USA TODAY International Edition

Victory is just 3 weeks away

As 2020 and Trump exit, stay strong

- Tom Nichols Tom Nichols, a senior adviser to The Lincoln Project and a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs, is the author of “Our Own Worst Enemy,” coming in August.

In 1990, President George H. W. Bush faced a decision about going to war against Iraq after the surprise invasion of Kuwait in August. Victory was never in doubt, but it would still be a momentous step to take the United States and its allies into a conflict with what was then a significant military power.

As Bush weighed his options that summer, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher warned him in a phone call that “this is no time to go wobbly.”

Three decades later, this is still good advice. Americans face enemies both from within and from abroad. The country is being ravaged by a pandemic that has killed 1,000 times as many Americans as died in Operation Desert Storm, and at its worst has reached 9/ 11 levels of deaths almost daily. The Russians are plowing through the cyber defenses of multiple U. S. agencies. Congress could barely agree to send a pittance of relief to people facing cold, hunger and eviction.

And the president of the United States, instead of defending us from physical and virtual threats, has become an enemy of our people, our democracy and of our Constituti­on. He vetoed funding for the Department of Defense and threatened to stop the COVID- 19 relief package before signing it Sunday night. He has used the Oval Office as a command center for meetings with seditious kooks and conspiracy cranks as he plots a military interventi­on against individual American states to punish them for having the temerity to insult his fragile and sociopathi­c ego.

Down with the mad king

This is no time for Americans to go wobbly. Trump is trying to unnerve the nation in order to prepare us for yet more outrages, right to the last day of his term. But the new year is in sight and victory, as it was in 1991, is not in doubt. The worst thing now is for us to give in to our fears, or to begin bickering among ourselves, when we are so close to overcoming the terrible year we are about to leave behind.

The American people have much for which to be grateful as 2020 draws to a close. Despite the utter incompeten­ce of the Trump administra­tion and its war on science, actual scientists around the world worked together to create a vaccine in record time and shots are already in the arms of our first responders. We have been attacked by the Russians and other malefactor­s before, but competent profession­als are working to shore up our defenses.

Most important, America has a president- elect waiting to take the stage. Joe Biden is a decent man with long experience in national affairs. There’s no doubt he’ll be sworn in and Trump will leave 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, either by his own volition or escorted out by the Secret Service.

Still, we are saddled with this mad king for three more weeks, and Trump can still add to the incalculab­le damage he has already inflicted. Among the things we must be ready to face before Biden arrives are the possibilit­y of a showdown between the White House and the U. S. military — a once unthinkabl­e propositio­n — as well as any number of legal and political nightmares that Trump could trigger with his band of Acting Nobodies. He’s still the commander in chief, and because the Republican­s have shown not one iota of courage in opposing his schemes, he could even launch a military conflict.

There is no point in dwelling on our anxieties, though. This moment, and a better American future, calls for stoicism and resolve.

Help has arrived to defeat the coronaviru­s; it is now up to each of us to assist our medical profession­als in maintainin­g pandemic protocols while the vaccines make their way through the country. Help, such as it is, has been approved by Congress; meanwhile, it is up to each of us to ensure the well- being of our friends and neighbors as best we can. And help has arrived via the ballot box; it is up to each of us to set our faces resolutely against the rage of Trump’s soon- to- be- exiled minions and his fanatical loyalists among us.

Reckoning ahead for Trumpers

Ignore Trump’s talk of coups. The courts, the military and the other institutio­ns of American democracy are stressed and damaged but will hold against a rogue president.

Ignore the pardons of criminals and cronies. They are meant only to distract us from Trump’s many other abuses of power and the worse pardons yet to come of the Trump inner circle.

Ignore all of it — but remember the names of the people who have defended this lunacy or who have stayed silent when it was their duty to speak out. The day will come to hold them accountabl­e at the ballot box, in congressio­nal hearings and in the court of public opinion.

It is a reckoning for warmer days and better times, all of which will be here soon. The brightest festivals of winter are upon us, and we should celebrate while leaving Trump to stew and plot in the White House when he should be packing and looking for a new home.

We should be grateful for our democracy and those who still defend it, both in uniform and in the halls of our legal system. We should be grateful that our basic freedoms are still intact after the worst sustained assault from within since the days of Joseph McCarthy and J. Edgar Hoover. And we should be grateful for the Constituti­on, the wise requiremen­ts of which will force Donald Trump out the White House door and into the street on Jan. 20.

Stand fast and show faith in our traditions and our institutio­ns. It is within our power to make the new year a better one — but only if we decide not to go wobbly.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Marine One over the White House in October.
WIN MCNAMEE/ GETTY IMAGES Marine One over the White House in October.

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