Opinion
Thomas L.
Friedman
Trump’s
Politics Are Not America First. They’re Me First.
Jan. 21,
2026, 1:00 a.m. ET
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/21/opinion/trump-greenland-europe-nato.html
Opinion
Columnist
I have
never trafficked in the conspiracy theories about Donald Trump and Russia. I
never thought that he was a Russian asset or that Vladimir Putin had some
financial leverage on him or sex tapes to blackmail him with. I have always
believed it was much worse: that Trump, in his heart and soul, simply does not
share the values of every other American president since World War II when it
comes to what America’s role in the world should be and must be.
I have
always believed that Trump has an utterly warped value set that is not grounded
in any of our founding documents, but simply favors any leader who is strong,
no matter what he does with that strength; any leader who is rich and can thus
enrich Trump, no matter what the leader does with that money or how he got it;
and any leader who will flatter him, no matter how obviously phony that
flattery is.
As long
as Putin the dictator checked all those boxes more than the democratic leader
of Ukraine, Trump treated him as a friend — American interests and values be
damned. Putin never even had to break a sweat to make Trump his chump.
For all
those reasons Trump is the most un-American president in our history. It was
obvious from the day Trump trashed Senator John McCain, an authentic American
war hero and patriot, for having been shot down in combat and taken prisoner.
What kind of American would denounce McCain, who was held captive for over five
years in a North Vietnamese prison camp after spurning early release, knowing
it would be used as propaganda? No American that I know.
Trump’s
worst un-American impulses and intellectual laziness were contained in his
first term in the White House by a group of serious advisers. This time around,
there is no one to contain them. He has surrounded himself with sycophants. So,
Trump is now basically running our country the way he ran his companies — as a
one-man show free to make terrible deals.
That
management style led to six bankruptcy filings by his companies. Unfortunately,
today we’re all his shareholders, and I fear he is going to bankrupt us as a
nation — morally for sure, if not one day financially and politically.
Trump’s
behavior has become so reckless, so self-absorbed, so obviously contrary to
American interests — as even Republicans have long defined them, let alone
Democrats — that the question must be asked: Is America now being ruled by a
mad king?
What
American president would ever write the text that Trump wrote to Norway’s prime
minister, Jonas Gahr Store, on Sunday, claiming that one reason he is pushing
to acquire Greenland is that he was not awarded the Nobel Peace Prize? He
wrote, “Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize
for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely
of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what
is good and proper for the United States of America.”
Read
those words over slowly. They don’t scream “America first.” They scream “Me
first.” They scream “I, Donald Trump, am ready to seize Greenland, at the price
of breaking up the nearly 77-year-old NATO alliance, because the Nobel
Committee did not give ME its peace prize last year” — ignoring the fact that
the Norwegian government doesn’t control the awarding of the prize.
It would
be one thing for Trump to say he is ready to break up NATO over a matter of
geopolitical principle affecting the security of the American people. I can’t
imagine what that would be, but I could at least imagine the possibility. What
is unimaginable to me is an American president so obsessed with winning a Nobel
Peace Prize to feed his ego and one-up his predecessor — as well as equal
Barack Obama, who won the peace prize in 2009 — that he would be ready to wreck
the whole NATO alliance and trading system with Europe because he did not get
it.
I am
trying to imagine a scene where Trump dictated that note to an aide, without
shame, and that person sent it to the Norwegians — presumably without anyone in
the White House hierarchy stopping it, without anyone saying: “Mr. President,
are you crazy? You can’t put your personal ambition for a Nobel Prize ahead of
the whole of the Atlantic alliance.”
But Trump
can do that, because he obviously assigns little or no value to the blood and
treasure and energy that generations of American soldiers, diplomats and
presidents before him sacrificed in order to build that durable partnership
with our European partners.
Let me
put it in terms Trump should understand: If America were a company, you would
say that a generation of American workers, executives and investors built the
most successful, profitable and impactful corporation in the history of the
world — the Atlantic/NATO alliance forged out of the ashes of World War II.
With a relatively tiny investment in postwar Europe, known as the Marshall
Plan, we created a healthy trading partner that helped make both America and
Europe richer than ever; we helped to transform Europe from a continent known
for nationalist, ethnic and religious wars into the biggest center of free
markets, free people and the rule of law in the world — giving ourselves a
powerful democratic wingman to help stabilize the world and contain Russia for
the last three quarters of a century.
It’s true
that Europe faces daunting challenges, from uncontrolled migration to
overregulation to the rise of far-right parties. And yes, it often responds
with indecision. And yes, there are legitimate security concerns in the Arctic.
But generations of American statesmen and presidents understood the overriding
importance of the U.S.-European compact and would never even contemplate
sacrificing it over who has sovereignty in Greenland.
It is so
obvious that only a pathological narcissist who insists on having his name on
everything — from someone else’s Kennedy Center to someone else’s Nobel Peace
Prize — would risk all of the above to seize Greenland, especially when you
consider that we already have the right to operate bases in Greenland and
station forward troops and missiles there. We also have the right to invest in
extracting its minerals.
If indeed
America were a company, the board of directors would have responded to behavior
like Trump’s by announcing an “intervention” with the C.E.O.
Unfortunately,
America’s board of directors, the Republican-led U.S. Congress, has been
completely self-neutered. And so now, we the people, we the shareholders, are
about to get stuck with the bill.
Meanwhile,
America Inc.’s competitors simply cannot believe their luck. Since the end of
World War II both Russia and China have understood the one big thing that Trump
does not: America’s competitive advantage. While Russia and China had only
vassals that they could order and pressure to join them in any geopolitical or
geoeconomic competition with the United States, America had a secret weapon
hiding in plain sight: allies who shared our values and were ready to do
difficult things, like send their soldiers to fight and die, in our wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan. One of them was Denmark, which has sovereignty over
Greenland.
Russia
and China dreamed that one day something would happen where America would lose
its allies and NATO would be fractured. Without economic allies, America could
never be as influential in trade negotiations with China, and without America’s
military might, NATO would be hard pressed to prevent Russia from retaking
parts of Central and Eastern Europe that it lost control over after the fall of
the Berlin Wall.
And then
one day their dreams came true. The American people elected a man who, no
matter what he tells us, is taking us to a future not of “America first,” but
of “America alone” and “Me first.”


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