David Rothkopf Profile picture
Feb 23 17 tweets 3 min read
I'm lying awake here tonight because I honestly can't fathom how we have gotten to the point that the leader of the GOP, the last SecState, some of the party's most vocal members & a major US TV network all are actively taking Russia's side in a conflict with America & the West.
Yes, I lived through the 2016 campaign and all four years of Trump placing Putin ahead of our intel community, praising Putin, defending Russian positions. And yet here we are at a moment of great crisis, a threat to the order Americans & allies fought and died for.
And Trump and Fox and the rest are actually praising the man who has threatened the entire international order, who has put tens of millions of innocents at risk. They're defending him. They're spreading his lies. They're betraying our country and our values.
Why should that surprise me? They, like the man they are defending, have attacked the very foundations of our system of democracy. They, like Putin, sought to discredit our electoral system and to cheat it. They engineered a coup and are still defending it.
One of America's two major political parties is, at its core, not just corrupt, not just racist, not just misogynist, not just opposed to truth or science or history. They are, their leaders are, actively enemies of the U.S., our system and what we stand for.
Even as I write that--and check and check again to make sure it is not hyperbole--I also know it has been true for years, apparent for years, reaffirmed for years by investigation after investigation. And yet, somehow, because this crisis is so enormous, I am still in disbelief.
This is the kind of moment when for almost all our history we really did set differences aside, when we came together. What's more, our president & his team are so clearly on the right side at this moment--pro-peace, pro-democracy, pro-international law, pro-our allies & friends.
And yet, even today, Trump and Fox defended the aggressor, the enemy of democracy, a man who has devoted his entire life to bringing down America and the west. Even after another invasion. Even on the brink of potential cataclysm.
How have we gone so wrong? How is there even a shred of support for this? How has such a large and vital part of our system become so corrupted? Why are the voices of decent people in the GOP not united in a chorus of denunciation and renunciation of the Trumpist-Putinists?
How can it be that this is a fact of life and that neither coups nor impeachments nor proof of wrong-doing nor just the light of day does not expose and end the threat these people pose? For the moment, we must turn our attentions to the crisis in Europe.
But we must in due course acknowledge the depth of this dysfunction and the profundity of its ugliness. And we must find those in the GOP and in all corners of civil society who will rise up to stop this movement, contain the spread of this political disease.
We are fortunate to have a capable president with a capable team right now. We are fortunate to have responsive and clear-eyed allies. We will, I believe prevail. But we cannot accept what these people say and do as a fact of our life.
We can't accept the threat they pose to our democracy or our values or our standing in the world as just part of the mix here in America or we will be doing the work that Putin ultimately wants done. We will be inviting division and decline.
And we will be less than we have been, less than we should be, less than we hope to be for our children and for our children's children. Don't take it for granted. Don't shrug it off. Don't minimize the toll it takes.
Don't pretend the origins are not the same as the many movements currently afoot that are targeting democracy, tolerance, and diverse societies and promoting autocracy and racial purity in their place.
It's easy to shrug it off after the past six years. But nothing could be more dangerous. I have faith we won't. But faith alone won't do it. We all most call it out, stand up to it and offer better alternatives whenever we have the opportunity.
And then we can leave it to deep self-examination and history to judge how we came to this strange, profoundly disturbing and dangerous moment.

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More from @djrothkopf

Feb 25
Enjoyed appearing on @TheBeatWithAri. One of you folks asked me to recap what I named as Putin's 5 big miscalculations. Happy to.
1. He expected the reaction to the invasion would be roughly what it was to Georgia & Crimea. Clearly, the outrage is orders of magnitude worse.
2. He expected NATO to be divided and unable to act. It has been unified and he has actually materially strengthened it.
3. He expected the US to be divided and thus weak. We have not. Biden & team have been strong, effective, smart leaders.
4. He felt Ukraine would be a push-over. Not going to happen. The military has already shown it'll put up a fight. However, even if Russia takes Kiev & ousts the gov't, installing a puppet, there will be a major insurgency & keeping a lid on Ukraine will be v. costly & difficult.
Read 9 tweets
Feb 24
Unilateral sanctions don't work. So the secret is finding what every major ally is willing to go along with. That will never result in a maximalist list. But what it has resulted in, thanks to effective diplomacy & leadership, is a strong set of sanctions.
Putin will say these sanctions will have no effect. It is false bravado. Look at the hit the Russian markets and ruble took today. Putin, his oligarch buddies, and the country will feel the pressure from the steps announced this week.
I've already seen TV talking head critiques along the line of "what about this" or "what about that"--easy pot shots that don't take into consideration the challenges of moving forward a massive and complex alliance. The reality is this was a good response for now.
Read 6 tweets
Feb 24
If Americans did not understand that Putin was an active threat to the international order that the U.S. and our allies have fought so hard to create during the past eight decades, then it is our obligation to ensure they do now.
Ukraine is only distant from the U.S. on a map. It is our neighbor in terms of the threat it is now facing, because that threat could easily and in an instant reach us. It is our neighbor because it is defending our interests and those of our most important alliance all alone.
It is our neighbor because the values it is protecting are our values. It is our neighbor because the enemy it is opposing seeks to weaken it so that he may weaken us and our alliance in the process. Ukrainians who are at risk and dying are therefore not just dying for Ukraine.
Read 6 tweets
Feb 24
What we have had confirmed tonight is that the man who controls the world's largest nuclear arsenal is without conscience, without respect for international law, without scruples, without mercy. He also is neither as strong nor as smart as he thinks.
Neither the world nor his neighbors nor his citizens will ever look at him the same way again. Whether they succeed or fail in the short term, the costs in the medium to longer term of this disastrous, reckless and indefensible attack will be immense.
I do not doubt for a moment that this is the beginning of the end of Vladimir Putin.
Read 4 tweets
Feb 24
Grateful for the opportunity to speak with @JoyAnnReid @McFaul & @juliaioffe on @thereidout just now. Important discussion. But I want to amplify a point Mike made. Whatever US politics are, tonight our thoughts need to be with the people of Ukraine.
They are awaiting, as you read this, what could be a horrific onslaught. Their lives and those of their loved ones are now at risk, their worlds may be turned upside down, because of the malevolent ambition of one man.
I'm so glad that our administration has stood up for them and for diplomacy and for peace so resolutely, admiring of the tenaciousness and deftness of U.S. and allied diplomacy, pleased at Western resolve to rebuff Putin.
Read 6 tweets
Feb 22
A rebuttal to the idea that the West contributed to the current crisis by supporting NATO expansion. 1.) It is naive. It accepts Putin's false rationale for his action. He obliterated this argument when he made his real argument: That Ukraine does not exist & is part of Russia.
2.) Putin's argument that the historical boundaries of the Russian empire or Soviet Union should fall under Moscow's control only underscores how important it was that former Soviet states were able to join NATO and gain its protections.
The reason Ukraine was targeted was because it was not a member of NATO not because it was. It was vulnerable and Putin, a predator, sought and seeks to take advantage of that.
Read 5 tweets

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