1. In final years of the Cold War, as a leading proponent of the Reagan Doctrine, I distinctly remember a moment in 1989 when many of us began to conclude that the doctrine was proving so effectual that the entire Soviet empire faced a realistic prospect of collapse;
2. I then recall our internal discussions shifting quickly to a new question:
What do we now do to ensure that the Kremlin, facing an imminent collapse of its empire and with little to lose, does not lash out with a final kinetic burst of military aggression against the West?
3. We concluded that Gorbachev needed to be assured publicly and privately that, in exchange for allowing the Cold War to end peacefully and allowing a united Germany in NATO, we would not seek any further eastern expansion of NATO;
4. I recall feeling then that, given the magnitude of the stakes, this was the least we could offer. And for eight years, from 1991 until 1999, we kept this promise until Clinton, GWB, and Obama violated it repeatedly, adding about a dozen Warsaw Pact and Baltic nations to NATO;
5. Prior to Russia's Crimea and Ukraine invasions in 2014 and 2022 respectively, Putin and Russia described NATO's eastern expansions as provocative and threatening. Supporters of the Ukraine War, in turn, predictably later labeled this response "Russian propaganda"; and
6. But the fact that we issued such assurances is now beyond dispute. In December 2017, these declassified documents available @NSArchive and elsewhere, demonstrate that we made such assurances publicly and privately at many levels and did so repeatedly:
George Washington, now in Cambridge, takes command of roughly 13,000 ill-equipped and largely untrained Continental Army troops.
Three miles east in Boston, meanwhile, the British have increased their troops to 11,500; they are highly trained.
In late June, prior to departing Philadelphia to begin leading a war against the world's most powerful military, Washington does two things. Both provide some insight to his mindset at the time:
He buys several books on military strategy.
And he orders that his will be written.
Before departing Philadelphia, he is also approached by several delegates who forewarn him about the patriot militia in Cambridge, which they describe as zealous but unruly, disorganized, and untrained.
Arriving in Cambridge on July 2, Washington finds them exactly as described.
On June 26, 1775, en route from Philadelphia to Cambridge to assume command of the newly formed Continental Army, George Washington stops in Kingsbridge in present-day Bronx, where he addresses the New York Provincial Congress.
Peter Van Brugh Livingston, president of the Congress, reads a statement approved by its nearly 60 delegates congratulating Washington:
"We rejoice in the appointment of a gentleman from whose abilities and virtue we are taught to expect both security and peace."
But there are concerns about the role of a military leader in a free nation and Washington's long-term intentions:
After the revolution, we hope you will "cheerfully resign the important deposit committed unto your hands and reassume the character of our worthiest citizen."
Prior to departing Philadelphia, Washington writes Martha to inform her that he has been selected to command the newly formed Continental Army.
He tells her he sought to avoid the appointment and again questions his abilities for this significant role.
"I shall feel no pain from the toil, or the danger of the campaign. My unhappiness will flow from the uneasiness I know you will feel at being left alone," he writes her on June 18, 1775.
Aware of the danger of his new role, Washington also tells her he is having a will drafted.
On June 23, Washington departs Philadelphia for Cambridge. About 20 miles into the 300-mile voyage, he is met by a courier dispatch, which delivers him details of Patriot casualties and the loss of Charlestown (now part of Boston) in the Battle of Bunker Hill six days earlier.
The Second Continental Congress appoints the Committee of Five (Adams, Franklin, Jefferson, Livingston, and Sherman) to draft the Declaration.
Jefferson agrees to author the first draft and sets about writing some of the most famed words in world history.
Jefferson considered the Declaration his greatest accomplishment. His epitaph references his role as its author but omits being the nation's third president and first secretary of state.
He and Adams both died on July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration's adoption.
"... on the faces of the Obelisk the following inscription, & not a word more...because by these as testimonials that I have lived, I wish most to be remembered."
Jefferson's written instructions about his epitaph:
The policy and legal issues associated with the @USTreasury are as simple as they are outrageous.
Seven facts:
1. Article II of our constitution clearly empowers @POTUS and his executive branch designees alone with managing the executive branch, which includes routine audits;
2. In the preliminary stages of an audit being conducted in accordance with POTUS' directive, $100B in annual payments with no associated SSN or other recipient identification, as exists with other Treasury outlays, were identified.
This should alarm all;
3. Of this $100B in your tax dollars, which cannot be attached to an identifiable legal recipient, roughly half is estimated to be outright fraud or waste that has been permitted and is ongoing.
That's $50B annually. In other words; more than the entire annual GDP of Bolivia;
Let me share some of the themes I mentioned to media around the world tonight regarding the #SOTU of the most failed POTUS in our lifetimes:
1. By my count, Biden went about an hour before even mentioning two of the most significant crises confronting the nation: The open
border, which is entirely Biden's innovation and creation and has invited a crisis in which 4.5M aliens from all over the world, including those on the terror watch list, with violent criminal histories, violent gang members, human and drug traffickers, and record levels of
lethal fentanyl have poured into our nation; and the vast national security, public health, economic, human rights and other threats from China's Communist Party (CCP) that have escalated on Biden's watch, including the CCP's recent surveillance balloon, which the CCP then lied