An analogy struck me like a thunderbolt yesterday, and I don't know why I hadn't twigged it before. I don't know if anyone else has made the connection yet, but I haven't seen it.
Ukraine today stands much like the 300 Spartans at Thermopylae - outnumbered, outgunned, but refusing to yield. Just as the Spartans held the pass against a vastly larger Persian army, buying time for Greece to rally, Ukraine is holding the line against Russian aggression, giving Europe time to strengthen its defences.
The Spartans fought not just for survival but to protect their way of life, knowing that surrender meant subjugation. Ukraine fights with the same resolve, standing as a shield for democratic nations against an imperialist force. And just as the Greeks ultimately triumphed because of the Spartans' sacrifice, Ukraine’s resistance could be the turning point that secures Europe's future - if the remaining free world (less America) stands firm in its support. However, it will come at the cost of Ukraine, just as Thermopylae cost the Spartans.
The similarities are stark! Zelensky is the Spartan, Leonidas, valiantly defending Greece, Putin is Xerxes, an imperialist invader. Trump is the traitorous Greek, Ephialtes, who betrayed the Spartans for Persian gold (minerals).
Trump has now confirmed what anyone with a functioning brain suspected. Ukraine is on its own. Aid is cut off, the American umbrella is gone, and Europe, despite its grand speeches about self-reliance, is nowhere near ready to step in. This is not just a bad decision. It is a catastrophic one.
If Ukraine is to survive, American deterrence is essential. Without it, there is no balance of power, no deterrent against Russian aggression, no way to stop Putin from achieving exactly what he set out to do. Ukraine cannot hold the line indefinitely without US weapons, intelligence and financial backing. The war will not end because Trump declares it so. What will end is Ukraine’s ability to resist, and with that, the very notion that the West stands for anything at all. Ukraine needs artillery shells, long-range missiles, air defence systems and intelligence support. With Trump cutting aid, all of that disappears, and Ukraine is left with nothing but dwindling stockpiles and empty promises from a Europe that is still struggling to rearm.
European leaders may try to compensate, but they are not yet ready to replace the US in providing deterrence. NATO has expanded, but expansion means nothing without the military capacity to defend new members. Countries like Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania have small armed forces, and while they are committed to NATO, they cannot hold off Russia alone. NATO’s entire strategy depends on rapid US reinforcements. Without them, Eastern Europe is a paper shield, and Putin knows it. Ukraine’s fall is not an immediate certainty, but at the current trajectory, military analysts estimate that within 12 to 24 months, Russian forces will have regained sufficient strength to overwhelm Ukrainian defences.
Europe has spent the past two years scrambling to prepare for this moment, but it is nowhere near ready. Defence industries take years to ramp up, military supply chains are still tangled in bureaucracy, and half of Europe is still clinging to the idea that diplomacy can work with a man who has made it clear that he only respects force. If Europe had spent the last decade preparing for this, things might be different, but it did not. It is only now waking up to the reality that it may have to stand alone, and it does not like what it sees.
Desperate to buy time, European leaders have resorted to stroking Trump’s ego, flattering him in the hope that he will throw them a bone. It is pragmatic, but doomed. He has no loyalty beyond himself. He demands absolute sycophancy, but it never guarantees results. He rewards praise only when it benefits him, and he will turn on allies the moment it suits him to do so. Europe’s leaders can grovel all they like, but the reality is that they cannot bribe, flatter or humour him into acting against his own instincts. Macron’s failed attempts at charm diplomacy, Johnson’s awkward flattery and the EU’s repeated concessions to his trade tantrums prove that he sees admiration as an entitlement, not an incentive. If they think they can manipulate him, they have learned nothing from the last eight years.
What follows from this is entirely predictable. With Trump refusing to step up to the plate and Europe not yet ready, Ukraine’s fate is sealed. It will not be an immediate collapse. Ukraine has fought too hard for that. It will be a slow, grinding loss. First, the ammunition shortages will start to bite. Then, as Russian forces regain their strength, Ukrainian troops will be forced to retreat. Bit by bit, Russia will reclaim more land, not through a dramatic offensive, but through sheer persistence. Eventually, without the ability to sustain its war effort, Ukraine will have no choice but to accept a so-called peace deal. The kind of peace that only works for the aggressor.
Undoubtedly there will be a massive flow of refugees into Europe, one than puts the small boats into perspective. However, there will be a healthy contingent of battle-hardened troops who could bolster Europe's decimated manpower, especially as they have been trained on western weaponry.
If Ukraine falls, the consequences will not be limited to Ukraine. Russia will not stop at the Dnipro—it will push further, testing NATO’s resolve. Moldova, already partially occupied through the illegal presence of Russian troops in Transnistria, will likely be next. If NATO does not act, Russia will have carved out a path all the way to Romania’s border, positioning itself to disrupt supply lines and further weaken Western Europe’s security.
Putin will not stop there. He has no reason to. With Ukraine pacified, he will turn his attention elsewhere. Moldova is the next obvious target, but the real test will come when he starts probing NATO’s eastern flank. It will not begin with tanks rolling over borders. It will start with cyberattacks, political destabilisation, and manufactured border crises - tactics Putin has already used in Crimea, Moldova and Estonia. If NATO does not respond decisively, he will push further, testing the alliance at every step. If Trump signals that he has no intention of defending small countries in Eastern Europe, NATO’s credibility collapses.
At that point, Europe is forced into two equally appalling choices. Either it goes to war without American support, or it backs down and lets Russia take what it wants. A third option exists - massive NATO fortifications along the Polish and Baltic borders to contain Russia—but it is a last-resort strategy that leaves Ukraine permanently occupied and the alliance weakened. If NATO chooses war, it does so from a position of weakness, unprepared and divided. If it chooses appeasement, it hands Putin victory on a plate and proves that NATO is little more than a hollow shell. Either way, Russia wins.
It is at this stage that nuclear blackmail comes into play. Putin will not use nuclear weapons on the countries he wants to control. There would be no point in taking a wasteland. He will, however, threaten distant NATO members. The UK, Poland or any country he believes he can intimidate. The aim will be to paralyse NATO decision-making, to create division, fear and hesitation. Importantly, these would not be all-out nuclear war threats, but tactical nuclear strikes—small, battlefield-level detonations designed to break Western resolve. With Trump in office, Putin knows that all he needs to do is hold his nerve while the West dithers.
Of course, nothing in politics is permanent. Trump’s weakness on Russia is not America’s weakness - only his. If he is impeached, or if a Democrat wins in 2028, US policy could shift dramatically. Ukraine could receive renewed support, NATO could be reinforced, and Putin’s momentum could be stopped. But the damage done in the next four years will not be undone overnight. The question is whether Ukraine, NATO and Europe can hold out long enough to see that day come. If they cannot, history will remember Trump not as the man who saved America, but as the man who doomed the West.
Farage's denigration of a European Army looks a bit silly now..... Mind you, everything he says is silly - he's an industrial strength grievance machine with no solutions whatsoever.
I apologise for the crude image - I had to get No.1 Son to help me. If anyone can do a better one with AI, then please contact me, as this needs to go viral.