Speaking to the Vice President’s traveling press pool in Munich late last week, Former U.S. Ambassador to Germany Ric Grenell had a stark message for his European colleagues and counterparts: you’re doing it again.
The “it,” as he put it, represents “missing the boat” in terms of tough dealing, with much of Europe adopting a supine prostration towards the Chinese Communist Party’s global efforts, rather than confronting it as an authoritarian regime.
“Look, I’m a German expert because I used to be the ambassador here,” he told The National Pulse from the basement of the Commerzbank in Munich, “And what makes me very pleased is to hear the Germans say, ‘we should have done this years ago,’ [with regards to NATO]. Holding myself back from saying, ‘I told you so.’ Donald Trump was right.
“But I’m shocked that there is an actual belief, and it’s now being articulated, not just something that they think, but an actual articulation that they should have done these things a long time ago.
“I think that within the foreign policy establishment of Europe, there is an inward look to say, did we bring this war on ourselves? Were we too close to Russia? I’ve said this publicly many times, but in my conversations with Chancellor Merkel, early, long time ago, 2019-ish, she said, look, the problem with you Americans is you don’t understand that we Germans have a different relationship with the Russians. We can control them. That was not true.
“And whether it’s Nord Stream 2, Iran sanctions, or NATO spending, Donald Trump was right on all these. And so it’s nice to see the Europeans kind of inwardly say, yeah, we should have done it.
“Now I quickly switch the ground on them and say, and you’re doing it on China now. You missed the boat on Russia before and you’re doing it. You’re missing it on China now. Clean it up, get focused on it now.”
Grenell’s warnings will be music to the ears of China hawks around the United States, and will doubtless set tongues further wagging in Europe, following Vice President J.D. Vance’s extraordinary intervention on the subjects of mass migration, free speech, and conscience issues last week at the Munich Security Forum.
Grenell, who was one of the favorites to be President Trump’s Secretary of State nominee, is now set to run the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., as well as informally advise on a number of high-level diplomatic issues.