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February 15th, 2026.
The Trump administration's White Nationalist Project was on full display this weekend at
the 62nd Munich Security Conference that took place from February 13th to 15th, 2026.
The Munich Security Conference is the leading international forum for discussions of security
policy.
It was begun in 1963 at the height of the Cold War to be an independent venue for experts
and policy makers to discuss the most pressing security issues around the globe.
While the USSR absorbed neighboring countries' satellites, the US and its allies and partners
embraced a theory that international relations could achieve permanent peace so long as they
emphasized representative democracy, economic interdependence, and international organizations.
The equality, shared norms, and costs for wars that this system built, the theory went,
along with new mechanisms for negotiation, would prevent global military conflict like
those the world had suffered twice in the early 20th century.
Since World War II, those values have reinforced civil rights and created opportunities for
women and people of color, created dramatically higher standards of living around the globe,
and prevented global wars.
But the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 changed global calculations.
Rather than defending the tenets of democracy, American leaders focused on spreading capitalism
into the newly accessible states, arguing that democracy and capitalism went hand-in-hand.
At home, the end of the Cold War meant that the extremist Republicans, who hoped to destroy
business regulations and slash taxes, as well as halt infrastructure projects and end civil
rights protections, no longer had to work with Democrats to stand against the USSR.
They focused on getting rid of those they called the American Left, a term that for them
included not just Democrats, but also independence and traditional Republicans in the mold of President
George H.W. Bush, who believed the government had a role to play in regulating business,
providing a basic social safety net, promoting infrastructure, and protecting civil rights.
Most Republicans attacked their opponents as socialists, even as their tax cuts and deregulation
were moving money dramatically upward.
At least $50 trillion moved upward from the bottom 90% to the top 1% between 1975 and 2020.
Republican leaders and media figures fed their audiences the story that the middle class
was imploding not because of Republican policies, but because undeserving black people, people
of color, and feminist women demanded government handouts.
This narrative fueled Trump's political rise.
He promised to fix the economic dispossession of those the modern economy left behind, by
draining the swamp, restoring white men to control, and rebuilding the American middle class.
Once in office, though, Trump continued Republican policies of tax cuts and deregulation, maintaining
his hold over his supporters by increasing attacks on racial and gender minorities and on women.
As he distanced himself from democratic principles, he cozyed up to Arab monarchs and Russia's
President Vladimir Putin.
Like right-wing media leaders, he championed Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who had
destroyed democracy and Hungary in favor of establishing autocracy.
At the Munich Security Conference last year, just after Trump had taken office for the
second time, Vice President JD Vance announced the US was switching sides in global affairs.
Henceforth, it would work to destroy the values of representative democracy and the global
systems of trade and security that the US and partners constructed after World War II.
In their place, officials in the Trump administration and their media allies have embraced the
great replacement theory that says black and brown migration to Europe and the US is destroying
Western civilization.
Such migration must be stopped, they argue, and brown and black people purged from the
US in Europe.
The end of equal rights for migrants will enable white Christian men to dominate society
and pass laws that reinforce traditional religious and patriarchal hierarchies.
A report, the organizers of the Munich Security Conference released before this year's event,
named the Elephant in the Room, the changing role of the United States in the international
system.
The report looked back to the statement of US Secretary of State Dean Atchison who oversaw
the development of the post-World War II global order that he was present at the creation.
Now the report said, we may be present at its destruction.
The world has entered a period of wrecking ball politics, sweeping destruction rather than
careful reforms and policy corrections is the order of the day.
The most prominent of those who promise to free their countries from the existing orders
constraints and rebuild stronger, more prosperous nations is the current US administration.
As a result, more than 80 years after construction began, the US-led post-1945 international order
is now under destruction.
Trump is leading that destruction, the report says, but it's not clear that he is clearing
the ground for new policies that will secure American safety, prosperity, or freedom.
It warns that Trump is building a world based on private transactions that privilege a global
elite and replace international cooperation with a few powerful countries.
Ironically, it says, this would be a world that privileges the rich and powerful, not
those who have placed their hopes in wrecking ball politics.
When he opened this year's conference, German Chancellor Friedrich Mayer's warned the
Trump administration that the leadership claim of the US is being challenged, perhaps
already lost, and that the world of great power rivalry the US is trying to set up will
leave the US alone and weakened.
We Germans know a world in which might makes right would be a dark place, he said.
Our country has gone down this path in the 20th century until the bitter and dreadful
end.
The culture war of the mega-movement is not ours, Merz said.
Freedom of speech ends here with us when that speech is turned against human dignity and
the Constitution.
And we don't believe in tariffs and protectionism, but in free trade.
We stand by climate agreements and the World Health Organization.
