Vice President JD Vance Turns on European Allies in Blistering Speech Downplaying Threats From Russia and China

J.D. Vance lambasted European leaders for “running in fear” of their own voters on Feb. 15, 2025, in Munich, Germany. (Leah Millis / Reuters via CNN Newsource) J.D. Vance lambasted European leaders for “running in fear” of their own voters on Feb. 15, 2025, in Munich, Germany. (Leah Millis / Reuters via CNN Newsource)

Munich, Germany (CNN) — U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance vented at European leaders Friday, telling them that the biggest threat to their security was “from within,” rather than China and Russia.

Vance used his first major speech as vice president to lambast European politicians for suppressing free speech, losing control of immigration and refusing to work with hard-right parties in government.

The audience at the Munich Security Conference was expecting to hear about the Trump administration’s plans to end the war in Ukraine, but instead were treated to a bombastic rejection of liberal orthodoxies that have prevailed in Western Europe since the Second World War, in a speech that downplayed the threats to the continent posed by Russia and China.

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“The threat that I worry most about vis-a-vis Europe is not Russia, not China, it’s not any other external actor. What I worry about is the threat from within, the retreat of Europe from some of its most fundamental values,” Vance told a stone-faced audience.

The vice president — due to meet Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shortly at the conference — said “shutting down” unorthodox viewpoints is the “most surefire way to destroy democracy,” and called on European leaders – who have been elected by their respective peoples – to “embrace what your people tell you.”

“If American democracy can survive 10 years of Greta Thunberg scolding, you guys can survive a few months of Elon Musk,” he said.

Vance listed a string of what he cast as an oppressive European responses to political expression, from the United Kingdom arresting a man for praying near an abortion clinic to Sweden convicting an anti-Islam campaigner for burning Korans in public.

While many had expected the vice president to echo Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s calls for European countries to hike their defense spending as a precondition for continued American support, Vance’s message was blunter: “If you are running in fear of your own voters, there is nothing America can do for you.”

Strikingly, Vance compared today’s democratically elected European leaders to the tyrants that led swaths of the continent during the Cold War.

He zeroed in on a decision by Romania’s constitutional court to cancel the country’s presidential election last year, after its intelligence service uncovered a campaign “coordinated by a state actor” to help elect Calin Georgescu, an ultranationalist virtually unknown before the election who unexpectedly won the first-round vote.

“When we see European courts canceling elections and senior officials threatening to cancel others, we need to ask whether we’re holding ourselves to an appropriately high standard,” Vance said.

Vance asked “what happened to some of the Cold War’s winners,” suggesting they had abandoned the values that allied them to prevail against “tyrannical forces” on the continent.

“Consider the side in that fight that censored dissidents, that closed churches, that canceled elections. Were they the good guys? Certainly not. And thank God, they lost the Cold War. They lost because they neither valued nor respected all of the extraordinary blessings of liberty,” he said.

Notably, Vance did not criticize countries like Russia and Belarus, which have been ruled by the same leaders for decades and allow only stage-managed elections.

The vice president said he “understands” the argument that Romania canceled its election – which has been rescheduled for May – because “Russian disinformation had infected” the electoral process, but said European leaders needed to get some “perspective.”

“If your democracy can be destroyed with a few hundred thousand dollars of digital advertising from a foreign country, then it wasn’t very strong to begin with,” he said.

Vance said that Europe’s assaults on free speech extended into the digital realm, claiming that leaders had “threatened and bullied social media companies to censor so-called misinformation,” citing the example of the Covid-19 lab leak theory.

“It looks more and more like old entrenched interest, hiding behind ugly, Soviet-era words like misinformation and disinformation, who simply don’t like the idea that somebody with an alternative viewpoint might express a different opinion,” he added.

Speaking in Munich a day after a 24-year-old Afghan asylum seeker drove a car into a crowd in the same city, injuring at least 36 people, Vance said the attack showed the “horrors wrought by” Europe’s migration policies.

“No voter on this continent went to the ballot box to open the floodgates to millions of unvetted immigrants,” Vance said, paying tribute to the victims of Thursday’s attack.

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