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14 Feb, 2025 12:52

Vance compares EU politicians to Soviet leaders

Censorship disguised as anti-disinfo is not a good response to shifting public sentiment, the US vice president has argued
Vance compares EU politicians to Soviet leaders

US Vice President J.D. Vance has blasted mainstream politicians in the EU for adopting a “Soviet-style vocabulary” to suppress dissent. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal published on Thursday, Vance criticized EU elites for their failure to recognize the widening gap between their views and those of ordinary citizens on issues such as migration. 

Rather than confronting these challenges, he claimed, they prefer to censor opposing voices, framing it as a fight against “disinformation or misinformation.”

Critics of the EU's leadership have drawn similar parallels for years. In 2016, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov accused Brussels of pressuring member states to use accusatory language towards Moscow. He said that some governments resisted “blind obedience” and considered the situation “absurd,” adding: “Much like the USSR in the past, the EU prioritizes ideological doctrine over the core economic interests of its member states.”

Other EU leaders have echoed the sentiments. In 2023, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban described the bloc as “a poor contemporary parody” of the USSR, claiming its leaders seek to dominate Eastern European countries as Moscow did during the Cold War.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has described discontent in the EU as reflective of broader issues in the West, rooted in US arrogance and self-proclamation as an “indispensable nation” entitled to intervene globally and manipulate allies. During a 2023 press conference, he remarked that the USSR had made similar mistakes, but Russia “has long recognized that such policies were misguided and only escalated tensions.”

Elon Musk, appointed by President Donald Trump as US government efficiency tsar, acknowledged this week that Washington has been too “pushy.” Speaking to an international audience at the World Government Summit in Dubai, he stated that the new administration has “less interest in interfering with the affairs of other countries” than its predecessors.

Basically, America should mind its own business rather than push forward regime change all over the place.

Musk’s comments came as the Trump administration signals its intent to reduce involvement in the Ukraine conflict and seal a possible peace deal with Russia, with European allies envisaged taking charge afterward.

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