Volkswagen has ended car production at its Dresden showcase factory. The move is small in volume but large in meaning. Germany’s old advantage rested on export prowess, deep supplier networks, and structurally cheap Russian pipeline energy. With that input gone, costs higher, and global competition harder, borrowing and subsidies now mask a competitiveness gap that cannot be financed away.
Europe is not being dragged into decline by fate. Its leaders are choosing an energy squeeze, a financial time bomb over frozen Russian assets, and subordination to United States tariffs and war demands, while pretending this is morality and strategy. The only sector with a clear future is the arms industry. Everyone else is being told to absorb the cost in silence.
Europe was told it had to cut Russian energy and arm for democracy. In reality it has swapped predictable pipeline gas for volatile imports, pushed energy intensive industry toward the exits and tied its public finances to an open ended rearmament cycle largely designed elsewhere. This piece follows the gas, the factories and the defence budgets to show who really pays for the last phase of US hegemony.