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  • What Trump’s vision of the new world order means for Europe

    What Trump’s vision of the new world order means for Europe


    Allan Little profile image

    Allan LittleSenior correspondent

    BBC A dual split image, the one at the top shows the back of Trump's head, and the image below is, from the left, Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz, France's President Emmanuel Macron and Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer BBC

    For 80 years, what bound the United States to Europe was a shared commitment to defence and a common set of values: a commitment to defend democracy, human rights and the rule of law.

    That era was inaugurated in March 1947 in an 18-minute speech by President Harry Truman, in which he pledged US support to defend Europe against further expansion by the Soviet Union.

    America led the creation of Nato, the World Bank, the IMF and the United Nations. And it bound itself into what became known as the “rules-based international order“, in which nation states committed to a series of mutual obligations and shared burdens, designed to defend the democratic world against hostile authoritarian powers.

    Now, the new US National Security Strategy (NSS), published in December, signals that, for the White House, that shared endeavour has ended; that much of what the world has taken for granted about America’s role is over.

    The review refers to the “so-called ‘rules-based international order’”, putting the latter phrase in inverted commas: a kind of delegitimisation by punctuation mark.

    AFP via Getty Images US Vice President JD Vance talks in front of the Nato logo 

AFP via Getty Images

    JD Vance said that the real threat to Europe did not come from Russia but from within

    Vice-President JD Vance warned America’s European allies that this was coming in a speech at the Munich Security Conference in February 2025.

    He told them bluntly that the real threat to Europe did not come from Russia but from within – from those censoring free speech, suppressing political opposition and therefore undermining European democracy. And he was damning about the “leftist liberal network”.

    The French newspaper Le Monde said the speech was a declaration of “ideological war” against Europe.

    Last month’s NSS codifies Vance’s remarks, and, in black and white, elevates them to the status of doctrine.

    “Certainly America is no longer the country that promoted the global values that have been in place since the end of the Second World War,” says Karin von Hippel, who previously held senior positions in the US State Department and is a former Director of the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), a Whitehall think tank.

    “It is shifting to a very different place.”

    So, if the world is indeed moving away from that order, what is it moving towards? And what does it mean for the rest of the world and in particular for Europe?

    ‘We have a different world today’

    “International institutions, notably the United Nations, have been marked by dramatically anti-American sentiment, and have not served our or any other particular purpose,” says Victoria Coates, a vice-president at The Heritage Foundation, a prominent right-wing think tank in Washington.

    In the eyes of Coates – who was previously the Deputy National Security Adviser to US President Donald Trump – change to the international order is inevitable in a changing world.

    “The other issue we face here is that when that so-called rules-based international order was established after the Second World War, 80 short years ago, China wasn’t a major concern.

    “We just have a different world today.”

    Getty Images United States representative signing the United Nations Charter
Getty Images

    President Truman watches on as a US representative signs the United Nations Charter in 1945

    This rules-based international order, built in the years after World War Two, was created by a generation that had come of age during an era of Great Power geopolitics, and had seen that system descend, twice, into catastrophic global conflict.

    That international order, flawed and incomplete though it undoubtedly was, was the legacy of that experience.

    But the NSS directly argues that American strategy went astray in the years since – and it blames what it calls “American foreign policy elites”.

    “They lashed American policy to a network of international institutions, some of which are driven by outright anti-Americanism and many by a transnationalism that explicitly seeks to dissolve individual state sovereignty,” it says.

    It suggests that in future, the US will seek to roll back the influence of supranational bodies.

    Anadolu via Getty Images (L - R) Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Finland's President Alexander Stubb, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, US President Donald Trump, France's President Emmanuel Macron, Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte
Anadolu via Getty Images

    The National Security Strategy says: ‘We stand for the sovereign rights of nations, against the sovereignty-sapping incursions of the most intrusive transnational organizations’

    “The world’s fundamental political unit is and will remain the nation-state… We stand for the sovereign rights of nations, against the sovereignty-sapping incursions of the most intrusive transnational organizations…”

    Elsewhere in the document, reflecting on the “balance of power”, it states: “The outsized influence of larger, richer, and stronger nations is a timeless truth of international relations.”

    The Kremlin responded to the review with praise, saying much of it aligned with Moscow’s own thinking.

    “I think Trump, Xi, Putin and their more authoritarian acolytes are seeking to return us to an era of Great Power politics,” says Field Marshal Lord Richards, who, as General Sir David Richards, was the head of the UK’s armed forces from 2010 till 2013.

