
When a man says something others don’t understand, he may be a bad communicator or else a genius. However, when he himself doesn’t realise what he is saying, concerns about his mental health are valid.
The other day, incensed that European countries seem to disagree that Trump can help himself to any piece of land he desires, he sent a message to Norway’s prime minister.
I hope he knows what he meant to say, but what he actually did say makes no sense this side of a lunatic asylum. But judge for yourself:
“Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the US.”
Others have scrutinised those claims of eight wars miraculously stopped, and discarded them. Some of those wars lasted only a few hours; some involved no fighting at all; some weren’t really stopped.
And Trump not only hasn’t stopped the most important war, one raging in the heart of Europe, but has consistently taken the aggressor’s side. Just the other day he repeated his stock idiocy that it’s Zelensky who is at fault in continuing hostilities. Why can’t the Ukraine just capitulate and adopt Putin’s ‘peace’ plan Trump has claimed for his own?
However, none of this is a sign of clinical disengagement from reality. Playing fast and loose with facts, especially for the purpose of self-aggrandisement is Trump’s stock in trade after all.
Neither does his atrocious syntax betoken psychiatric problems. All it says is that the money Trump’s Daddy paid for his expensive education was sorely squandered. But read on.
Why did Trump try to stop all those wars he never quite stopped? Was it to stop woeful bloodshed? No. Was it to pursue America’s geopolitical interests? No. Was it because Jesus said peacemakers are blessed? No.
The only way his first sentence can be read by any textual analyst is that Trump became a peacemaker solely because he wanted to win the Nobel Peace Prize. That failing, he has lost interest in peace, other than saying it’s of course still important, in general terms.
But coming to the fore now is “what is good and proper for the US”. Contextually, this means that peace is neither good nor proper for Trump’s country. Implicitly, he also bears a grudge against Norway (“your Country”), although it wasn’t the country’s government that slighted Trump so egregiously, but the Nobel Committee, established and endowed by the legacy of Alfred Nobel.
It’s true that the Peace Prize is the only one for which Norway’s government appoints judges, but they are in no way obligated to do as they are told. But this is a minor point compared to the delirious rant of Trump’s first sentence.
Yet that wasn’t all. Because of the perfidious Norwegians and generally obstreperous Europeans, Trump is ready to press his claims for Greenland. Since he is no longer committed to the cause of peace, he can grab the island the hard way, see if he cares.
Hence he is prepared further to indulge his affection for initial caps: “The World is not secure unless we have Complete and Total Control of Greenland.”
This is arrant nonsense, although one appreciates Trump’s abandoning strictly parochial concerns for the sake of global ones. It’s true that the Arctic is becoming a major arena of great-power confrontation, and it’s also true that Greenland, equidistant as it is from Russia and America, is a vital strategic hub.
But Trump doesn’t need “Complete and Total Control of Greenland” to beef up NATO’s defences in the region. Treaties that have been around for almost as long as I have allow the US to open and operate any number of bases on the island, in addition to those already there.
At the height of the Cold War, the US kept up to 15,000 soldiers on the island; now that number is 200. I’m sure Greenland, Denmark, that perfidious Norway and the rest of NATO would be perfectly happy to cooperate with the US every step of the way.
Hence my forensic investigation suggests that either Trump’s loss of touch with reality reflects a true pathology or, more sinister and more likely, he actually wants to destroy NATO. This will be an inevitable outcome of any American invasion, the end of the alliance that has kept the West safe for 80 years.
Even Trump isn’t so insane as to think America can fend for herself in this world without any help from anybody. Hence he must be looking for new alliances to replace the one he finds useless.
You aren’t winning any prizes for guessing exactly where he is looking. It was announced yesterday that Trump has invited Putin to join his Gaza ‘board of peace’. Since we already know that, because of those Norse ingrates, the Donald has lost all interest in peace, he must feel that Putin will offer some welcome counterbalance.
Now, Putin is an indicted war criminal wanted by The Hague for the atrocities his troops have committed — are continuing to commit — in the Ukraine. He is a tyrant who unleashed the only serious war in Europe since 1945, and he shows no signs of planning to end it soon, if ever.
Inviting Putin to join that ‘board of peace’, in fact using the words ‘Putin’ and ‘peace’ in the same sentence, is either a sign of mental instability or part of a general strategy. I hope it’s only the former, but fear it must be the latter.
Trump has always sensed typological proximity to Putin, something he emphatically doesn’t feel about any Western leader. Now Trump’s new step closer to Russian fascism shows he wants to drag Putin back to the top table of world politics.
Of course, there’s the little matter of the outstanding warrant for Putin’s arrest issued by the International Court of Justice. This means he could have his collar felt if he visits any country recognising the court’s authority.
I have a solution for Donald: invade The Hague and force them to revoke the warrant at gunpoint. And oh Donald, The Hague is in Holland, in case you’re wondering.
The Twenty-Fifth Amendment, anyone?








