Recent actions by Donald Trump, such as simulating the conquest of Greenland on the social network Truth or his comments about the Nobel Peace Prize in Norway, are viewed as mere eccentricities that conceal a much deeper threat. The author argues that dismissing these outrageous acts as consequences of personal pathologies is a superficial and overly optimistic analysis.
The goal is to undermine parliamentary democracies from within by spreading chaos and confusion, and to do so not only in the United States but throughout the world.
This strategy, detailed in the National Security Strategy document of November 2025, seeks to destroy the foundations of Western democracies established after World War II. The plan relies on sowing chaos and violating international legality so that only the law of the jungle prevails.
To achieve this, the document explicitly details Trump's support for far-right parties spreading across Europe, including groups like Vox and Aliança Catalana. The article mentions the populist leader Orriols, who recently accused Illa of receiving VIP treatment at Vall d'Hebron.
The column concludes that the real problem is not the figure of Donald Trump, but the legacy of the far-right ideologue Steve Bannon. Bannon trained European far-right leaders in a monastery in Italy during Trump's first term, and his influence will endure. When Trump is gone, other figures like J.D. Vance or Marco Rubio will take his place as the "schoolyard bully."