    Yet Sir Lawrence Freedman, Emeritus Professor of War Studies at King’s College London, believes the new Security Strategy is not as radical a break with the past as it may appear.

    AFP via Getty Images Russia's President Vladimir Putin AFP via Getty Images

    The Kremlin said much of the review aligned with Moscow’s own thinking

    “We need to be careful about the rules-based international order, which is a term that came into general use in the last decade or so,” he argues.

    “Look back and you find plenty of violations of the rules, Vietnam for example. So there’s a sort of rosy glow about the past at times and everyone should be careful about nostalgia for what was a complex past.”

    Muscular reassertion of the Monroe doctrine

    Washington’s military operation in the Venezuelan capital Caracas that led to the capture of the country’s leader Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, is an early example of this more muscular assertion of sovereign unilateralism.

    Some international law experts have questioned the legality of the Trump administration’s actions, and argued the US may have violated international statutes governing the use of force.

    The US maintains its actions were legally justified.

    “Under American law it certainly was [legal]” Robert Wilkie, who served as an Undersecretary of Defense in the first Trump administration, has previously told the BBC.

    “Maduro – most of our European partners have not recognised his regime so he is an illegitimate figure. Because of that he is stripped of the normal protections that heads of state would have […]particularly when were are looking at constitutional provisions that exist in the United States, that would supersede anything the UN says.”

    AFP via Getty Images Fire at Fuerte Tiuna, Venezuela's largest military complex, is seen from a distance after a series of explosions in the Venezuelan capital Caracas AFP via Getty Images

    The military operation in the Venezuelan capital Caracas led to the capture of Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores

    The NSS claims, for the United States, the right to be the pre-eminent power in the Western Hemisphere, and to bend its Latin American and Caribbean neighbours into alignment with Washington’s interests.

    This is a muscular reassertion of the 1823 Monroe Doctrine and its promise of US supremacy in the Western hemisphere.

    Colombia, Panama and Cuba are all also in the President’s sights.

    “This starts primarily with the Panama Canal,” says Victoria Coates. “The degree to which control of the canal is necessary to the United States cannot be overstated.”

    China is now Latin America’s biggest trading partner and a major infrastructure investor there. The NSS aims to roll back Chinese influence in Washington’s backyard.

    When the canal was handed over to Panama, in 1999, by President George HW Bush, says Coates, “we were in the assumption that China was a reasonable actor… That turned out not to be true…

    “So making sure that the United States retains a prime position over the canal is critical, and I think Panama is for the first time getting that message from the United States.”

    A map showing the Panama canal, as well as Colombia, Venezuela and Cuba

    But Sir Lawrence Freedman is among those who argue that the US’s ability to control its neighbours is not unlimited.

    “The Strategy Review might say this is our hemisphere and we can do what we want, but there are still constraints. They may have extricated Maduro and his wife, but they’re still dealing with the old regime.

    “They’re not running the country, despite what Trump says.”

    Under the new strategy, the United States will no longer pressure authoritarian regimes to improve their human rights records.

    In a phrase taken from the US Declaration of Independence of 1776, the review declares, “All nations are entitled by ‘the laws of nature and nature’s God’ to a ‘separate and equal station’ with respect to one another.”

    Getty Images Nicolas Maduro (R) walks with Chinese President Xi Jinping (L) in Beijing, China
Getty Images

    Xi Jinping and Nicolas Maduro pictured in 2015 in Beijing, China

    In the Middle East, for example, the US says it will abandon the “misguided experiment with hectoring these nations – especially the Gulf monarchies – into abandoning their traditions and historic forms of government”.

    “The key to successful relations with the Middle East,” it adds, “is accepting the region, its leaders, and its nations as they are while working together on areas of common interest.”

    But it seems the same level of respect for traditions and historic forms of government is not extended to the democratic and allied nations of Europe.

    Whilst it refers to an American sentimental attachment to the European continent – and to Britain and Ireland – what’s striking about this paper is that it seeks to redefine what is worth defending in the Western world.

    This review is civilisational in its reach, and argues for a civilisation that is no longer built on the shared values of the Truman Doctrine, but instead on the primacy of the sovereign nation-state.

    Where does this leave Europe?

    The review is damning about Europe’s “current trajectory” and raises questions about whether some European nations can be regarded as dependable allies in the future.

    It talks about “economic decline” but adds that this is “eclipsed by the real and more stark prospect of civilizational erasure”.

    Elsewhere in the document, it states: “It is more than plausible that within a few decades at the latest, certain Nato members will become majority non-European,” which raises doubts about their viability as long-term security partners, the strategy suggests.

