Opinion
Thomas L.
Friedman
Trump
Isn’t Interested in Fighting a New Cold War. He Wants a New Civilizational War.
Dec. 11,
2025
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/11/opinion/trump-europe-security-strategy.html
Every few
years I am reminded of one of my cardinal rules of journalism: Whenever you see
elephants flying, don’t laugh, take notes. Because if you see elephants flying,
something very different is going on that you don’t understand but you and your
readers need to.
I bring
that up today in response to the Trump administration’s 33-page National
Security Strategy, released last week. It has been widely noted that at a time
when our geopolitical rivalry with Russia and China is more heated than at any
other time since the Cold War — and Moscow and Beijing are more and more
closely aligned against America — the Trump 2025 national security doctrine
barely mentions these two geopolitical challengers.
While the
report surveys U.S. interests across the globe, what intrigues me most about it
is how it talks about our European allies and the European Union. It cites
activities by our sister European democracies that “undermine political liberty
and sovereignty, migration policies that are transforming the continent and
creating strife, censorship of free speech and suppression of political
opposition, cratering birthrates, and loss of national identities and
self-confidence.”
“Should
present trends continue,” it goes on, “the continent will be unrecognizable in
20 years or less.”
Indeed,
the strategy paper warns, unless our European allies elect more “patriotic”
nationalist parties, committed to stemming immigration, Europe will face
“civilizational erasure.” Unstated but implied is that we will judge you not by
the quality of your democracy but by the stringency by which you stem the
migration flow from Muslim countries to Europe’s south.
That is a
flying elephant no one should ignore. It is language unlike any previous U.S.
national security survey, and to my mind it reveals a deep truth about this
second Trump administration: how much it came to Washington to fight America’s
third civil war, not to fight the West’s new cold war.
Yes, in
my view, we are in a new civil war over a place called home.
First, I
need to make a quick detour to “home.” These days there is a tendency to reduce
every crisis to the dry metrics of economics, to the chessboard machinations of
political or military campaigns, or to ideological manifestoes. All, of course,
have their relevance, but the longer I have worked as a journalist, the more I
have found that the better starting place for unlocking a story is with the
disciplines of psychology and anthropology. They are often much better at
revealing the primal energies, anxieties and aspirations that animate our
national politics — and global geopolitics — because they uncover and
illuminate not just what people say they want, but also what they fear and what
they privately pray for, and why.
I was not
here for the Civil War of the 1860s, and I was still a boy during our second
great civil struggle, the 1960s civil rights movement and the assassination of
Martin Luther King Jr. But I am definitely on duty for America’s third civil
war. This one, like the first two, is over the questions “Whose country is this
anyway?” and “Who gets to feel at home in our national house?” This civil war
has been less violent than the first two — but it is early.
Humans
have an enduring, structural need for home, not only as a physical shelter, but
as a psychological anchor and moral compass, too. That is why Dorothy in “The
Wizard of Oz” (my favorite movie) got it exactly right: “There’s no place like
home.” And when people lose that sense of home — whether by war, rapid economic
change, cultural change, demographic change, climate change or technological
change — they tend to lose their center of gravity. They may feel as though
they are being hurtled around in a tornado, grabbing desperately for anything
stable enough to hold onto — and that can include any leader who seems strong
enough to reattach them to that place called home, however fraudulent that
leader is or unrealistic the prospect.
With that
as background, I cannot remember another time in the last 40 years when I have
traveled around America, and the world, and found more people asking the same
question: “Whose country is this anyway?” Or as Itamar Ben-Gvir, the far-right
nationalist Israeli minister, put it, in Hebrew, in his political banner ads
during Israel’s 2022 election: “Who is the landlord here?”
And that
is not an accident. Today, more people are living outside their country of
birth than at any point in recorded history. There are approximately 304
million global migrants — some seeking work, some seeking education, some
seeking safety from internal conflicts, some fleeing droughts and floods and
deforestation. In our own hemisphere, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection
office reports that migrant encounters at our southern border hit historical
highs in 2023, while estimates from the Pew Research Center suggest that the
total unauthorized population in America grew to 14 million in the same year,
breaking a decade-long period of relative stability.
But this
is not just about immigrants. America’s third civil war is being fought on
multiple fronts. On one front it is white, predominantly Christian Americans
resisting the emergence of the minority-dominated America that is now baked
into our future sometime in the 2040s, driven by lower birthrates among white
Americans and growth in Hispanic, Asian and multiracial American populations.
On
another front are Black Americans still struggling against those who would
raise new walls to keep them from a place called home. Then there are Americans
of every background trying to steady themselves amid cultural currents that
seem to shift by the week: new expectations about issues like identity,
bathrooms and even a typeface, as well as how we acknowledge one another in the
public square.
On yet
another front, the gale-force winds of technological change, propelled now by
artificial intelligence, are sweeping through workplaces faster than people can
plant their feet. And on a fifth front, young Americans of every race, creed
and color are straining to afford even a modest home — the physical and
psychological harbor that has long anchored the American dream.
My sense
is that we now have millions of Americans waking up each morning unsure of the
social script, the economic ladder or the cultural norms that are OK to
practice in their home. They are psychologically homeless.
When
Donald Trump made building a wall along the Mexican border the central motif of
his first campaign, he instinctively chose a word that did double duty for
millions of Americans. “Wall” meant a physical barrier against uncontrolled
immigration that was accelerating our transition to a minority-majority-led
America. But it also meant a wall against the pace and scope of change: the
cultural, digital and generational whirlwinds reshaping daily life.
That, to
me, is the deep backdrop to Trump’s National Security Strategy. He is not
interested in refighting the Cold War to defend and expand the frontiers of
democracy. He is, in my view, interested in fighting the civilizational war
over what is the American “home” and what is the European “home,” with an
emphasis on race and Christian-Judeo faith — and who is an ally in that war and
who is not.
The
economics writer Noah Smith argued in his Substack this week that this was the
key reason the MAGA movement began to turn away from Western Europe and draw
closer to Vladimir Putin’s Russia — because Trump’s devotees saw Putin as more
of a defender of white Christian nationalism and traditional values than the
nations of the European Union.
Historically,
“in the American mind,” Smith wrote, “Europe stood across the sea as a place of
timeless homogeneity, where the native white population had always been and
would always remain.” However, “in the 2010s, it dawned on those Americans that
this hallowed image of Europe was no longer accurate. With their working
population dwindling, European countries took in millions of Muslim refugees
and other immigrants from the Middle East and Central and South Asia — many of
whom didn’t assimilate nearly as well as their peers in the U.S. You’d hear
people say things like ‘Paris isn’t Paris anymore.’”
Today’s
MAGA-led American right, Smith added, does “not care intrinsically about
democracy, or about allyship, or about NATO, or about the European project.
They care about ‘Western civilization.’ Unless Europe expels Muslim immigrants
en masse and starts talking about its Christian heritage, the Republican Party
is unlikely to lift a hand to help Europe with any of its problems.”
In other
words, when protecting “Western civilization” — with a focus on race and faith
— become the centerpiece of U.S. national security, the biggest threat becomes
uncontrolled immigration into America and Western Europe — not Russia or China.
And “protecting American culture, ‘spiritual health’ and ‘traditional families’
are framed as core national security requirements,” as the defense analyst Rick
Landgraf pointed out on the defense website “War on the Rocks.”
And
that’s why the Trump National Security Strategy paper is no accident or the
work of a few low-level ideologues. It is, in fact, the Rosetta Stone
explaining what really animates this administration at home and abroad.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário