In the shadow of Carl Schmitt: Putin and Trump’s ideas on the division of Europe

Over the heads of the Europeans, Trump and Putin are currently trying to divide up not only Ukraine, but also the dominance of “Greater Europe” between them. It is high time for the EU to enter the negotiations forcefully and with a clear concept. Germany must play a prominent role alongside France and Poland as soon as possible, including militarily, demands former German diplomat Johannes Regenbrecht. He analyzes the traditions of thought that guide Trump and Putin and which need to be understood in order to decisively oppose their plans.
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1. What connects Carl Schmitt, Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump?
Two major powers, the USA and Russia, are negotiating the future of Ukraine in Riyadh. Ukraine is not at the table. Europe is left out. Are we witnessing a return to the politics of the great powers as in the 19th century? A comparison with the three allied victorious powers — Russia, the USA and Great Britain — who delineated spheres of influence and interests in Yalta in February 1945, seems more relevant than the cabinet policy of the princes of Europe.[1] However, with the difference that there is (still) no “victorious power” at present — in view of hundreds of thousands of dead and injured, devastated cities and landscapes, a demolished security order in Europe and the fact that Putin has not yet achieved any of his war aims despite his gigantic military machine. However, President Trump’s actions are likely to put Putin on the podium of victory.
An important ideological driving force and pioneer for Putin’s geopolitical thinking in large areas and spheres of influence is Carl Schmitt (1888–1985), the German professor of constitutional law and apologist for international law of National Socialist Germany.
“The liberal idea of freedom in Western democracy is now historically outdated.” (Carl Schmitt 1939)[2]
Schmitt is regarded as a reactionary teacher for autocrats, but also as an original thinker on the philosophy of the state and a cultural critic.[3] As part of a “Schmitt renaissance” in the face of increased receptiveness to conservative thinking worldwide and the rise of right-wing populist movements, he is being intensively studied, particularly in Russia[4] , but also in the USA[5] . Rhetorical set pieces and thought patterns can be traced back to Schmitt in both Putin and Trump.
“... authority proves that it does not need to be right in order to be right.” (Carl Schmitt 1922)[6]
“Judges aren’t allowed to control the executive’s legitimate power.” (JD Vance)[7]
The similarities are striking but are not surprising because Schmitt’s theses are ideally suited to populist narratives due to their polemical exaggeration.[8]
“...the ‘rule of law’ ... means nothing other than the legitimization of a certain status quo...” (Carl Schmitt 1932)[9]
“He who saves his Country does not violate any Law.” (Donald Trump about Elon Musk)[10]
Essentially, there are five core theses from Schmitt’s oeuvre that are reflected in both Trump and Putin:
- The opposition of friend and foe as the essence of the political.
- “Sovereign is he who decides on the state of exception”[11]: The exception is the finest hour for disruptive rule-breakers and protagonists of a “revolution from above”, in the USA Trump with the advocates of the “unitary executive theory”, in Russia Putin and the architects of his dictatorship.
- Anti-liberal thinking directed against multilateralism and a rules-based international order, which is defamed as a “tyranny of values”[12].
- Definition of geopolitical “Greater Spaces” instead of a universal order under international law with the establishment of a strategic balance of a few great powers that divide the world among themselves, according to Schmitt a “Greater Space order under international law with a ban on intervention by powers outside the region”[13]. Trump and Putin are likely to share the basic idea but differ in their interpretation. Naturally, Putin emphasizes the concept of a “multipolar” world with Russia as a great power[14]. With his claims to Gaza and Greenland, Trump is circumventing the pure Schmittian doctrine of the “prohibition of intervention by powers outside the region”[15].
- A few great powers (Schmitt: “empires”, Putin “civilizations”) are at the core of the large areas they dominate. They are the only relevant subjects of international law with the exclusive right to define friend or foe and determine war and peace, to control the foreign and security policy alliances of the states in their sphere of influence, and the bearers of a political idea that permeates their own geopolitical hemisphere. [16]
In Putin’s case, there is evidence of a large number of statements and actions over the long period since he came to power a quarter of a century ago, which take up Schmitt’s theses, but are situational and context-related and also refer to a wealth of other sources and role models.[17] With Trump, unlike Putin, “no truly coherent geopolitical strategy” is discernible. He is still in “disruption mode” without a systematic agenda[18]. However, it is also true that Trump is “prepared, aggressive, strategic” in the early phase of his second term as president, he wants a “brute revision of America’s internal constitution, its enemies and friends”.[19] Especially when disruption is the mode and permanent polarization the script for Trump’s daily actions, Schmitt’s “state of exception” and his friend-enemy opposition as the essence of the political come in handy as explanatory patterns.
It is therefore worth discussing possible overlaps, but also differences, in Putin’s and Trump’s foreign policy concepts with the help of Schmitt’s terminology with a view to a ceasefire arrangement for Ukraine. To what extent do Putin’s war aims and his concept for the “reorganization of Europe” presented in December 2021[20] reflect Schmitt’s ideas? Which elements are negotiable for him with regard to the demarcation and organization of the Russian “greater space”, and which are not? How do Trump’s ideas relate to this? Does a look through the prism of the “Greater Space Order theory” help explain Trump’s departure from the initially envisaged “peace through strength” approach[21] for Ukraine and his scandalous swing towards Putin’s position even before the start of negotiations?
2. Russia and the “Greater Space Order”
On April 1, 1939, Schmitt gave a lecture in Kiel, published under the unwieldy title “Greater Spatial Order under International Law with Prohibition of Intervention by Powers Foreign to Space. A contribution to the concept of empire in international law”. The occasion was the 25th anniversary of the Institute for Politics and International Law at the local university. A few days before the speech, on March 15, the Wehrmacht had invaded Czechoslovakia in breach of the Munich Agreement[22] concluded just a few months earlier, on September 29, 1938. NSDAP member and anti-Semite Schmitt used the occasion to campaign in Kiel for the German “right of protection for German ethnic groups of foreign nationality”[23] invented by Hitler as a pretext for the occupation of independent states in violation of international law. Hitler’s so-called “destruction of the rest of Czechoslovakia” laid the appeasement policy of Great Britain and France in ruins and finally buried the European post-war order since 1918/19. The incorporation of the neighboring country in the southeast was the last military milestone before Nazi Germany’s campaign of conquest and annihilation, which began with the invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939.
Shortly before, on August 24, 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union had concluded a non-aggression treaty. As a reminder: In the secret additional protocol to the Hitler-Stalin Pact, both dictators had agreed to divide Poland, the Baltic states and Bessarabia into German and Soviet spheres of interest in the event of “territorial-political transformations”. Today, unlike the Soviet Union in the past, Russia no longer denies the agreement with Nazi Germany with the aim of dismembering and dividing up sovereign states in violation of international law. However, Putin justifies it as an act of legitimate protection of a “surrounded” Soviet Union, claims that Poland is also to blame for the Second World War and even goes so far as to claim that the Baltic states voluntarily joined the Soviet Union in the fall of 1939.[24]
From this historical distortion on the 75th anniversary of the victory in the “Great Patriotic War” in 2020, a straight line leads to Putin’s essay “On the historical unity of Russians and Ukrainians 2021”[25], in which he denies Ukraine an independent historical-cultural identity and reduces it to a function of Russia, to the Russian president’s TV address on Day 1 of the major Russian attack on Ukraine on 24 February 2022. In it, he accuses the West of aggressive and unilateral action against Russia, above all by expanding NATO eastwards (despite the alleged promise not to move the alliance “one inch” eastwards) and accuses it of creating an “anti-Russia that is hostile to us” in Ukraine, on “Russia’s historic land”. In addition, Putin claims that the West is attempting to “destroy our traditional values and impose its pseudo-values on us”, leading to “decay and degeneration”. Putin thus stylized the war of aggression against Ukraine as an act of legitimate self-defence against a threat that was putting “our future as a nation”, indeed “the existence of the state and its sovereignty”, at risk. He adds that Moscow has no right to repeat its grave historical mistake, which consisted of waiting for the German invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941 with a policy of appeasement. [26]
This is where Carl Schmitt comes into play again, one of the most important intellectual godfathers of Putin’s thinking in geopolitical spaces and spheres of interest. Schmitt’s thinking is based on three premises:
- The old European order, based on sovereign states with equal rights and a rules-based order, has finally come to an end;
- the nation state as the sole embodiment of political unity and holder of the monopoly on political decision-making has had its day;
- any “cosmopolitan”-universalist alternative to the nation state (“world government”) would, however, only conceal the actual power politics of a hegemon. [27]
Schmitt postulates a multipolar world dominated by hegemonic superpowers as a “new spatial order”. He speaks out against the globalization of US ideals and norms. This leads to the collapse of spatial borders and contradicts the “idea of spatial demarcation”.[28] In other words, for Schmitt, the post-political idea of cosmopolitan global governance is the opposite of international order, which is constituted by large areas divided and separated from one another under international law between major powers .[29]
Schmitt’s theories form the breeding ground for perception of the USA as a unilateralist, monopolistic superpower with a hypocritical façade as a champion of human rights and a rules-based order that has been emerging in Russia since the early 2000s. With the start of Putin’s third term in office in 2012, his Greater Russia theory became the mainstream of foreign and security policy thinking in Moscow. The most important transmission belt for Schmitt’s thinking is Alexander Dugin, ultranationalist political philosopher, chief ideologue of the Russian New Right and advocate of “Eurasian imperialism”. He is regarded as Putin’s “mastermind” or “whisperer” — with high-ranking connections to Washington and even to Trump’s close circle.[30] Dugin, for whom Schmitt’s Greater Space Theory is the “most reliable platform for a multipolar world, for anti-globalism and the national liberation struggle against global American domination[31], calls for the creation of a “new Eurasian empire”. Justification: The “existence of the Russian people as an organic, historical entity” is unthinkable without “empire building”. Any attempt to reduce Russia to the status of a regional power or a European nation state would mean suicide for the Russian people.[32] Dugin thus applies the concept of empire to Russia, which Schmitt defines as follows:
“Empires in this sense are the leading and supporting powers whose political idea radiates into a certain large area (Grossraum) and which fundamentally exclude the intervention of foreign powers in this large area.” (Carl Schmitt) [33]
The core meaning of the Monroe Doctrine for “Greater America” is
“...a genuine principle of a greater space, namely the combination of a politically awakened people, a political idea and a greater space that is politically dominated by this idea and excludes foreign intervention...this core, the idea of a greater space order under international law, is transferable to other spaces, other historical situations and other friend-foe groupings.” (Carl Schmitt)[34]
Against this backdrop, Dugin identifies four global metropolitan areas or “empires” (in Schmitt’s diction, “realms”): The Atlantic Greater Space around the USA, the Asian Greater Space around China, the European Greater Space, and finally the Eurasian Greater Space around Russia. The latter three areas should expand, while the American “empire” should withdraw with its globalization claims.[35] Russia had to be the center of power in its own hemisphere and form a strong counterweight to the other metropolitan areas around the USA and China. Alexei Drobinin, head of the foreign policy planning department at the Russian Foreign Ministry, draws the circle of great powers or what he calls “civilizations” wider than Dugin, including the global South. According to him, a “civilization” must fulfil three criteria: firstly, the capability and will to carry out a sovereign and independent domestic and foreign policy; secondly, comprehensive economic, military, demographic, scientific and technological potential; thirdly, an “authentic philosophy of development” with its own cultural and spiritual potential and its own “signature vision” of international politics. These criteria were met by “civilization-states” or “civilizational commonwealths” such as Russia, China, India, Southeast Asia (ASEAN community), the Arab world and the Muslim Ummah, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean and the “Western civilization” with its Anglo-American and European components. [36]
Schmitt defines states that stand in the shadow of empires and are located in their metropolitan areas as entities with limited sovereignty and a lack of subjectivity under international law, without the power to differentiate between friend and foe (and therefore without the ability to shape their own policies) and without the right to join international alliances. The claim by Vladislav Surkov, deputy head of the Kremlin administration at the time and Putin’s Ukraine envoy from 2013–2020, that states like Ukraine have never been sovereign on a single day of their existence, fits in with this. [37]
In summary, the Russian political elite around Putin agrees on the following four core elements that define Russia as a great power:
- Russia does not define itself within its borders as a nation state, but draws its identity as a hegemonic power from a larger space that transcends its own borders;
- Russia thus exercises power over states with limited sovereignty within its metropolitan area;
- Russia is the protagonist of a political “idea” that “unites” the peoples in its metropolitan area;
- the Russian metropolitan area is exclusive, a military presence of third powers is inadmissible.[38]
However, there is an inherent contradiction in this structure, which is conceptually already present in Schmitt.[39] It is about the effectiveness or scope of the “political idea”, which, according to Schmitt, must always remain “bound” to its respective space and must not become universal. The claim of universality of human rights, for example, is an expression of “imperialism” and could turn into a global “tyranny of values”, which would lead to the breaking of spatial borders and thus to the collapse of the international legal order. [40]
It was precisely along these lines that Putin argued in his memorable speech at the Munich Security Conference on February 10, 2007, accusing the West of misusing the OSCE to interfere in the internal affairs of Russia and other countries under the pretext of protecting human rights, “in order to impose on these states how they should live and develop.”[41] This narrative, often coupled with the accusation of applying “double standards” (such as “selective” verification of compliance with human rights and fundamental freedoms only “east of Vienna”), has been for a long time a common thread running through discussions in the OSCE Permanent Council in Vienna or other relevant dialog forums with Russia.