    “It’s a very nativist document,” argues Karin von Hippel. “It’s very ideological. The underlying message is that the Christian white male is no longer running many of the countries [in the West] and we’re seeing a threat to the dominance that the Christian white male has had in the United States and Europe.

    “They’re very careful not to say any of that explicitly but I think that’s what’s implied.”

    Getty Images US President Donald Trump addresses a crowd of servicemen and women 
Getty Images

    The new US National Security Strategy, which was published in December, is damning about Europe’s ‘current trajectory’

    But Victoria Coates argues that, in her view, the “larger struggle we find ourselves in” is indeed civilisational.

    “Sovereignty is also a critical issue,” she says. “Looking at the European Union project, especially after Brexit, I think a lot of countries are wondering if subverting the national interest to Brussels is a winning strategy.

    “I do think that is one of the institutions that the NSS does call into question.”

    This chimes with the interests of the American tech giants that oppose EU efforts to regulate their activities on the European continent.

    Last month Elon Musk posted on X that the European Union should be abolished and sovereignty returned to the individual nation states.

    ‘Cultivating resistance to Europe’s trajectory’

    The review is clear about how Europe can regain its “self-confidence”.

    It says: “The growing influence of patriotic European parties indeed gives cause for great optimism. Our goal should be to help Europe correct its current trajectory. We will need a strong Europe to help us successfully compete.”

    And one of its policies for doing this is by “cultivating resistance to Europe’s current trajectory within European nations”.

    What is meant precisely by “cultivating resistance” raises many questions.

    In Europe, some have already concluded that the USA may no longer be a reliable ally, at a time when Russia poses a growing threat. After Vice-President Vance’s speech in Munich, Germany’s Chancellor, Friedrich Merz, said Europe would need to “achieve independence” from America with a reshaped Nato.

    But this takes time.

    “It’s not achievable in the short term,” says Sir Lawrence. “The Europeans have become very dependent upon the United States, and this was a matter of choice: it was cheaper and simpler.

    “Though in practice it would be desirable to be able to act without the Americans… in practice it’s going to take years to disentangle ourselves. And it’ll be extremely expensive.

    “So Europe has a difficulty: it can’t rely on the Americans, but it can’t operate easily without them.”

    AFP via Getty Images Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz (L) speaks with US President Donald Trump 
AFP via Getty Images

    Friedrich Merz has said Europe would need to “achieve independence”

    As to the pressing question of what it means for Europe – and the EU – in the near future, Lord Richards issues a stark warning: “[It] risks falling between the cracks.”

    “The EU cannot be a Great Power, nor can any of its constituent nations,” he argues. “[So] the UK/EU must decide under whose sphere of influence they should shelter?

    “The answer is they are likely to remain in the USA’s – and within a reshaped Nato.”

    ‘A popular revolt against the establishment’

    But Lord Richards also believes that increased spending commitment is long overdue.

    “European nations are going to have to spend much more on their own defence. This has long been coming but in the UK it is not yet translating into any fresh money. Indeed this year the armed forces are being required to save money rather than spend more.”

    The US has been pushing Europe to increase defence spending for years, notes Sir Lawrence.

    “The message that Europe needs to do more for its own defence has been around a long time. It was pushed by both Obama and Biden.”

    Last year Trump secured from the European allies a commitment to increase defence spending to 5% of GDP – and in doing so may have done Europe a security favour, by pushing it, in the long term, towards greater operational independence from Washington.

    “Spending has gone up quite significantly,” says Sir Lawrence. “The Germans have been making quite impressive strides. So there is movement, not as fast as many would wish, but it’s happening.”

    The review is clear about how America thinks it can “help” Europe. “We want to work with aligned countries that want to restore their former greatness,” it says.

    Getty Images President Donald Trump points as he takes a question from a reporter Getty Images

    Victoria Coates says: “International institutions, notably the United Nations, have been marked by dramatically anti-American sentiment…”

    Ultimately, what the report reveals is not so much an ideological divide that separates the US and Europe, but one that slices through both continents.

    Both sides of the Atlantic have certain concerns in common, argues Victor Mallet, a Paris-based journalist and author of a forthcoming book, Far Right France: Le Pen, Bardella and the Future of Europe.

    “Concerns about immigration, concerns about the economy… and there’s an extraordinary cultural gulf between supporters of people like Donald Trump, the National Rally in France, the AfD in Germany, and the intellectual, metropolitan, educated liberal elite.

