Ex-president’s support for the Russian strongman has experts fretting over American interests and security sources overseas

Donald Trump’s continuing lavish praise and support for Russian president Vladimir Putin are fueling alarm among former intelligence officials and other experts who fear another Trump presidency would benefit Moscow and harm American democracy and interests overseas.

Trump praised Putin as a “genius” and “pretty savvy” when Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022, and has boasted he would end the war in a “day”, sparking critics’ fears that if he’s elected again Trump would help Russia achieve a favorable peace deal by cutting off aid to Kyiv. Trump also recently greenlit Russia to “do whatever the hell they want” to Nato members who don’t pay enough to the alliance.

“Trump views Putin as a strongman,” said Fiona Hill, a senior fellow at Brookings Institution and a national security official in the first two years of Trump’s administration. “In a way they’re working in parallel because they’re both trying to weaken the US, but for very different reasons.”

More recently, instead of criticizing Putin for the death of Alexei Navalny, Russia’s leading opposition figure, who the Kremlin once tried to kill with poison, and who died suddenly last month in an Arctic penal colony, Trump weirdly equated the four criminal prosecutions he faces with Navalny’s fate as political prisoners.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Considering I gave specific examples, it sounds like you need a better understanding.

    Also, “native culture” is not a thing. There was no unified culture.

    • frezik@midwest.social
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      8 months ago

      I think people are pushing back against that specific passage because it goes a step too far. Both Europeans and the various native tribes of the Americas knew how responsible hunting works. We have bag limits today for that reason, and Europeans of the old country were familiar with the practice.

      US government policies on the buffalo were a deliberate genocide, and I don’t think you’ll disagree with that. The phrase “no reason to believe they wouldn’t have shot every buffalo in sight” implies the tribes would have done the same, and that’s just not true.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Would all the tribes have done it? No. That’s the issue here. There was no unified agreement amongst the various indigenous peoples of North America. There were thousands of languages, religions and cultures.

        So would the Blackfeet, who basically believed that all bison must die for the good of their people? Probably they would have.

        Would the Crow, who hunted more sustainably? Probably not.

        So I admit I was being far too general when I said ‘they.’ I should have specified that certain groups would have been fine with wiping out buffalo and others were more sustainable hunters.

        Oddly enough, De Soto, who spent a lot of time wandering around what is now the Southeastern U.S., didn’t report buffalo there. So it’s also unclear how widely-ranged they were in the first place. There’s an author named Charles C. Mann who wrote a well-regarded book about pre-Columbian contact called “1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus” and he posits that the vast buffalo herds later reported in the Great Plains were actually the result of the mass die-off of indigenous peoples through European diseases returning the plains to grassland when they had previously been farmed. So it could be that there were also far less buffalo in the Americas before European contact (although most certainly more than today).

        And no, I would not deny the reason why the mass kill-off later happened. It was one of the many genocides the United States perpetrated against the indigenous peoples of the Americas.