Mark Kelly is basically saying the quiet part out loud: the big rupture is not that Europe suddenly changed its values, or that democracies woke up and decided alliances are boring. The rupture is that the United States, under Donald Trump, started vandalising the very system that overwhelmingly benefited America for decades.
And that matters, because people keep framing this like “the world is different now.” Sure, Russia is still doing what it has always done when it thinks it can get away with it: attacking neighbours, lying about it, and daring the West to blink. That is not some new era. That is the same ugly playbook with different dates.
What is genuinely new is Washington choosing unpredictability as a brand, and treating allies like optional subscriptions. That is why Kelly’s “take generations” line hits. Trust is slow to build and ridiculously fast to destroy, especially when the destruction is deliberate and public.
So yes, the core point stands: Trump is the variable. The rest of the democratic world is largely trying to keep the old logic alive, rules, alliances, deterrence, support for Ukraine, while also scrambling to build a backup plan because the US is acting like a flaky partner. That is exactly the vibe coming out of Munich Security Conference right now: Europe talking more openly about self reliance because it no longer knows what America will do next.
If you want the blunt version: Russia is a brutal, corrupt aggressor. But Trump is the one handing them the strategic gift, by turning allied unity into a question mark. That is why this feels like the end of an era. Not because the world suddenly stopped believing in alliances, but because the country that built the alliance system is now flirting with burning it down.
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