    “It’s definitely a popular revolt against the establishment.”

    He believes that one of the problems is inequality. “America has, on average, the richest group of consumers the world has ever seen and yet many ordinary Americans find it hard to make ends meet and the same applies in Western Europe.”

    In the NSS, the US commits to scrapping certain practices, such as Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, that are derided by many in Trump’s base.

    In this document, the culture wars that shape America’s bitter public discourse now to a degree also shape its in foreign policy, and – by extension, affect the security of the Western world.

    Russia is not mentioned as a hostile power, despite its invasion of Ukraine, a Western ally.

    For in the culture wars, some in Trump’s Maga base see in Vladimir Putin not a foe but a natural ally in the defence of white, Christian nationalist civilisation: a man who proudly defends his country, its traditions and identity – the very attributes, after all, that they value and admire in Donald Trump.

    Top picture credit: AFP / Getty Images

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  • Oreshnik ballistic missile fired in fresh strikes on Ukraine

    Oreshnik ballistic missile fired in fresh strikes on Ukraine


    Reuters A smouldering residential building with a few firefighters standing out the front. There is lots of rubble around the building and covering a few cars that are parked out the front, and a bit of smoke coming from inside the building.Reuters

    Four people were killed in Kyiv and 25 others injured, authorities said

    Russia has used the Oreshnik ballistic missile as part of a massive overnight strike on Ukraine.

    Four people were killed and 25 others injured in Kyiv on Thursday night, where loud booms could be heard for several hours, setting the sky alight with explosions.

    It is only the second time that Moscow has used the Oreshnik, which was first deployed to hit the central city of Dnipro in November 2024.

    Russia’s defence ministry said the strike was a response to a Ukrainian drone attack targeting Vladimir Putin’s residence in late December, which Kyiv denies carrying out.

    While the ministry did not specify what had been the Oreshnik’s target, shortly before midnight (22:00 GMT) videos began circulating on social media showing numerous explosions on the outskirts of the western city of Lviv.

    President Volodymyr Zelensky and Ukrainian authorities confirmed that a ballistic missile had struck infrastructure in Lviv, about 60km (40 miles) from the Polish border.

    The Oreshnik is an intermediate-range, hypersonic ballistic missile, meaning it can potentially reach up to 5,500km (3,417 miles). It is thought to have a warhead that deliberately fragments during its final descent into several, independently targeted inert projectiles, causing distinctive repeated explosions moments apart.

    “Such a strike close to EU and Nato border is a grave threat to the security on the European continent and a test for the transatlantic community,” Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha said.

    The strike was launched “in response to [Putin’s] own hallucinations,” he added, referring to the alleged drone attack on the president’s residence in December.

    The EU had immediately cast serious doubt on whether the drone strike ever happened, and last week Donald Trump said he did not think any such attack had taken place.

    On Friday EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said Russia’s Oreshnik strike was meant as a warning to Europe and the US.

    “Putin doesn’t want peace, Russia’s reply to diplomacy is more missiles and destruction. This deadly pattern of recurring major Russian strikes will repeat itself until we help Ukraine break it,” she wrote on X.

    Zelensky said in addition to the Oreshnik, 13 ballistic missiles targeted energy facilities and civilian infrastructure overnight, along with 22 cruise missiles and 242 drones.

    One damaged a building at the Qatari embassy, he added.

    He accused the attacks of aiming “against the normal life of ordinary people” during a cold spell and added everything possible was being done to restore heating and electricity.

    As Lviv and other western regions were targeted on Thursday night, more than a dozen missiles and hundreds of drones were deployed during the attack on Kyiv.

    A paramedic was among those killed while arriving at a damaged apartment in Kyiv. The capital’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, and Zelensky said it had been a “double-tap” hit – in which the first strike is followed by a second, killing rescuers who have arrived to help the injured.

    Two apartment buildings along the east bank of the Dnipro River and a high-rise building in the city’s central district were also targeted.

    The power supply was disrupted in several of the city’s neighbourhoods in the middle of a particularly harsh winter and as Kyiv braces for -15C (5F) temperatures this weekend.

    On Friday Klitschko urged Kyiv residents to leave temporarily if they were able to, and find warmth.

    “Half of Kyiv’s apartment buildings – nearly 6,000 – are currently without heat due to damage to the capital’s critical infrastructure caused by a massive enemy attack,” he wrote on social media.

    “I also appeal to residents of the capital who have the opportunity to temporarily leave the city for places with alternative sources of power and heat to do so.”