At the same time, however, Russia is using the “Russian values” revived under Putin, a combination of traditional Christian family values, the symbiosis of the state and the Russian Orthodox Church[42] and the concept of a “strong”, authoritarian state as a bulwark against regime change and “color revolutions”, as instruments of criticism of the “West” and its alleged “moral decadence”. This also involves the massive use of social media to divide Western societies, strengthen right-wing populist movements[43] and undermine the political systems in the West. Russia thus contradicts itself when, on the one hand, it does everything in its power to enforce “Russian values” globally, while on the other hand questioning the validity of universal values such as human rights and fundamental freedoms with reference to Russia’s alleged special historical and cultural position and its sphere of interest. For this reason, Putin’s justification for claiming Moscow’s exclusive right to determine the internal constitution and foreign policy orientation of Ukraine (protection of the “Russian idea” from the negative influence of “hostile powers”) lacks any credibility.
3. Putin, Trump and the Ukraine negotiations
Against the background of Schmitt’s Greater Space Theory, it becomes crystal clear what Putin wants:
- The “restoration” or “completion” of the “Greater Russia” on the territory of the Soviet Union
- Limited sovereignty for Ukraine as part of the “Greater Russia”. Right of veto for Russia in the choice of foreign policy alliances and the application of external security guarantees by Ukraine. Influence or even military presence of “external powers” is undesirable. From Moscow’s point of view, NATO membership is therefore out of the question. An EU accession process, on the other hand, can be negotiated.
- Neutral, non-aligned status with permanent renunciation of nuclear weapons. At best, the military should be reduced to a minimum that could not offer Russia any serious resistance.
- Mutation of Ukraine from an “anti-Russia” into a vassal of Moscow. Selensky resigns as “illegitimate leader” in favor of a Russia-friendly president before a ceasefire agreement is signed.
- Overcoming the schism of Russian Orthodoxy in order to make Ukraine a loyal supporter and bearer of the “Russian idea” that permeates the greater Russian region. This is one of Putin’s central political concerns. “Reunification” of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU) (independent since 2019) with the Russian Orthodox Church, whereby the OCU is to be subordinated to the Moscow Patriarchate.
- In Putin’s imperial view, Ukraine, as the cradle of Kyiv Rus, is the most important member of the Russian Greater Region (Russky Mir), without — with the exception of Crimea — having to be part of the territory of the Russian Federation. As long as Ukraine as a whole submits to all the aforementioned demands, territorial claims to parts of its territory do not play a decisive role.
- Formation of a cordon sanitaire of states without the presence of troops from NATO third countries to guarantee the integrity of the Greater Russia area. The Russian draft agreement sent to NATO on December 17, 2021 stipulates that the “old” NATO states (as of May 27, 1997, the date of the NATO-Russia Founding Act) undertake not to station armed forces and armaments in other European states, including the 16 “new” NATO member states (Art. 4). This would mean, for example, the withdrawal of the Bundeswehr brigade from Lithuania. Additional expansion of NATO must be stopped (Art. 6). NATO states may not conduct any military activities on the territory of Ukraine, other states in Eastern Europe, the Southern Caucasus and Central Asia (Art. 7). [44]
The following are therefore non-negotiable for Russia
- Exclusion of NATO accession and “neutralization” of Ukraine
- Subordination of Ukrainian domestic and foreign policy to Russia, Moscow’s say in external security guarantees
- Ending or at least substantially reducing the NATO troop presence in Eastern Europe.
