A recent piece from the Gatestone Institute makes that case bluntly: many Western European leaders are not defending Western civilisation — they are actively undermining it.
That’s a serious charge. So what’s behind it?
A Crisis of Confidence — or a Collapse of Will?
The claim is that Europe’s political class has lost confidence in its own values.
Instead of defending Western traditions — democracy, free speech, cultural identity — leaders are portrayed as increasingly willing to dilute them in pursuit of political convenience. This isn’t accidental. It’s driven by a mix of ideology and electoral calculation.
And that brings us to the most contentious issue.
Immigration, Identity, and Political Reality
Large-scale immigration into Western Europe — particularly from Muslim-majority countries — has created deep cultural and political tensions.
More controversially:
Many newcomers have not assimilated
Anti-Israel and anti-Jewish sentiment has increased
Political leaders are reluctant to confront these issues for fear of losing votes
In short, leaders are prioritising short-term political survival over long-term social cohesion. (Gatestone Institute)
It is a difficult argument to dismiss.
Israel: The Fault Line
It is exemplified by Europe’s stance toward Israel.
So while Israel remains one of the West’s most reliable allies, many European leaders treat it with hostility or contempt. This reflects a broader moral confusion within Western leadership.
This highlights a deeper question: has the West lost clarity about who its allies are, and why?
A Civilisation Unsure of Itself
Perhaps the most striking theme is the idea that Europe is suffering from what one commentator calls a “political and sociological death wish.” (Gatestone Institute)
That may sound dramatic — but the underlying point is simple:
Civilisations don’t usually collapse because they are conquered.
They collapse because they stop believing in themselves.
Europe today risks exactly that — a slow erosion of identity, confidence, and purpose.
So Where Does That Leave Us?
This isn’t a neat, black-and-white issue.
There are legitimate debates here:
How should immigration be managed?
What does integration actually mean?
How should Western nations balance tolerance with cultural cohesion?
And how should they deal with allies and adversaries in a rapidly changing world?
But one thing is clear: these are no longer fringe questions.
They’re central.
And they’re becoming unavoidable.
Final Thought
The real question isn’t whether Europe is being “betrayed.”
It’s whether its leaders still believe in the civilisation they are supposed to lead.
Because if they don’t — history suggests the outcome is already written.

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