"We respectfully suggest...,” the letter says. It was sent by a group representing more than 300 veterans of American diplomacy, intelligence and national security and addressed to the leaders of the intelligence committees in the Senate and House.
For a fleeting moment, I thought — hoped? — that I was reading a Swiftian satire in the tradition of "A Modest Proposal." Then it hit me with full force that the entreaty was dead serious and reflected what I and other observers of U.S. foreign policy under U.S. President Donald Trump have been worrying about for months.
The letter asks Congress to demand a classified intelligence assessment that answers questions such as the following: Whether America’s allies believe the U.S. remains a stable democracy; whether they regard the U.S. as a reliable partner; whether they’re hedging their security by seeking alternative alliances without the U.S.; and even whether they’re developing contingency plans for wars "in which they might, for the first time in generations, have to fight against U.S. forces if America were to align with Russia against NATO or Ukraine, for example.” Let that sink in.
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