>Could Poland have done what they did without Western assistance asks Zbigniew Brzezinski, Polish-born national security adviser under President Jimmy Carter and author. - "I'd have to say no."
And one of the strongest militaries in Eastern Europe with a whopping 4.7% of GDP providing an independent bulwark against Russian aggression - fulfilling the exact role that Trump claims to want in Nato.
Unfortunately, there is only a ‘treatment’ group but no control group (aka non-repeatable treatment), so it's hard to draw conclusions from it.
Also, the Poland location could be another explanation: if your neighbor is Russia, with whom you have (let’s put it mildly) a long history, but you’re also a NATO member under the U.S. nuclear umbrella, you have plenty of reasons to appreciate the aforementioned country. Disclaimer: just another possible explanation.
Certainly depends on what you mean about US interests. I'm a US citizen and am very pleased with what they have done enhancing trade, feeding people, addressing malaria and TB, education, sanitation, and lots more. It's easy to connect this with promoting democracy, paving the way for Pax Americana, and other things which are pro-American.
USAID was created by an executive order, but then established by Congress in the Foreign Affairs Reform and Restructuring Act of 1998. Simple impoundment of funds violates the Impoundment Control Act of 1974. So Trump does not have the authority to just shut down USAID.
But here's the thing. He doesn't care. He has complete immunity for it. He isn't running for re-election. He believes that it is a political advantage for his legacy. He is effectively immune from impeachment until the midterm elections. If the court orders it re-funded, he re-hydrates it under his control, and is still politically ahead. And this informs most of his executive actions.
He's eager to get before the Supreme Court and has people whispering in his ear that the Impoundment Control Act is unconstituional. I think the shock and awe campaign has politician gains at deployment and any fights can be turned to his favor in public, too. He's very good at getting people to play on his terms.
> Simple impoundment of funds violates the Impoundment Control Act of 1974. So Trump does not have the authority to just shut down USAID.
IIUC, the current administration is running with that the Impoundment Control Act itself is unconstitutional [1] so they do have authority to shut down USAID or any other congress appropriations.
This is what chatgpt suggested to make it minimal viable agency (align with aforementioned acts):
Staff: 10-50 employees, mostly in HQ
Budget: ~$1-2M for core staff & admin, rest funneled through grants
Field Presence: 1-3 priority countries, skeleton operations
Mission Execution: Reduced to policy advising, reports, & strategic partnerships
This would keep USAID legally operational while effectively neutering it.
>Could Poland have done what they did without Western assistance asks Zbigniew Brzezinski, Polish-born national security adviser under President Jimmy Carter and author. - "I'd have to say no."
Result is absolutely highest US approval of all European nations. 91% positive with miniscule 3% negative in 2022 https://www.pewresearch.org/global/2022/06/22/international-...
Clearly wasted money ...