Now, from Hungary on to the EU.
EU leaders, despondently, as if
on their way to the slaughter,
are following the constantly
shifting course of America,
and, curiously, are even starting
to follow in its footsteps.
So, on Friday, in Malta, EU leaders
met in an informal summit.
It was their first meeting after the
inauguration of the new US President,
and after all the things
they heard him say.
It would be logical to expect some kind of
a joint declaration in response, but no.
A declaration was adopted, but
a completely different one.
The document is such, as if the authors
timidly peeked at Trump's paper,
the executive order, entitled "Protecting the Nation
from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States."
Quite silly, really.
Now the EU is suddenly in favor of reducing
the number of new refugees it will allow.
And, in the spirit of Trump, they are suddenly
in favor of the establishment of border controls.
And, poof, no more illegals.
A key element of a sustainable
migration policy
is to ensure the effective control of our external
border and stem illegal flows into the EU.
And not a word against the United States, as if
they don't want to wake the sleeping giant.
The sleeping giant, however, is not asleep.
Trump's pick for the US ambassador to the EU, Ted
Malloch, compared the EU to the USSR.
He recalled how at his last diplomatic
job, he helped to ruin the Soviet Union,
and made it clear that the same task, meaning
another collapse, is his next job in Brussels.
His words are clearly approved.
They mean that America simply does not
need the European Union anymore.
There is NATO, so what is
the European Union good for?
Absolutely nothing.
So, it's some sort of political garbage,
a non-viable bureaucratic utopia.
And President Trump doesn't need the euro.
Is the eurozone even needed?
Also not needed.
Today America is such that it sees
the future of Europe having a dollar zone,
and not some kind of shaky euro zone.
Does the euro even have
resources for defense? Hardly.
I do not want to fill your head
with a bunch of complex terms,
which all the experts use anyway,
but the point is the same:
If not only Greece and Italy struggle
under the euro, but Germany, too,
then what is the point
of a single European currency?
There are probably a few countries that do,
but nobody will be asking them.
Today I can hardly imagine seeing
what Obama so loved:
a US-EU summit with its long corteges
in a cramped Brussels, full of sirens
and flashing lights,
paralyzing the capital of the European Union.
When Donald Trump, a week before the
inauguration, asked about the EU's future,
the answer turned out to
be as straight as could be:
I believe that the future will be hard.
People want their own identity, just like the
United Kingdom wanted its own identity.
If you want my opinion, I think that other
countries will leave the EU as well.
Either way, already, there are experts who, with all
seriousness, give the euro 12-18 months to live.
But slaughtering the EU and forcing Europe to buy
the dollar as the world's reserve currency
is only the temporary goal
of the United States.
Their main economic and future
military rival is China.
If so, Russia is in a position where everyone is
interested in it as an ally in the global arena.
That is, Russia has a potential
"golden share" in this triangle.
Of course, if we match the
speed of the game that's stirring up.
As for the EU, the mood
is gloomy there, as if at a funeral.
A revealing letter, which was recently
written to the leaders of the EU
by the Pole, Donald Tusk, the
President of the European Council.
Alarming statements by the new US administration
make our future very unpredictable."
How is this different from the captain
saying, "Gentlemen, we're sinking"?
But Tusk for some reason believes that the current US
president is the terminator of the European Union.
That's rather self-deprecating.
After all, the European Union with
its pointless bureaucracy
and its dysfunctional ideology came to collapse
and worthlessness on its own.
Trump only pointed out what was going on.
The UK just decided to
get off the boat first.
In good English families, parents teach children
about the best time
to excuse yourself when you are
a guest at someone's home.
And here it is, the golden rule:
It is necessary to time the exact
moment while it is still fun,
that way, when you go back home,
everyone feels that after
you left, the party died.
Everyone is tired and now it is boring.
Now the EU is in such a mood. The UK
said, "Goodbye, the party is over."
