No More Coalition Of The Willing
There's a dog that isn't barking here, and nobody, at least at Real Clear Politics, seems to have noticed. Just to be sure I wasn't completely out of touch with conventional wisdom, I asked Chrome AI Mode, "Has Russia previously objected to US aggressive moves in Iran, Cuba, and Venezuela? Is there currently a difference?" It replied,PM Starmer just killed the UK-US "Special Relationship. demoting the UK to the status of unreliable US allies like Turkey. https://t.co/9qRiFVDQ2i
— Trent Telenko (@TrentTelenko) February 19, 2026
Yes, Russia has a long history of objecting to U.S. "aggressive moves"—including sanctions, military threats, and diplomatic pressure—in Iran, Cuba, and Venezuela. Traditionally, Moscow has used these nations as strategic partners to counter U.S. global influence.
However, there is currently a significant difference in how Russia responds to these moves: while its rhetoric remains sharply critical, its practical ability to intervene has diminished due to its prioritization of the war in Ukraine.
It gives only one useful link, to a January 15, 2025 piece at the Institute for the Study of War, although the ISW has been consistently wrong on Ukraine:
Russian President Vladimir Putin and official Kremlin mouthpieces have yet to address the situation in Venezuela as of the time of this writing, however. The lack of a coherent official Kremlin response, taken in tandem with the boilerplate Russian diplomatic responses, suggests that Putin has made the official decision to remain mute on the recent situation in Venezuela.
. . . Russia’s response to developments in Venezuela parallel Russian responses to the joint US/Israeli strikes on Iran in June 2025 — highlighting a continuity in Russian foreign policy decision-making over the backdrop of the war in Ukraine since Trump took office in January 2025. . . . ISW notably assessed at the time that Russia’s response options to the Israel-Iran war were limited both by material constraints due to the war in Ukraine and by political constraints due to Russia’s desire to court the Trump Administration in the hopes of forcing the United States to end, or severely downgrade, its support for Ukraine.
In other words, Putin is tacitly giving Trump a free hand vis-s-vis what were previously vital Russian interests in Iran, Venezuela, and Cuba, because he apparently has little choice. For that matter, he has also said the US's proposed acquisition of Greenland "is of no concern to us whatsoever".
Putin, addressing the matter for the first time in public, signalled that Russia would not object to Trump's push to control Greenland, which he speculated may be worth nearly $1 billion.
"What happens in Greenland is of no concern to us whatsoever," Putin told a meeting of Russia's Security Council.
On the other hand, US NATO allies have been diverging from US policy primarily due to the Ukraine war. This summary of the 2026 US National Defense Strategy carries key points of disagreement:
The NDS and accompanying remarks by U.S. officials emphasize a homeland-centric defense posture that puts defending American territory and the Western Hemisphere first. “The U.S. military’s foremost priority is to defend the U.S. Homeland,” the strategy declares, including by securing borders, countering narco-terrorism, and protecting U.S. airspace.
. . . Ultimately, the 2026 NDS forces a reckoning on both sides of the Atlantic. The United States is redefining leadership as selective engagement rather than permanent guardianship. Europe must decide whether it is prepared to act as a genuine security provider in its own region—or whether it will continue to rely on assumptions that Washington has now explicitly disavowed.
UK Prime Minister Starmer's refusal to allow use of US bases in UK territory to support an attack on Iran is to some extent reflective of this new autonomous NATO reality. On the other hand, Starmer's own position within his government is uncertain following the Mandelson-Epstein scandal, and the expectation is that he will turn more to the left and appease his Muslim base to stay in office; the protests within and outside Iran are seen as explicitly anti-Muslim, as woulld be any potential US military action. Starmer wants to be seen as opposing this.But the problems with the UK extend beyond Starmer. The arrest of former Prince Andrew poses difficult questions for the future of the monarchy. Chrome AI Mode gave me an intriguing set of possible outcomes if public sentiment moves toward removing it:
Only the UK Parliament has the supreme power to abolish the monarchy. This would involve passing a Monarchy Abolition Act (or similar legislation) by a simple majority in the House of Commons.
This would be a much lower standard than the supermajorities needed to remove a president in the US via either impeachment or the 25th Amendment, which suggests the potential for political instability that could result. But the UK, unlike the US, has no written constitution under which such a major change could take place, which raises the next question:
Parliament would need to draft a new formal constitution to clarify who holds executive authority and how a new head of state (likely a President) would be appointed.
Consider the other issues that would immediately come up in a de novo UK constitutional convention. The Church of England would likely be disestablished, but what would be Muslim demands for establshing Islam or Sharia law? But for that matter, the UK monarch currently has almost no political power. What sort of power would a potential UK president hold? Little more than a king, I would think.With the reduction of power in the House of Lords in the 1999 House of Lords Act, it's not unreasonable to anticipate that a new written UK constitution would emulate the rest of Europe and abolish the nobility as a constitutional entity, so no more House of Lords at all. Thus the UK becomes much more politically unstable, dominated by a large and vocal Muslim minority. What kind of an ally would this be? The UK is closer to the brink than we might imagine, and this could be a harbinger of greater European collapse.
The only reassuring part of this scenario is that Trump and Rubio appear to be fully aware of these possibilities. The global balance has already shifted, with Russia and Europe both largely out of the equation, while growing European weakness suggests Russia could become the dominant continental power. This may be the basis of the strategy Putin is following with Trump.