These are Putin’s central war aims. Putin currently rejects the deployment of foreign troops, including from EU states, as a security guarantee for Ukraine. However, it cannot be ruled out that he could ultimately agree to a “manageable” EU military presence (but not US troops!) west of Dnipro and possibly Chinese troops not far from the front line.
Putin is unlikely to back down on his territorial claims in the upcoming negotiations. Moscow declared the Ukrainian territories of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Luhansk and Donetsk to be part of the Russian Federation by law in October 2022, although Russia has so far only occupied parts of these territories in violation of international law. Russia “needs” its troops there to be able to escalate the conflict again at any time, even after a ceasefire in order to keep Ukraine and Europe under pressure. Nevertheless, a negotiation scenario is conceivable in which Putin could be “flexible” with regard to Kherson or Zaporizhia (or parts thereof), depending on what he is “offered” in return. The prerequisite for any reduction in Moscow’s territorial claims is that Ukraine, from Putin’s point of view, is irrevocably “integrated” into the Russian orbit.
Against this backdrop, what does Trump’s shift from a “peace through strength” approach to a policy of appeasement, which relinquishes almost all negotiating positions ab initio, mean? Until recently the approach of his Ukraine envoy, retired General Keith Kellogg, was considered a foregone conclusion:
- Continued military support for Ukraine by the USA,
- Ukraine’s participation in peace talks,
- Postponement (“to put off”) of NATO membership for an extended period in exchange for a comprehensive and verifiable peace settlement with security guarantees,
- Creation of a demilitarized zone to secure the ceasefire.[45]
Instead, Trump has now fully toed Putin’s line, with the exception of the deployment of European troops in Ukraine, which Moscow rejects:
- Peace talks until further notice only at the level of the “superpowers” USA and Russia, negotiations are being conducted over the heads of Ukraine and the EU.
- Refusal of Ukraine’s accession to NATO.
- Adoption of Putin’s rhetoric, discrediting the President of Ukraine as a “dictator without elections” and blaming Kyiv for starting the conflict (“You should never have started it”, as he said).
- Taking advantage of Ukraine’s wartime distress to achieve a “rare earth minerals deal”,
- Undermining the hitherto large majority within the UN framework in condemning Russia as an aggressor,bypassing the General Assembly and adopting a gutted, pro-Moscow Ukraine resolution together with Russia in the Security Council on February 24 this year. [46]
What explains this devastating shift in negotiating tactics with the abandonment of almost all indispensable negotiating positions? It is highly unlikely that Trump — for all his sympathy for Carl Schmitt’s friend-foe dichotomy or the doctrine of the state of exception in order to undermine the separation of powers — would want to adopt Schmitt’s theory of the Greater United States as his agenda. Observers agree that the focus for him is on the business transaction, the “deal”, and not, as for Putin, questions of sovereignty and securing great power status. For Trump, the latter are a means to an end, but not an end in themselves. This explains why Trump is against the costly deployment of US troops or even against Ukraine joining NATO and is pursuing a “commodities deal” in order to “recoup” US budget funds spent on supporting Kyiv. Nevertheless, in terms of negotiating tactics, it remains inexplicable why Trump is giving away key negotiating positions from the outset and not using them as a “bargaining chip”. Putin would have sat down at the table with Trump even with significantly lower advance payments.
A look at the personnel table of the negotiators involved so far also makes the asymmetry to the detriment of Ukraine and European concerns clear:
- On February 18, the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (born 1971), National Security Advisor Michael Waltz (born 1974) and Trump’s Middle East Representative Steve Witkoff (born 1957) were sitting at the table in Riyadh. Rubio, Senator for Florida since 2011, and Waltz, a former Army Special Forces soldier and member of the House of Representatives from 2019 to 2025, have no foreign policy experience in the executive branch to date, and above all no recognizable expertise on Russia or Ukraine. The most important person in the US delegation is lawyer, real estate mogul and close Trump confidant Witkoff, who has good connections to the Russian businessman and head of Russia’s state investment fund[47] , Kirill Dmitriev (*1975), an economist, banker and consultant who studied in the US and worked at Goldman Sachs and McKinsey. He has had close working relations with Putin for a long time.[48] Trump had sent his Ukraine and Russia envoy, former General Keith Kellogg (*1944), to Kyiv for the duration of the meeting in Riyadh.