    The targeting of power plants has become a constant feature of this war, with Ukraine increasingly responding in kind to Russia’s sustained attacks on energy infrastructure that regularly leave millions without access to electricity or heating.

    On Thursday night, as Moscow’s attack on Ukraine was ongoing, half a million people in the Russian region of Belgorod were left without power following Ukrainian shelling of infrastructure, the local governor said.

    Authorities also said that a Ukrainian strike on a Russian power plant in the city of Oryol, further north, affected the water and heating systems.

    Diagram showing the operation of Russia's Oreshnik missile system: first it uses rocket engines to launch the missile into the upper atmosphere before discarding the first stage, a MIRV bus carrying six warheads is released from the second stage and travels to the target area. It then uses thrusters to position and direct each warhead to separate targets before releasing them and dropping to Earth itself. Source: Reuters



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  • Elon Musk’s Grok AI image editing limited to paid users after deepfakes

    Elon Musk’s Grok AI image editing limited to paid users after deepfakes


    Elon Musk’s platform X has limited image editing with its AI tool Grok to paying users, after it came under fire for allowing people to make sexualised deepfakes.

    There has been a significant backlash after the chatbot honoured requests from users to digitally alter images of other people by undressing them without their consent.

    But Grok is now telling people asking it to make such material that only paid subscribers would be able to do so – meaning their name and payment information must be on file.

    The BBC has approached X for comment.

    Those who do not subscribe can still use Grok to edit images on its separate app and website.

    “Musk has thrown his toys out of the pram in protest at being held to account for the tsunami of abuse,” said Professor Clare McGlynn, an expert in the legal regulation of pornography, sexual violence and online abuse.

    “Instead of taking the responsible steps to ensure Grok could not be used for abusive purposes, it has withdrawn access for the vast majority of users.”

    And Hannah Swirsky, head of policy at the Internet Watch Foundation, said it “does not undo the harm which has been done”.

    “We do not believe it is good enough to simply limit access to a tool which should never have had the capacity to create the kind of imagery we have seen in recent days,” she said.,

    The charity previously said its analysts had discovered “criminal imagery” of girls aged between 11 and 13 which “appeared to have been created” using Grok.

    “Sitting and waiting for unsafe products to be abused before taking action is unacceptable,” Swirsky said.

    It comes after the government urged regulator Ofcom to use all its powers – up to and including an effective ban – against X over concerns about unlawful AI images created on the site.

    Addressing concerns that sexualised images of adults and children had been generated by Grok, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said it was “disgraceful” and “disgusting”.

    He said Ofcom had the government’s “full support” to act on the content.

    “It’s unlawful. We’re not going to tolerate it. I’ve asked for all options to be on the table,” he said in an interview with Greatest Hits Radio.

    Government sources told BBC News: “We would expect Ofcom to use all powers at its disposal in regard to Grok and X.”

    Ofcom’s powers under the Online Safety Act include being able to seek a court order to prevent third parties from helping the Elon Musk-owned platform raise money or be accessed in the UK.

    The BBC has approached the regulator for comment.

    Grok is a free tool which users can tag directly in posts or replies under other users’ posts to ask it for a particular response.

    But the feature has also allowed people to request it to edit images – and ask it to digitally strip people of most of their clothing.

    Grok has fulfilled many user requests asking it to edit images of women to show them in bikinis or little clothing – something those subject to such requests have told the BBC left them feeling “humiliated” and “dehumanised“.

    However as of Friday morning, Grok has told users asking it to alter images uploaded to X that “image generation and editing are currently limited to paying subscribers”.

    It adds users “can subscribe to unlock these features”.

    Some posts on the platform seen by BBC News suggest only those with a blue tick “verified” mark – exclusive to X’s paid subscriber tier – were able to successfully request image edits to Grok.

    Dr Daisy Dixon, a female X user who said she had seen an increase in people using Grok to undress her, welcomed the change but said it felt “like a sticking plaster”.

    “Grok needs to be totally redesigned and have built-in ethical guardrails to prevent this from ever happening again,” she told the BBC.

    “Elon Musk also needs to acknowledge this for what it is – yet another instance of gender-based violation.”

    Prof McGlynn said X’s move echoed its approach to pornographic Taylor Swift deepfakes on the platform last year – where it blocked searches for sexualised material generated of the popstar using a Grok AI video feature.

    “He is doing this to stoke free speech arguments,” she added.

    “He will claim regulation is stifling people’s use of this technology. But, all the regulation requires is that he takes necessary precautions to reduce harm.”



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