A Free
World
Needs
a Strong
America
By The
Editorial Board
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/12/14/opinion/editorials/us-military-cold-war-lessons.html
As
recently as a decade ago, it would not have been hard to unite a broad majority
of Republicans and Democrats around a shared idea of what America's military
power should be for.
Defense
of the homeland. Deterrence of would-be aggressors. Cooperation with treaty
allies and protection of kindred democracies confronting common foes.
Humanitarian aid and relief. The security of the global commons: sea lanes, air
corridors, undersea cables, digital networks. Upholding the laws of war.
In sum,
the ability to prevent war wherever possible and win it whenever necessary —
all for the sake of a safer, more open, rules-based world.
The Trump
administration brings a starkly different mind-set to the issue. Out with the
Department of Defense; back to the Department of War. Well-established rules of
engagement have yielded to blowing up small boats on the high seas. In place of
standing with Ukraine’s embattled democracy against Russia’s invasion, the
administration has adopted a course of moral equivalence between the two sides
while seeking profits from the war through arms sales and mineral deals.
As for
the kind of military alliance-building that typified American foreign policy
for much of the 20th century, President Trump has reverted to threats of
conquest more common in the 19th. And this is to say nothing of his efforts to
deploy troops to American cities, impose political loyalty tests on senior
officers or hamstring reporters at the Pentagon.
Mr. Trump
justifies his approach by claiming that the Pentagon needs an entirely
different mentality for a new era of great-power rivalry. That’s not wrong.
China’s rise and Russia’s revanchism means our security is more threatened
today than it has been in decades. But so does the fact the United States has
forfeited our military’s edge.
The
president has done better than his predecessors in getting NATO allies to start
budgeting adequately for their defense. He’s been right, also, to cut through
layers of entrenched Pentagon bureaucracy that have prevented the military from
keeping pace with technological changes that leave us increasingly vulnerable.
But Mr.
Trump and his administration are grievously wrong to think the “America First”
approach they’ve adopted meets the moment. America cannot adequately defend
itself and its vital interests unless it recovers the strategies and instincts
that served it well in its greatest triumph of the past century — not World War
II, but the Cold War.
The
phrase “Cold War mind-set” is usually meant as an insult, sometimes with good
reason. Stretches of that long struggle were marked by political paranoia,
nuclear brinkmanship and ideological Manichaeism that nobody should want to
repeat. There were blunders and fiascos, none greater than the war in Vietnam.
Yet it is
worth remembering that our victory in the Cold War didn’t come at a cost of
more than one million American casualties, as World War II did. The architects
of the Cold War understood that the country’s future security required
engagement, not isolation, and that the primary purpose of military power was
the prevention of war through deterrence, alliances and international
legitimacy — hence the name the Department of Defense, not War.
The Trump
administration routinely prioritizes national interests over multilateral
alliances like NATO.
America’s
Cold War strategists also knew that previous concepts of security were
inadequate in an era of long-range bombers and intercontinental ballistic
missiles. A return to isolationism was the road to a second Pearl Harbor.
They knew
that the United States could not hope to win an ideological struggle against
Communist adversaries if we were faithless to our own ideals. Among the reasons
that President Harry Truman desegregated the armed forces was that the United
States could hardly offer itself as a model of freedom and justice while
enforcing racist policies in the ranks of those we sent around the world to
advance those values.
They knew
that deterring the Soviet Union required preserving America’s scientific and
technological edge, which in turn called for national investments in research
and development and partnerships with American universities. The first modern
computer, ENIAC, was developed for the Army at the University of Pennsylvania;
the Tomahawk cruise missile was largely developed by Johns Hopkins’s Applied
Physics Lab.
They knew
that the only enduring form of world leadership came through voluntary
followership. Moscow had to coerce Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and other
satellites into membership in the Warsaw Pact; their restiveness was the Soviet
Union’s undoing. Washington’s key allies, by contrast, mostly chose to be on
our side.
And they
knew that shared prosperity was vital to democratic credibility. The people who
created the institutions of the postwar world said that they were binding
people together economically so that they would stop fighting with one another.
