The West’s parasite politics. By Jack Atkinson in The Spectator.
The West today:
America is the wealthy, capable, relentlessly active grandfather who still pays the bills, still fixes the roof, still shows up when danger turns financial or physical, and still serves as the family’s emergency backstop.
Europe, Britain and Australia are the adult children who mismanaged their own households, neglected their own responsibilities, and now spend their time lecturing the one relative still keeping the lights on. …
The deeper story is that too many ‘allied’ governments have become structurally dependent, strategically incapable, and morally evasive. …
It is a family of overgrown children still running tabs through grandad’s account while pretending they are financially independent. …
Iran:
It should not be remotely controversial to state the obvious: Iran has long been a grave and growing threat. The fact that this basic context all but disappeared from so much mainstream commentary over the last month tells you everything about the moral vanity and intellectual dishonesty of the modern media class. …
Even cautious reporting now accepts the core point: Iran’s nuclear infrastructure has been degraded, but not all of its leverage has disappeared. That is precisely why sustained pressure matters. A regime with less money, less reach, fewer proxies, and less nuclear ambiguity is plainly a lesser threat than the same regime flush with cash, reach and impunity. Only in the decadent political culture of the modern West does this have to be argued as though it were somehow novel.
And then came Operation Midnight Hammer. The strategic lesson was unmistakable. …
It was another reminder that the competent relative in this family still knows how to pick up the tools and do the hard job (that many Presidents and powerful leaders have put off or failed to act whilst the threat only grew stronger) while the weak, ineffective allied leaders of nations who benefit, opt to grandstand, criticise and complain about lack of diplomacy (as if that was a viable option) or the nuances of how it was done, from the comfort of their armchair. …
Globalists gotta sneer:
Gratitude for the many wins is nowhere to be found. Instead, Trump is mocked for boasting, sneered at for his style, and dismissed as though the only thing that matters in foreign policy is whether the commentariat finds a leader aesthetically pleasing. This is the great fraud of the contemporary West: results are minimised, risks are memory-holed, and the one leader willing to impose costs on enemies is treated as the real embarrassment.
- The Abraham Accords were real.
- Gulf alignment against Iran is real.
- Nato burden-sharing has risen under pressure. Iran’s nuclear program has come under more direct strain than at any point in recent memory.
- Many global conflicts have been resolved by Trump.
- Aggression by adversaries has been minimal whilst he’s been in touch – again, not a coincidence.
By contrast, the frailty and weakness of the US and its allies under Biden coincided with catastrophe after catastrophe: the Afghanistan withdrawal, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and October 7 and the Middle East disaster that followed. Adversaries notice weakness. They exploit hesitation. They respect force. That is not ideology. It is the oldest rule in international politics.
The inconvenient truth for detractors is that peace through strength has worked and will be a defining legacy of the Trumpian era.

Britain:
Britain, for its part, has become a masterclass in second-rate moralising. Keir Starmer now speaks of a ‘new and dangerous world’ while nudging Britain closer to Europe and biting the American hand that feeds. …
It is risk aversion disguised as principle. And it fits Starmer perfectly: a weak leader’s favourite habits are moralising, finger-pointing and hoping nobody notices that he is doing neither the leading nor the lifting. Fortunately, Britain has seen past the facade as Starmer’s record low approval ratings since polling began …
Australia:
Australia looks no better. Anthony Albanese has delivered the kind of managerial, anaemic rhetoric that passes for leadership in a complacent political culture: stay calm, conserve fuel, brace for disruption, use public transport, do not panic-buy. That is not statecraft. That is late-stage crisis management in an energy-rich country that somehow still imports almost all of its fuel and remains vulnerable to precisely the sort of geopolitical shock any serious government should have spent years preparing for. …
The family equivalent is the unemployed middle-aged son living in the parents’ basement demanding another handout. …
Nato:
The problem is that too many of them have turned dependency into a governing philosophy: rely on American deterrence, American naval power, American intelligence, American markets and American risk tolerance, then sneer at the Americans for being insufficiently delicate while performing the burdens everyone else quietly outsourced.
It is the brat’s posture in its purest form: entitlement without gratitude, dependence without humility, and endless criticism of the one adult doing the heavy lifting.
Realist Trump:
The sharpest argument for Trump on foreign policy is not that he is saintly or subtle. It is that he understands a civilisational truth much of the modern West is too vain, too soft or too dishonest to admit: order survives when somebody is willing to enforce it. If Iran’s power is broken down, its proxies weakened, its nuclear ambiguity narrowed and its ability to blackmail the world through terror and chokepoints reduced, that will not be a tragedy. It will be a major gain. And the allied governments that stand to benefit most from that gain should stop behaving like spoiled children rolling their eyes at the grandfather while waiting for him to pay the next bill.
You’ll never see that point of view in the legacy globalist media. It would interrupt the posturing and Trump derangement.
















