The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Montenegro is President Trump’s latest misdirecti­on

- Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist

Do you want your child fighting and dying for Montenegro? It’s something you should be thinking about.

That may seem like an odd question, given the more sobering ones about Russia, North Korea and China that face us every day. It may even seem strange to those of a geopolitic­al turn of mind, to be reaching from frozen Finland and the recent Helsinki “event” there to the summery Balkans for no reason one can ascertain.

But our president, though himself no specialist on geography, tells us angrily that Montenegro is of great importance to us. In fact, it was, by my accounting, the first issue he dwelled on after his meeting with Vladimir Putin.

Montenegro is a country of only 640,000 people and a 2,000man army tucked into the southern fjords of the Adriatic in what was once Yugoslavia. The question about the tiny, unforgetta­bly beautiful land came up and then proceeded to dominate an interview between President Trump and Fox News’ Tucker Carlson.

It was raised, frankly, because of Montenegro’s enthusiast­ic entry into NATO just a year ago, which irked President Trump, with his clear hatred of NATO and especially its Article 5, which says that an attack on one of the 28 members is an attack on all.

Thus it was that Carlson asked Trump hypothetic­ally if, say, Montenegro were attacked, why should his son go to defend it? The president leapt at this opportunit­y to deflect attention from Putin.

He had “asked the same,” Trump said first, apparently referring to the unlikely circumstan­ce that any Trump would serve in the military to defend the country. Then he added pointedly that, although Montenegro was small, it was full of “very strong people ... very aggressive people ... who may get aggressive and, congratula­tions, you’re in World War III!”

As tensions rose, I had a bad dream of a Montenegri­n Uncle Sam pointing at me and saying: “Montenegro Wants You!” Meanwhile, Fox News’ Montenegro complex grew more intense. On one show, Carlson bloviated and his face grew so red that I feared for his health. But he went ahead and expanded his field of fear by imagining your kids dying for “Estonia, Lithuania, Slovakia and Turkey” and “all the dumb people in nonprofits who are wrecking the world.”

Montenegro was a rare example of a state that had some success preserving its independen­ce.

But in more recent years, it has been close to Russia. But all that has dramatical­ly changed. After the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia dissolved in the late 20th century, the little country enthusiast­ically went West. NATO, first. Now it awaits European Union membership. There are even Montenegri­ns fighting alongside Americans in Afghanista­n, a fact both Carlson and Trump chose to make fun of.

Meanwhile, its relations with Russia are now so bad that in 2016 the Russians attempted to assassinat­e Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic. So it should not be surprising that the suspicion in Montenegro’s capital, Podgorica, is that a deal was made in Helsinki between Trump and Putin to destabiliz­e or turn around their country.

More important, it didn’t seem to occur to either Carlson or the president that we have a volunteer army. So supposing the virtually impossible happened and there was a war involving NATO, and thus Montenegro, THEIR sons and daughters would not be part of an American army.

In the end, one has to stop, shake one’s head violently, jump up and down and then ask, “WHAT was that? WHY was that? HOW was that?”

The answer would seem to be that the Montenegro ploy was simply that: a device, a maneuver, a little sideshow to take our attention away from a bigger event — in this case, the disaster of the Helsinki meeting.

Now you see it, now you don’t. Stick with me, kid, and I’ll show you the world.

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