It was an explicit rationale for lowering trade barriers, and it worked. We won
the Cold War because the lights were brighter on this side of the wall.
None of
this is to ignore the furious policy debates of the Cold War. Yet what’s
striking about the era is the broad continuity of policy between Republican and
Democratic administrations. Dwight Eisenhower adopted the containment policies
bequeathed to him by Truman. Richard Nixon embraced the logic of arms control
and détente that he inherited from John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. Ronald
Reagan expanded the defense buildup started under Jimmy Carter. Continuity
meant predictability, and predictability helped maintain peace.
This is
not the approach of the Trump administration. Mr. Trump believes in cutting
deals, not sharing values; in making money, not winning friends. He has waged a
funding war against basic research at our leading universities. And he is
infatuated with displays of hard power — the power to coerce, in the
formulation of the political scientist Joseph Nye — but contemptuous of the
value of soft power, which is the power to attract. His latest National
Security Strategy, released this month, is notable mainly for its indifference
to the distinction between despotism and democracy.
His
approach is inadequate for the long-term challenge America faces. A country’s
military is only as good as the purpose to which it is harnessed. And the
central purpose of American power should be to defend political liberty and the
rule of law that undergirds it, against all enemies foreign and domestic.
.
That
mission may be impossible for an administration whose defining trait is the
assault on the rule of law, which is as much a foreign-policy crisis as it is a
domestic one. The United States cannot lead the free world, inspire those who
want to be a part of it, or oppose those who seek to undermine and destroy it
if we cease to be a model democracy ourselves.
What of
future presidents? Mr. Trump’s presence in the White House does not erase the
reality that Russia seeks to annex one neighbor and probably others. Or that
China is eyeing regional hegemony in the Indo-Pacific while it rapidly expands
its conventional and nuclear arsenals. Or that America remains threatened by
extremist groups that can use A.I., drones, bioweapons or other increasingly
ubiquitous and inexpensive technologies to perpetrate future Sept. 11-type
attacks.
The
horrors that China has visited on the Uyghurs and Russia has imposed on
Ukrainians are not only a sign of the immoral core of these regimes; they are
also the portents of violent instability to come. A Chinese attack on Taiwan
that ends up disrupting or destroying that island’s chip foundries would push
the world into an economic crisis. A Russian attack on even a small NATO member
state, such as Estonia, would put Europe and America alike on a global war
footing.
All this
strikingly resembles the challenge America and our allies faced from the Soviet
Union at the outset of the Cold War: a contest both ideological and military,
requiring a response equal to both. After World War II, the United States met
the threat of Russian arms with military investments that yielded some of the
most transformative technologies of the century: supersonic aircraft,
nuclear-powered submarines, thermonuclear weapons, guided missiles, satellite
reconnaissance. They were essential in dissuading Soviet leaders from doing to
Western Europe what Vladimir Putin is doing to Ukraine. America must pursue
today’s military innovation with equal resolve.
But
arsenals alone did not win the Cold War. Just as important were the tools of
soft power. Respectful consultation among allies. Mutually beneficial trading
ties. Fidelity to democratic ideals. A willingness to face and overcome the
moral hypocrisies of democratic states. Strategic firmness matched with
diplomatic flexibility toward our foes.
In the
end, the power of our military deterrent and the resilience of our global
alliances in the 20th century buttressed the most important weapon in the
struggle against totalitarianism: patience. From one president to the next,
America’s leaders waited out authoritarian challengers until they came apart on
their own internal contradictions. The Cold War ended in Berlin, of all places,
because ordinary people in the eastern half of the city yearned for a better
life in an open society, just over the barbed wire on the other side of the
wall.
If the
United States is indeed on the cusp of a new Cold War with authoritarian
adversaries, these will be the tools we will require to get through another
long struggle. We cannot afford the consequences of a world in which dictators
can aggress at will, as they did before World War II, and as they have started
to do again. Preventing that requires a military that has the right tools, the
right tactics and the right culture. It requires a global alliance of
like-minded democracies. Most of all, it requires leaders with the wisdom and
vision to explain the stakes and rally the free world to the work ahead.


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