- Dimitriyev attended the meeting in Riyadh as a member of the Russian delegation — in the second row, behind Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (*1950) and Putin’s foreign and security policy advisor Yuri Ushakov (*1947). Lavrov is an experienced diplomat (since 1972) and has been Foreign Minister since 2004 — with good prospects of equaling the 28-year term of office of his Soviet predecessor Andrei Gromyko. Ushakov had already joined the Russian Foreign Ministry in 1970, two years before Lavrov. Both have many years of US experience, Lavrov with two assignments at Russia’s UN representation in New York (1994–2004 as ambassador), Ushakov as ambassador in Washington (1998–2008). Both are intimately familiar with the details of the Ukraine dossier, Ushakov as head of the Russian negotiating team for the Minsk II agreement, among other things.[49]
One thing is clear: based on the composition of the negotiating delegations and the current level of foreign policy expertise, the Russian side should easily outperform the USA. It speaks volumes that Trump is not focusing on foreign and security policy, but rather on business experience with the appointment of heavyweight Witkoff. [50]
It is therefore urgent for the EU to get involved in the negotiations at a high level, forcefully and with a clear concept and prevent a US-Russian deal from being concluded over the heads of Ukraine and the European Union. The new German government must play a prominent role here, as quickly as possible and closely alongside France and Poland. In order for Putin to understand the message, Europe will have to prove that it also wants to and will develop into a military powerhouse - certainly also as a “Greater Europe”.
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Footnotes
[1] Ralf Fücks, for example, who also refers to Trump’s shift towards large-scale power politics. In: DER SPIEGEL Online, February 13, 2025, https://www.spiegel.de/ausland/ukraine-donald-trump-uebernimmt-die-sichtweise-aus-russland-und-china-gastbeitrag-a-1dc18d52-b486-4c40-b012-0de2b7d36442
[2] Carl Schmitt, Greater Spatial Order under International Law with a Prohibition of Intervention by Non-Spatial Powers. A contribution to the concept of empire in international law (1939), Berlin 2022.
[3] Cf. e.g. Paul Noack, Carl Schmitt: Eine Biographie. Berlin and Frankfurt/Main 1993.
[4] Alexander Dugin, ultranationalist political philosopher, chief ideologue of the Russian New Right and advocate of “Eurasian imperialism”, is considered the most important mediator of Schmitt’s thinking in Russia, see also p. 6 below.
[5] Cf. notes 7 and 30. The most important mediator of Carl Schmitt’s thought in the USA is the German-American political philosopher Leo Strauss (1899–1973). 1949–1969 Professor at the University of Chicago, one of the most important theoretical thinkers for the US neocons. As a Jewish scientist, he went to France before the beginning of the Nazi dictatorship on a Rockefeller scholarship (advisor Carl Schmitt), then to Cambridge/UK. Cf. Stephan Steiner, Weimar in America. Leo Strauss’ Politische Philosophie, Schriftenreihe wissenschaftlicher Abhandlungen des Leo Baeck Instituts 76, Tübingen 2013. There are close ties between the conservative political scientist Patrick Deneen (Catholic University of Notre Dame, Indiana), Strauss adept and winner of the Leo Strauss Award for the Best Dissertation in Political Philosophy, and Vice President JD Vance (information provided by former ambassador Dr. Hans-Ulrich Seidt).
[6] Carl Schmitt, Political Theology. Four Chapters on the Doctrine of Sovereignty (1922), Berlin 2021.
[7] US Vice President JD Vance, X of 9.2. 2025, 16:13. Vance is close to the far-right monarchist Curtis Yarvin, see TAZ of 18.2. 2025, https://taz.de/Donald-Trump-gegen-den-Rechtsstaat/!6066964/. See also https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/dec/21/curtis-yarvin-trump. Yarvin said in an interview on September 29, 2024: “But there’s another problem with libertarianism, which we could call Carl Schmitt’s problem. There’s this very English and American idea of “the rule of law, not men.” In a place like Iran, they would talk about “the rule of God, not men,” or rather “the rule of Allah, not men.” But it’s always a person deciding what God thinks. When you examine the issue of the rule of law, you see that it’s always ultimately the rule of someone who claims to know how to interpret the law.” https://rage-culture.com/en/conversation-with-curtis-yarvin/. See also Courtney Hodrick, From Neoreaction to Alt-Right: A Schmittian Perspective. In: Telos 198 (Spring 2022), 90–112. http://journal.telospress.com/content/2022/198/90.full.pdf
[8] Schmitt was a “man of the polemical treatise, the pamphlet. He found his true literary form in what the French call a brûlot: an inflammable text, a boat with a highly flammable cargo, designed to set fire to the opponent’s ship.” Christoph Schönberger, Values as a Danger for the Law? Carl Schmitt and the Karlsruhe Republic. Afterword to Carl Schmitt, Die Tyrannei der Werte (1960), Berlin 2020, 57.
