The Atlantic Faces Criticism for Comparing Trump to Dictators

The magazine’s staff writer Anne Applebaum has alleged that the former US president is imitating the rhetoric of notorious dictators

The Atlantic magazine has faced criticism for publishing an opinion piece comparing former US President Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, and Benito Mussolini. The author, Anne Applebaum, has been accused of promoting propaganda for US intelligence agencies.

Published on Friday, the article’s headline states that “Trump Is Speaking Like Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini.” In the following paragraphs, Applebaum argues that by calling his opponents “vermin,” and referring to criminal illegal immigrants as “animals,” Trump has “introduced dehumanizing language into American presidential politics.”

Trump is “cynically” borrowing language from not just Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini, Applebaum argues, but also Mao Zedong and Pol Pot.

“In using this language, Trump knows exactly what he is doing. He understands which era and what kind of politics this language evokes,” Applebaum claims.

The Trump campaign dismissed the article as “more fake news by a third-rate media outlet,” and it was widely mocked by pro-Trump and independent commenters online.

“When you spend 8 years calling a person every bad name you can think of – including Hitler – only to see that it’s not working, so you desperately decide the only thing left for you to do is call him all the bad names at once,” American journalist Glenn Greenwald quipped on X.

“I love the idea that the editors at The Atlantic sat round a time and said: ‘Let’s come up with a headline for Anne Applebaum’s piece that will really scare the average voter’… and then came up with this,” conservative British pundit Ben Kew .

I can’t stop laughing,” SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk .

Appelbaum sits on the board of directors of the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), an NGO funded by the US State Department to do, in the words of its founder, what “was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA.” In recent years, the NED helped the 2014 Maidan coup in Ukraine, meetings of anti-Beijing officials and delegates in Taiwan, and a UK-based organization working to drive right-wing American news outlets out of business.

Her published opinions and those of the US national security state rarely diverge. Writing for the Atlantic, she has advocated regime change in Russia, accused Trump of planning to “abandon” Ukraine and NATO, and Musk of “weakness” and “arrogance” over his refusal to help Kiev’s forces guide kamikaze drones into Russian naval targets in Crimea.

“Anne Applebaum is on the board of directors for the most notorious CIA cut-out in all of US history,” American pundit Mike Benz on X after the Atlantic published her op-ed on Musk. “So, you know, when reading her froth-mouthed hit piece today on Elon Musk, maybe take that into consideration.”

Applebaum has any links between herself, or the NED, and the CIA.

Appelbaum is married to Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski, whose liberal Civic Platform party she has praised in multiple articles for The Atlantic. Immediately after the Nord Stream pipelines were destroyed in 2022, Sikorski tweeted an image of the blast site along with the caption “Thank you, USA.” According to American journalist Seymour Hersh, the pipelines were sabotaged by the CIA and US Navy.