It was last night in the United States when Russia’s Vladimir Putin delivered televised remarks, announcing his authorization of an attack on Ukraine. Just minutes later, the Russian military began a series of attacks against its neighbor, bombarding Ukraine from the air and on the ground.
The result, as NBC News noted, is one of Europe’s gravest security crises since World War II.
As the war got underway, Donald Trump appeared on Fox News to identify the real victim: himself.
“As an American, I am angry and saddened,” the former president said of the conflict. “It happened because of a rigged election.”
Yes, as a deadly international crisis unfolds, what really matters to the head of the Republican Party is his pitiful Big Lie.
In the same on-air appearance, he admonished his own country’s leaders — Trump condemned what he saw as the Biden administration’s “weakness and stupidity” — before suggesting that he believed U.S. troops were part of last night’s military offensive. It fell to Laura Ingraham to explain that it was Russians, not Americans, that had launched an amphibious attack.
It was curious to see Trump confuse the two.
To be sure, listening to the former president respond to these events was bewildering, but his petty incoherence was emblematic of a larger truth: Trump wasn’t in a position to articulate the Republican Party’s position on Russia’s attack because the Republican Party doesn’t appear to have one. As The Boston Globe’s James Pindell explained:








