The cobblestone streets of Brussels, often associated with bureaucratic lethargy and diplomatic finesse, have begun to pulse with a rhythm more akin to a command center than a trade hub. For decades, the European Union operated under the comforting umbrella of “The End of History,” a philosophy suggesting that economic integration and liberal democracy had rendered large-scale kinetic warfare an archaic relic. However, the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia, coupled with a dramatic shift in the geopolitical winds blowing from Washington, has shattered that complacency. Today, the continent is gripped by a singular, urgent realization: the era of peace...
Continues…