In a speech to the conference yesterday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio was less confrontational
than Vance was last year, but the message was the same.
He attacked all three of the pillars on which the US has previously stood in foreign affairs.
Global trade has ruined the US economy, he said, while international institutions have
undermined sovereignty, and a climate cult has imposed energy policies that are impoverishing
our people.
He focused though on mass migration, which he claimed threatens the cohesion of our societies,
the continuity of our culture and the future of our people.
He called for Europe to join with the US in rejecting the tenets of the post-World War
2 vision, claiming that we are part of one civilization, Western civilization.
We are bound to one another by the deepest bonds that nations could share, forged by centuries
of shared history, Christian faith, culture, heritage, language, ancestry, and the sacrifices
our forefathers made together for the common civilization to which we have fallen air.
His description of that shared heritage reflected the Trump administration's fantasy past.
It was all white and Christian, quite weirdly erasing the indigenous Americans who were central
to the development of a peculiarly American identity in the eastern colonies of North America,
and the reality that the vast majority of the American West was indigenous, Spanish,
and Mexican for hundreds of years before it became part of the United States in 1848.
Rumios version of the US did not include black Americans at all, even though they were
among the first inhabitants of the colonies that became the US, and even though he called
out the Rolling Stones, who built their body of work on that of black American blues musicians
like muddy waters and howl and wolf, as part of Western civilization.
Rubio even ignored his own family's arrival in the US from Cuba in 1956, rooting his own
heritage, not in the modern migration from Latin America to the US, that the administration
is criminalizing, but in 18th century Spain, entirely ignoring the threat of autocratic
Russia against Europe, Rubio pushed Europe to abandon the values of democracy in favor
of imperialism.
He said the US had no interest in being polite and orderly caretakers of the West's
managed decline, and urged Europe to work with the US for a return to Western dominance.
From Munich, Rubio will travel to Hungary to visit with Orban, who is facing an election
on April 12th, following a stop in Slovakia, whose leader is also a Trump ally.
Rubio's version of history echoes that of the Nazis during World War II, and ignores
the strength of the real multicultural history of the United States.
European leaders wanted no part of it.
European Union foreign policy chief Kaya Kolas rejected the ideology behind Rubio's
speech.
Contrary to what some may say, woke, decadent Europe is not facing civilizational erasure,
she said.
She noted that other nations want to join the EU, and those that are already members want
the EU to take a stronger role in the world, to defend our values, to take care of our
people, to push humanity forwards.
Kolas disputed the argument that the post-war order is economically backward compared to
autocracy, noting that since the fall of the Soviet Union, nations that have joined the
EU have grown economically more than twice as fast as Russia.
She reiterated the value of international trade and security partnerships, and she reminded
the audience that the vast majority of countries also want the same thing, stability, growth
and prosperity for their people.
The best way to get there is to go together.
As Merza Dunn, Kolas called for Europeans to assert their own agency to protect not only
our excellent living standards, health and happiness, but the lessons we have learned
from our own history.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in Munich that Trump has betrayed the west,
he's betrayed human values, he's betrayed the NATO charter, the Atlantic charter, the universal
declaration of human rights, and warned he is modeling himself after Putin.
The Trump administration's attempt to replace the post-war international order with a great
power system driven by autocracy has opened the door for Democrats to suggest a different
kind of U.S. foreign policy, a number of elected Democrats traveled to Munich where they
tried to counter administration officials' message.
California Governor Gavin Newsom touted his state's climate policies and signed a memorandum
of understanding with Deputy Governor Oleksandr Kulepin of Levyv Ukraine to strengthen trade
and commercial ties with Levyv Oblast, California's sister state.
Representative Jason Crow, a Democrat of Colorado, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Democrat
of New York, cut more closely to the heart of the crisis that led to Trump's rise
by calling for a U.S. foreign policy rooted in the working class.
We can't fall into right-wing populism's lie that the most vulnerable in society are
to blame for wealth inequality in our countries, Ocasio-Cortez later summarized her argument.
We need to build movements that tell the truth.
The story of wealth inequality is not a cultural one, but a class one.
At Munich, she said, we want to make sure that we dive deeply into shared innovation,
investment, strategic priorities, and trade policies that ensure the benefits of that
trade actually benefit working class people and that we restrain ourselves from the military
interventions of our past.
Our foreign policy is being turned into an extortion ring for big oil, for the Trump family,
for elites, Crow said.
We're bullying our partners and allies.
We want strength and peace, but we don't want to be extorting and bullying our friends.
We want to be a force for good.
We need a national security and foreign policy that looks like America and has the experience
of the American people, with partnerships that are rooted in fairness and that deliver
for working class folks everywhere.



