised to redefine Europe’s security architecture for generations to come, so Europeans should naturally have a say.


At first, the pitch sounded like another rogue mission from Macron, who has built a reputation for making bold, provocative statements. But then, the French leader received the endorsement from a prime minister with whom he has often disagreed and, at times, clashed: Giorgia Meloni.


“Macron is right on this. I believe the time has come for Europe to also speak with Russia,” the Italian premier said last month. “If Europe decides to take part in this phase of negotiations by talking only to one of the two sides, I fear that in the end the positive contribution it can make will be limited.”


The Macron-Meloni alignment pushed the topic straight to the front page. Suddenly, the question of whether the EU should appoint a special envoy to lead the re-engagement with Russia was treated with the utmost seriousness. The European Commission, a staunch advocate of diplomatic isolation, changed tune and admitted direct talks could take place “at some point” in the future.


As the debate intensifies, so do the divisions.


In yet another Franco-German break, Berlin came against the move, citing as reasons Putin’s maximalist demands and his perennial refusal to establish an unconditional ceasefire, a long-held request by Western allies (and previously by Trump himself). Russia’s barrage of missiles and drones plunging Ukrainians into blackouts at sub-zero temperatures has only solidified the opposition.


“We currently see no need to open additional channels of communication,” German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said last week, when asked about the matter. “Moscow must be willing to end the war. If Moscow isn’t, the price it has to pay for this war, including the economic price, will increase week by week.”


The foreign ministries of Lithuania, Estonia and Cyprus also voiced resistance. Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson suggested that the EU must first find out “whether Russia even wants to conclude something that resembles a proper peace with Ukraine. And until that question has even begun to be answered, I do not think we should charge ahead and try to engage in talks with Russia.”


By contrast, Austria, the Czech Republic and Luxembourg jumped on the bandwagon of the special envoy. Latvian Prime Minister Evika Siliņa told us she’s in favour of the idea and name-checked Macron, Merz, Poland’s Donald Tusk and even Britain’s Keir Starmer, whose country is not an EU member, as potential candidates to fill the vacancy.


“I think you need to engage in diplomacy. You always need to talk, but we need to isolate and still have sanctions on Russia,” Siliņa said. “We have to be at the negotiation table because Ukrainians themselves have started to negotiate. So why should Europeans not negotiate?”


The split is hardly surprising. For some, re-engaging with Putin, a head of state that allies want to prosecute for war crimes, is unpalatable. Europeans are well aware that the Kremlin will exploit any overture to claim the Western front is fracturing and Russia is being reinserted in the global order. The exact opposite of accountability. For others, the peace process and the enormous stakes at play must take precedence over any moral reservations or political risks. Diplomacy, they say, is always unpleasant and entails, sooner or later, painful compromises.


The impasse is already weakening. Earlier this week, Macron dispatched his diplomatic advisor to Moscow to speak directly with the Kremlin. The trip, which was leaked to the press only after it happened, was made “discreetly.”


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🟦TRILETERAL TALKS

Ukraine and Russia swapped 314 prisoners of war, 157 from each side, following two days of negotiation in Abu Dhabi under the US mediation. Despite several rounds of trilateral talks, Moscow hasn’t budged on its demands. Meanwhile, the last remaining bilateral treaty between the US and Russia limiting strategic nuclear arms (START) came to an end. In Brussels, ambassadors sealed a deal to provide Kyiv with a €90 billion loan based on joint debt. 


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Most European allies might have disagreed with Trump's aggressive Arctic policy, but most seem to agree with the substance of his message: the Arctic needs special attention, and it needs it fast. Their problem: they’re missing both the doctrines and the military capabilities necessary to enforce them. Alice Tidey maps out Europe’s uphill struggle to defend this geopolitically explosive region.


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As the uproar over the Greenland crisis fades away, the European Parliament has decided to unfreeze the ratification process of the EU-US trade deal, our colleagues Peggy Corlin and Vincenzo Genovese report. A vote in plenary is likely to take place in March. Socialists, Liberals and Greens are pushing for a new clause to suspend the deal in the event of new threats against Greenland. After India, Brussels is eyeing a new commercial agreement with Australia


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Political groups at the European Parliament are struggling to find a compromise position on the design of the digital euro, putting the project’s legislative path in jeopardy, Eleonora Vasques reports in a scoop. Lawmakers have strong disagreements on the very essence of what the digital euro should look like, making it challenging to move forward.


🟦WAIT A MINUTE

Spain made headlines this week after Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez announced plans to ban social media for teens under 16 and amend its laws to criminalise those “ultimately responsible” for manipulating algorithms, in a bid to protect users from what he called a “digital wild west”. But the Commission moved quickly to remind Brussels that putting additional obligations on tech platforms is a “clear no-go” that encroaches upon the executive’s competence.


🟦WAR GAMES

The days of warfare confined to the battlefield are long gone, and artificial intelligence is playing an ever-growing role in the flow of information about global conflicts. As security concerns rise in Europe, more and more citizens are turning to chatbots for answers to their most pressing questions. Yet, the AI-generated replies they receive run the risk of being skewed or inaccurate. Estelle Nilsson looks into whether chatbots are censoring the truth about conflicts.

🟦ICE UNDER FIRE

The fatal shootings of two Minneapolis residents, Renée Good and Alex Pretti, by agents from the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have sparked outrage far beyond the US amid criticism that the agents used disproportionate force. That anger intensified when Italian authorities confirmed that ICE personnel would be present at the Winter Olympics in Milan–Cortina, set to begin on Friday, prompting many to ask: Can ICE even operate on foreign soil?



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IT'S IN THE NUMBERS

Eurozone inflation fell to 1.7% in January, below the European Central Bank’s 2% target. Core inflation eased to 2.2% as energy prices plunged. In reaction, the ECB kept interest rates unchanged.

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