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Thursday, June 18, 2026

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said the US will kick off a six-month review of its military presence in Europe as leaders in the region brace for a plan for deep cuts to American support for the continent.

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NATO expects US troop cuts from Europe to take years reut.rs/4ugUquZ

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-- Reuters (@reuters.com) 3:45 PM · May 19, 2026

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Put the cork back in the bottle, Pete, and give it a rest. Iran just whipped your a##.

#1 | Posted by Doc_Sarvis at 2026-06-18 08:36 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

"Make no mistake about it, this will be a real review. It will be designed to ensure that NATO is moving fast and irreversibly toward Europe leading, stepping up to take primary responsibility for the defense of Europe," Hegseth said. www.reuters.com

"NATO is moving fast and irreversibly toward Europe leading"

"Europe leading"

The United States no longer leading.
The end of eighty years of post-war Western hegemony, overseen by the United States.

We don't have Col. Jessep from A Few Good Men standing on that Wall any more.
We don't need him any more, according to Republicans.

#2 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-06-18 08:41 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Donald Trump is not done losing wars for the United States.

#3 | Posted by Zed at 2026-06-18 08:42 AM | Reply

Pete's plan is audacious and silly, but likely not possible.

I think Trump is trying to see just how ridiculous he can get, while still getting rubber-stamped by his sycophantic supporters in the legislature. But the next presidential election is a little over 2-years away. Most of what this administration does is going to be immediately reversed.

#4 | Posted by madbomber at 2026-06-18 08:50 AM | Reply

"I think Trump is trying to see just how ridiculous he can get"

Sure. Just ignore the actual topic of discussion.

"But the next presidential election is a little over 2-years away. Most of what this administration does is going to be immediately reversed."

This is the mentality of an anti-vaxxer who gets COVID and then decides they want the vaccine.

It doesn't work that way.

#5 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-06-18 08:52 AM | Reply

#4 | Posted by madbomber

I think you're still clinging to any sense of normalcy you can.

#6 | Posted by jpw at 2026-06-18 11:08 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Most of what this administration does is going to be immediately reversed.

#4 | POSTED BY MADBOMBER

Meanwhile have you packed your bags? Less troops in Europe means less need for you.

The Leopards Eating People's Faces Party you probably voted for is coming for you now.

But the next presidential election is a little over 2-years away.

Yes Hope is on the way. Accountability is coming.

But that won't save you in the here and now. Ask the hundreds of thousands of federal employees who have already been affected. Anti may never be compensated. I would not count on or expect a Dem anti weaponization slush fund that you can apply for.

#7 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-06-18 11:29 AM | Reply

@#4 ... But the next presidential election is a little over 2-years away. Most of what this administration does is going to be immediately reversed. ...

I've heard reports that our European allies are developing the view that the United States is no longer a reliable ally.

Regarding the next presidential election, they are of the opinion ~how can we rely on the United States when 50,000 votes in Wisconsin might cause a drastic change in the direction of the United State?~


Europeans No Longer Rely on US for Security: ECFR Poll 2026
informedclearly.com

... What the ECFR Poll Reveals About European Public Opinion

Conducted in May 2026 across EU member states including Germany, France, Italy, Poland, Spain, and the Netherlands, as well as Switzerland and the United Kingdom, the poll paints a stark picture of European sentiment. The report's authors, Ivan Krastev and Mark Leonard, argue that US President Donald Trump's second term -- marked by threats to NATO, plans to annex Greenland, and military strikes on Iran without European consultation -- has fundamentally shattered European confidence in American protection.

Michal van der Toorn, European affairs correspondent, explains the report's central metaphor: 'The comparison is crystal clear: the EU is Kevin and the US are the parents. Because home alone -- that's what we are as Europe.' The reference to the 1990 film 'Home Alone' underscores the sense of abandonment Europeans feel.

Key Findings at a Glance

- - - Trust collapse: Only 11% of Europeans see the US as an ally; 25% see it as a rival or adversary. ...

[italics theirs]


#8 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-06-18 02:27 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

@#4 ... Pete's plan is audacious and silly, ...

Well, yeah.

Quelle surprise on that.


The United Stated needs a qualified Sec of Defense.

#9 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-06-19 12:17 AM | Reply

All in all, replacing James Mattis with Hegseth was the shot that may have lost America as a constitutional republic, as sooner or later the military will be run by Trumpian goons for the good of the billionaire oligarchs, as happened in Russia.

#10 | Posted by Hughmass at 2026-06-19 06:33 AM | Reply

"The Leopards Eating People's Faces Party you probably voted for is coming for you now."

Good sir, I would have voted for someone who called themselves a Democratic Socialist over Trump. Especially knowing what I know now.

I fortunately have other options. A nice little house in Calabria.

You have options too.

There was a poll conducted recently. The results were posted on DR. Trump was voted the second-most popular president in the last 40 years. I'm starting to think that maybe the US is just not my country anymore. No harm, no foul, but it's just baffling to me that modern -day Repubs rate Trump higher than Reagan. Or higher than anyone for that matter.