[9] Carl Schmitt, The Concept of the Political (1932), Berlin 2015, 61.
[10] @realDonaldTrump, X from 15.2. 2025, 19:32
[11] Carl Schmitt (1922), 13.
[12] Carl Schmitt (1960).
[13] Carl Schmitt (1939).
[14] In contrast to a “unipolar” world order dominated solely by the USA. From Trump’s perspective, however, a restoration of the “unipolar moment” of the early 1990s with a USA “responsible” for the constitution of the entire world would be unrealistic and, moreover, undesirable given the radically changed geopolitical realities since then, especially the rise of China
[15] In doing so, he also undermines the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, which for Schmitt provides the historical starting point for his Greater Space Theory. However, this remains “harmless” as long as Trump does not get in the way of the protagonists of the other relevant superpowers Putin (Russky Mir or Eurasia) and Xi Jinping (Chinese Dream).
[16] In the language of Schmitt: “... the combination of a politically awakened people, a political idea and a large area politically dominated by this idea and excluding foreign intervention”.
[17] Cf. Erik Piccoli, Carl Schmitt and the Putin Regime. Illiberalism Studies Program Working Papers. Institute for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, The George Washington University, January 2024, 17.
[18] DER SPIEGEL 9/2025, 16.
[19] Constanze Stelzenmüller, The situation is serious, take it seriously! In: International Politics No. 2 (March/April 2025), 61.
[20] Cf. the Russian draft Agreement on Measures to ensure the Security of the Russian Federation and Member States of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, 17.12.2021. https://mid.ru/ru/foreign_policy/rso/nato/1790803/?lang=en
[21] See Keith Kellogg & Fred Fleitz, America First, Russia and Ukraine. Research Report/Center for American Security, AFPI (America First Policy Institute), 9.4.2024. https://americafirstpolicy.com/assets/uploads/files/Research_Report_-_America_First%2C_Russia%2C___Ukraine.pdf
[22] In Munich, only Adolf Hitler (Nazi Germany), Neville Chamberlain (United Kingdom), Édouard Daladier (France) and Benito Mussolini (Italy) sat at the table. The President of Czechoslovakia, Edvard Beneš, was not invited. The agreement dictated that the government of Czechoslovakia “evacuate” the Czechoslovak Sudetenland between October 1–10,1939. For more information, see Jürgen Zarusky/Martin Zückert (eds.), Das Münchener Abkommen von 1938 in europäischer Perspektive, Munich 2013.
[23] Carl Schmitt (1939), op. cit., 46.
[24] Vladimir Putin, 75th Anniversary of the Great Victory: Shared Responsibility to History and Our Future, Moscow 2020. http://static.kremlin.ru/media/events/files/en/VlMXXg4uCU1WOilGCMNzd8sPyIujZg3y.pdf. Historian Karl Schlögel in an interview with Deutsche Welle in June 2020, according to the DW website: “It has something to do with the present. He (Putin, the author) is instrumentalizing the interpretation of history for his current policy. It is an attempt to portray Poland, Ukraine and the Baltic states as reactionary, nationalist and, to a large extent, anti-Semitic. It is an attempt to isolate these countries.” https://www.dw.com/de/hitler-stalin-pakt-putins-geschichtsklitterung/a‑53878252
[25] (Об историческом единстве русских и украинцев), published on July 12, 2021. http://kremlin.ru/events/president/news/66181.
[26] Declaration of war. The speech by the Russian President on the morning of February 24, 2022. https://zeitschrift-osteuropa.de/blog/vladimir-putin-ansprache-am-fruehen-morgen-des-24.2.2022/.
