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    24 commenti

    1. Wonderful-Basis-1370 on

      Better headline would be: Trump wants to put Israel first, make Russia great again, and weaken the US and Europe.

    2. Former_Exchange_2585 on

      Of course…the US knows that they will have hard times in the future with China, so they dont need a EU that is economically equal and potentially becomes even stronger than them. They prefer a fragmented Europe, because they can still milk it and have relation with all parallel, but it isnt a potential threat to them then.

    3. Well, you do not need to be a detective but she is absolutely correct

    4. augenwiehimmel on

      Guess we shouldn’t have pointed out that Conald is an offical moron.

      He’s vindictive after all.

    5. Little-Low-5358 on

      Obviously.

      The thing is: are you gonna let it happen?

    6. KillerZaWarudo on

      Has the piss party said anything about trump negotiating with putin or they still too busy sucking him off

    7. AmigoDeer on

      People of europe we have to gather and unite against the americans.

    8. Wingedball on

      Really insightful take by a candidate that has 2.1% support. Why is this even newsworthy?

    9. dat_9600gt_user on

      President Donald Trump’s US administration is working to weaken and divide Europe, Polish presidential candidate Magdalena Biejat has claimed, arguing that Europe needs to assert its strength.Magdalena Biejat Polskie Radio

      Speaking at a campaign event in Elbląg, northern Poland, on Sunday, Biejat criticized US policy under Trump and accused Washington of sidelining Europe in peace negotiations over Ukraine and seeking to diminish European influence.

      # Trump ‘playing to weaken Europe’

      “The United States, under Donald Trump’s leadership, is playing to weaken Europe, to push it out of peace talks, to divide it,” said Biejat, who represents Poland’s New Left group and serves as a deputy lower-house Speaker.

      Referring to the conclusion of the Munich Security Conference, a major annual gathering focused on global security policy, she added: “Meanwhile, Europe has the chance to be strong. Its future depends on us.”

      She warned that Europe must resist what she called an “absurd situation” in which the United States decides on how to exploit Ukraine’s rare earth metals while expecting European Union troops to ensure the security of such operations.

      Biejat also voiced concern over the prospect of US-Russia [talks](https://www.polskieradio.pl/395/9766/artykul/3485312,usrussia-talks-on-ukraine-war-in-saudi-arabia-on-tuesday-report) on peace in Ukraine taking place without European involvement.

      “Neither Poland nor Europe should allow decisions about the war in Ukraine to be made solely between Trump and [Russian President Vladimir] Putin,” she said, comparing the situation to the 1945 Y[alta Conference](https://www.polskieradio.pl/395/7789/artykul/3164266,tribute-to-polish-soldiers-78-years-since-end-of-wwii), where Allied leaders decided postwar Europe’s fate, largely without the participation of Central and Eastern European countries most affected by the war and its aftermath.

      She echoed Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s calls for Europe to develop its own peace plan for Ukraine, stating: “We must not accept a scenario where Europe has no say in this matter.”

      # ‘We can work together to achieve peace’

      Biejat also advocated for Ukraine’s membership in both the European Union and NATO, arguing that peace should not come at the cost of allowing Russia to regroup for further aggression.

      “We can work together to achieve peace, but it must be a stable and lasting peace, not one that simply allows Putin to recover and attack again,” she said.

      She suggested that Poland and other Baltic Sea nations could take the lead in shaping a new European approach toward both Russia and the United States.

      These countries, she argued, should also drive integrated defense investments and joint arms purchases to strengthen Europe’s security and independence.

    10. isogaymer on

      I am glad that someone is calling it out precisely as it is. I want all of our politicians (who are free to do so because they aren’t required to play nice/neutral with the USA for diplomatic reasons) to do the same. Let our people know that the USA is a threat, is threatening us, is taking real, tangible action to damage us. Stop letting ambiguousness deaden our survival instincts.

    11. hanzoplsswitch on

      This is why we need to ban American social media OR they need to open up their algorithms.

    12. Locolama on

      Europe was already weakened before Trump got into office, and it’s thanks to policies that were pushed by politicians like Biejat. She’s not part of the solution, she’s part of the problem.

    13. mutedexpectations on

      Europe doesn’t need any help to become irrelevant. They are slowly being pushed off the end of the negotiating table.

    14. PmMeYourBeavertails on

      Europe had 2 years to get its shit together and show they are strong, but all they did was talk.

      18% of gas imports are still from Russia, Russians aren’t banned from entering the EU and no Russian assets have been seized yet. Europe is still refusing to acknowledge they are at war with Russia and her allies. Ukraine still hasn’t been given free reign to use European weapons to target Russia proper.

      https://foreignpolicy.com/2025/01/03/europe-russia-ukraine-war-energy-imports-oil-gas-pipeline/

    15. -CynicalPole- on

      Let’s be honest – Poland Is barely better with growing support for Mentzen and Konfederacja, while lewica and Mrs. Biejat has mere 3% support in the polls showing Poland is just as conservative shithole as US is trending under the orange man

    16. akiakiak on

      I’m still not getting what their expectation is, like, after running everything (more of their own country than Europe) into the ground, what’ll happen.

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