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OPINION

Your Countries Are Being Ruined

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Let’s be crystal-clear: when Donald Trump says NATO countries should shoot down Russian aircraft that violate their airspace, he isn’t just making headlines. He is forcing us to look in the mirror. What does it mean when nations refuse to enforce their own borders—not just metaphorical ones, but literal, military airspace violations?

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This week, President Trump responded plainly to a question from a reporter at the U.N. General Assembly: Should NATO members shoot down Russian jets if they fly into NATO airspace without authorization? His answer was simple: “Yes, I do.” That is not belligerence. That is national sovereignty. That is strength. That is common sense. And what it underscores is a disheartening reality—too many countries act like their sovereignty is optional, like their borders are suggestions.

We are watching Russia test the resolve of every free country. Incursions by MiG-31 fighter jets into Estonian airspace, by drones into Poland—these are not accidents. These are signals meant to probe how weak our response will be. How much will we endure before we draw a line?

Trump’s proposal—that when boundaries are violated, there must be consequences—is exactly what has been missing. We live in a time when talk is cheap, when condemnation resolutions are issued, and then next week the airspace is breached again. “Violation,” “provocation,” “reckless,”—all words, all repeated, all void without action. Action is what defends peace. Action is what upholds deterrence. Without action, you get more violations. Without resolve, you get more aggression.

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Critics will say: “Well, what about escalation? What about miscalculations?” Yes, those are real risks. But what is the alternative? Continuing to allow violations, to yield to intimidation, to accept that your airspace isn’t worth defending? That path leads not to peace but to gradual surrender of autonomy, of safety, of dignity.

Standing up for your country first does not make you isolationist. It doesn’t make you reckless. It makes you faithful—to your people, to your citizens’ safety, to the very meaning of nationhood. When a country lets foreign aircraft flout its airspace, it sends a signal—to adversaries and allies alike—that the rules of the world can be ignored. If we accept that, then what rules remain?

Trump’s statement also sheds light on another truth: being the best global citizen is not about passivity—it’s about strength. It’s about the courage to protect your own country, which in turn stabilizes the global order. Because if every NATO member, every free nation, refuses to defend its territory, then global norms unravel. The aggressor acts with impunity. The small states lose protection. The chain of treaties, the respect for boundaries, the doctrine of defense—all get shredded.

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Imagine Poland or Estonia or any NATO ally watching their skies violated, day after day. Maybe there are protest calls. Maybe there are diplomatic letters. Then a vague promise. But no decisive defense. That breeds despair. That breeds moral weakness—in the leadership and in the people. Do you want your children to grow up in countries where foreign jets can fly over your home, your farmland, your schools, without consequences?

So yes, strong borders matter. Sovereignty matters. If a neighbor breaks into your front yard, you don’t ask politely, “Please stop.” You defend your home. If a nation’s airspace is violated, the same principle applies. And Trump saying, “Yes, shoot them down if they cross,” is, ironically, a sober, realistic baseline. It forces nations to choose: will you preserve your nation? Or will you pretend that sovereignty is a slogan?

Of course, every situation has nuance. Not every aerial incursion demands a missile. Sometimes the violation is a mistake. Sometimes deconfliction is possible. But those are exceptions—not excuses. Exceptions do not become the default. When standing up weakens us, we lose far more than we gain by staying silent.

Your countries are being ruined—not by one policy, not by one speech, but by repeated erosion of self-respect, by letting the rules that protect nations crumble because confrontation is painful. The world is no safer for pacifism when pacifism is selective. It is no honor to allow your skies to be violated, your borders to be treated like suggestions. To be the best global citizen, you must first be the best steward of your own country. Your people deserve nothing less.

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So when Trump calls for NATO to shoot down Russian aircraft that invade their airspace, let’s see it not as escalation, but as the right kind of deterrent. Let’s support nations that protect their own skies. Because if sovereignty falls, if borders fall, then what is left? What protects liberty, what protects peace?

Editor’s Note: Thanks to President Trump and his administration’s bold leadership, we are respected on the world stage, and our enemies are being put on notice.

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