#11 | Posted by madbomber at 2026-06-19 10:28 AM | Reply

Reminder, EU is not too poor to defend itself and did not care until Putin invaded Ukraine. And how did those Russian armies do again? They are on their 4th so far if that helps.

#12 | Posted by sitzkrieg at 2026-06-19 07:08 PM | Reply

You have options too.

I certainly do.

But I think I'll stay here and maybe I'll get to die in the Revolution defending our democratic institutions, our rights and our constitution.

Because..

Semper Fi

PS. Happy Father's Day (tomorrow ) to all you Mo Fos out there!

#13 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-06-20 10:15 AM | Reply

Also this does not ring true ...

Trump was voted the second-most popular president in the last 40 years.

National polling shows a sharp divide on this topic, with different surveys reflecting varied results. In a Pew Research Center study examining which U.S. president over the last 40 years did the best job, Barack Obama ranked first (36%), followed by Ronald Reagan (21%), and Donald Trump (19%).

#14 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-06-20 10:18 AM | Reply

__________
#11 | Posted by madbomber at 2026-06-19 10:28 AM
There was a poll conducted recently. ... Trump was voted the second-most popular president in the last 40 years. ... No harm, no foul, but it's just baffling to me that modern-day Repubs rate Trump higher than Reagan. Or higher than anyone for that matter.

#14 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-06-20 10:18 AM
National polling shows a sharp divide on this topic, with different surveys reflecting varied results. In a Pew Research Center study examining which U.S. president over the last 40 years did the best job, Barack Obama ranked first (36%), followed by Ronald Reagan (21%), and Donald Trump (19%).

Close enough...


www.pewresearch.org - Pew: Beyond Red vs Blue - 2026-06-10

www.newsweek.com - Summary of Beyond Red vs Blue - 2026-06-11


Last 40 years had 7 presidents, including Bushes and Biden who clearly wouldn't make it to the top of polls. Clinton had a troubled presidency, huge dot-com bubble market crash in his last year and was part of Hillary's "baggage" in 2016, so another scratch off the list.

That leaves Reagan who won Cold War and caused demise of Soviet Union and communist block ideology, Obama and Trump.

So Democrats' choices are essentially down to one, a no-brainer.

Trump's current standing can be explained by several factors, the main of which are the Recency Bias (en.wikipedia.org), self-selective (FoxNews) and algorithmic- / "influencers"-driven digital 'news channels' consumption that favor him and sing his praises, people generally poorly educated in economics, history and politics, and also younger audience who don't have the reference (again, a subset of both Recency Bias and education/knowledge) and are much more influenced by zeitgeist's "marketing / slogans" and "causes / movements".

So, in light of all those factors, 19 percent overall is not that high - about the size of his base plus voters who can't (yet?) admit they made a mistake voting for him.

Would be interesting to see the percentage of people one year before 2024 elections who would give Trump same number as now, or thought Biden's presidency was the best, because of "great economy" and "lower inflation" - pretty sure it would be much higher for Biden than it is now. Even a week before elections there were posters here (some of whom are no longer posting) that were looking at the "good" employment/unemployment numbers and predicted victory, totally oblivious to what the real economy was for > 65% of voters. Harris' campaign was apparently blind to that, too: "I would not change anything", utter failure to take campaign seriously and choose competent VP, pay attention to swing states and "woke" issues, and hit Trump on his atrocious actual "business" and "dealmaking" record.


Most recent generic poll of "red"/"blue" states:

www.newsweek.com - Map Shows Donald Trump's Approval Rating in Every State After 17 Months - June 20, 2026
__________

#15 | Posted by CutiePie at 2026-06-21 08:48 PM | Reply

__________
#11 | Posted by madbomber at 2026-06-19 10:28 AM
... it's just baffling to me that modern-day Repubs rate Trump higher than Reagan. Or higher than anyone for that matter.

In Nuremberg (2025) (at 00:55:30), there is an interesting conversation between psychiatrist Douglas Kelley (www.history.com, www.forbes.com) and Herman Goering about what drew him to Hitler, which can shine some light on what drew/draws some to Trump:

[K] Let's talk about Hitler.

[G] It is interesting you have not asked me this directly before.

[K] I'm curious what the attraction was. He was a failed painter, right? Not a very good soldier, yet he's worshipped and revered.

[G] He made us feel German again.

[K] How?

[G] Well, the war had seen Germany crushed. And along comes a man who says... We can reclaim our former glory. Would you not follow a man like this?

[K] Depends what else he wanted to do.

[G] The first time I saw Hitler talk was... 1922. Upstairs of a coffee shop. For maybe 30 people. This was peacetime, but it was a peace without food, jobs, shoes. And he stood up. And he said "French bellies are being filled with German pain." And then... "If you make threats, you need bayonets. Rearm! Down with Versailles!" So that night... I became a National Socialist.

[K] Off of... One speech?

[G] Well, I could tell he would appeal to the old soldiers. If they have the old soldiers, they have the manpower. Even with his antisemitism, it served a practical purpose. It brought towards us men who needed something else to focus their emotions. Something else to blame.

[K] And the camps?

[G] They were to be work camps for our political opponents. Nothing more.
__________

#16 | Posted by CutiePie at 2026-06-21 11:10 PM | Reply

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