Comment by solidsnack9000
14 hours ago
The EU would also have opposed it if the US bought Russian, Chinese or Iranian weaponry.
The EU does seem to willing to reduce itself to a Chinese vassal. That would not improve the situation.
14 hours ago
The EU would also have opposed it if the US bought Russian, Chinese or Iranian weaponry.
The EU does seem to willing to reduce itself to a Chinese vassal. That would not improve the situation.
The right play is to maintain relationships (including arms trading) with multiple major powers - as Canada's PM very deftly pointed out at Davos. Getting closer to China doesn't mean exchanging one master for another - it can and should be a way to increase the alternatives available, without going all the way in the other direction.
> The EU would also have opposed it if the US bought Russian, Chinese or Iranian weaponry.
This is such an implausible counter-factual that I can't even begin to imagine what would have actually happened. Still, I doubt any more than some "public letters" would have been issued, whereas I'm sure that the opposite would have resulted in actual economic pressure from the USA against the EU/NATO country that would have dared, under any administration.
I don't see much sign of the EU becoming a Chinese vassal as in relying on it for defence in return for being told what to do. Trading with China is not the same thing.