[27] Summary according to David G. Lewis, Russia’s New Authoritarianism. Putin and the Politics of Order, Edinburgh University Press 2020, 163.
[28] Carl Schmitt (1939), ‘Großraum versus Universalism: The international Legal Struggle over the Monroe Doctrine’, trans. by M. Hannah, in S. Legg (ed.), Spatiality, Sovereignty and Carl Schmitt: Geographies of the Nomos, Abingdon: Routledge 2011, 46–54.
[29] David G. Lewis, op. cit., 164.
[30] Including Steve Bannon, Stephen Miller (now Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Homeland Security Adviser) and Trump himself, according to Brandon Hawk, Why far-right nationalists like Steve Bannon have embraced a Russian ideologue. In: The Washington Post, April 16, 2019.
[31] A. Dugin, Четвертая политическая теория. Россия и политические идеи XXI века (The fourth political theory. Russia and the political ideas of the 21st century), St. Petersburg 2009, 214.
[32] A. Dugin, Основы геополитики. Геополитическое будущее России (Fundamentals of Geopolitics. The Geopolitical Future of Russia), Moscow 1997, 121f., 109f., 113.
[33] Carl Schmitt (1939), op. cit., 49.
[34] Op. cit. 30.
[35] Summary according to David G. Lewis, op. cit. 186f.
[36] Alexei Drobinin, The Vision of a Multipolar World: The Civilizational Factor and Russia’s Place in the Emerging World Order. In: Russia in Global Affairs, 20.2. 2023, https://eng.globalaffairs.ru/articles/the-vision-of-a-multipolar-world/
[37] Vladislav Surkov, , Суверенитет — это политический синоним конкурентоспособности (Sovereignty is the political synonym of competitiveness). Lecture at the Center for Party Studies and Training of Leaders of the United Russia Party on June 9, 2006. https://www.newkaliningrad.ru/news/politics/99871-.html
[38] This concise summary comes from David G. Lewis, op. cit. 171.
[39] Thus David G. Lewis, op. cit., 180ff.
[40] Cf. Schmitt (1939), op. cit., passim, e.g. the criticism of Wilson’s 14 points of January 22, 2017 as an expression of “boundless interventionism” and the point “at which the policy of the United States turns away from its native soil and enters into an alliance with the world and human imperialism of the British Empire” (41). Or his criticism of the practice of minority protection at the League of Nations: “The underlying liberal-individualistic and therefore universalistic construction of minority protection was the basis for the control and intervention of the foreign-spatial Western powers in the European East via the universalistic League of Nations in Geneva.” (op. cit., 45f.)
[41] Speech by Russian President Vladimir Putin at the 43rd Munich Security Conference. Speech and the Following Discussion at the Munich Conference on Security Policy, February 10, 2007. http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/transcripts/24034
[42] Cf. Regina Elsner, Identity, Values and the Russian Orthodox Church. In: Christian Ströbele et al. (eds.), Rechtspopulismus und Religion: Herausforderungen für Christentum und Islam, Regensburg 2023, 281–290.
[43] Cf. Arndt Freytag von Loringhoven/Leon Erlenhorst, Putin’s Attack on Germany. Disinformation, propaganda, cyberattacks, Berlin 2024.
[44] Cf. note 19.
[45] Lt. Gen. (Ret.) Keith Kellogg & Fred Fleitz, America First, Russia and Ukraine. America First Policy Institute (AFPI) Research Report, 9.4. 2024.
[46] VN-SR 2774 (2025). https://docs.un.org/en/S/RES/2774(2025)
[47] Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), Российский фонд прямых инвестиций. https://www.rdif.ru/Eng_Index/
[48] Cf. e.g. Newsweek of 13.02. 2025, https://www.newsweek.com/kirill-dmitriev-putin-trump-talks-russia-2030494
[49] Cf. Johannes Regenbrecht, The Minsk Agreements 10 Years After: 10 Lessons learned for future Negotiations with Moscow. Policy Paper, Center for Liberal Modernity, January 2025. https://libmod.de/en/the-minsk-agreements-10-years-after-10-lessons-learned-for-future-negotiations-with-moscow/
[50] Shortly before, W. had already rendered outstanding services as a contact to Dimitriyev, negotiator for the release of US citizen Marc Fogel, who was imprisoned in Russia on February 11, 2025, and initiator of the round of talks in Riyadh.
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