Vice President Vance rounded out the Trump administration’s whirlwind of a week in foreign policy with his first major address to the Munich Security Conference in Germany.
Let’s start from the beginning: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, whose relative inexperience with foreign policy partly complicated his confirmation process, raised eyebrows in his first weeks on the job.
What did he say?: He said Wednesday that he does *not* believe Ukraine joining NATO is “realistic” as the Trump administration tries to negotiate an end to its war with Russia. Ukraine desperately wants to join NATO, so this would signal a major win for Russia.
He then tried to walk it back: Hegseth tried to walk back some of his comments amid global blowback. He followed up Thursday to say “everything is on the table” with regards to Russia-Ukraine negotiations.
🚨 A senior Republican senator slammed Hegseth: Republican Sen. Roger Wicker (Miss.) chided Hegseth for this comment, which he painted as a “rookie mistake.” Wicker told Politico on Friday that he was “puzzled” and “disturbed” by Hegseth’s comments.
“I don’t know who wrote the speech — it is the kind of thing Tucker Carlson could have written, and Carlson is a fool,” Wicker told Politico’s Jonathan Martin on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference. 👀
And then Vance entered the chat: Vance stepped on stage in Germany, where world leaders anxiously wanted clarity on Trump’s plan for ending the Russia-Ukraine conflict. 💻 Watch Vance’s remarks
Instead: Vance scolded Europe over its differing viewpoints from the Trump administration, slamming censorship, “mass migration” and a change in “fundamental values.”
Vance did mention Ukraine, but not on stage: He spoke with The Wall Street Journal while in Munich. He argued that his boss, President Trump, has a “broad” range of options in brokering a peace deal with Russia and Ukraine.
🔎 More from Vance’s WSJ interview
The Ukraine-Russia war isn’t the only foreign policy whiplash: Last week, President Trump floated the idea last week taking of the Gaza Strip, infuriating Middle Eastern countries and prompting international pushback from U.S. allies. His secretary of State, Marco Rubio, then walked back the president’s comments, arguing he meant to rebuild the territory, not claim it as the U.S.’s own.