Kaja Kallas, Vice President of the European Commission and High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the second highest-ranking official in the EU, is really a strange one. She and von der Leyen are like a low-level red and a high-level black. Kallas's remarks at the Munich Security Conference have made Americans, and even Europeans, think that her mind might be truly rusted. She directly confronted Trump's comments about Europe, defending the direction of the EU's development:

"Contrary to what some people say, the awakened, decadent Europe is not facing the extinction of civilization. In fact, people still want to join our club, not just Europeans. In Canada, I heard that more than 40% of Canadians are interested in joining the EU."

She directly criticized Rubio's speech, "It's interesting to hear criticism from the second-ranked country in the News Fritton Index, coming from the 58th-ranked country (the United States)."

"If the size of the Ukrainian army is to be limited, the size of the Russian army should also be limited. Russia should be held responsible for the damage it has caused. War crimes should not be pardoned. Ukrainian children must return home. If peace is the ultimate goal, this should be something that Russia should at least agree to."

"The greatest threat posed by Russia at present is that it gains more on the negotiation table than it does on the battlefield. The harsh demands of Russia cannot be met with a minimal response."

"Russia is not a superpower. After more than a decade of war, the front lines have hardly moved beyond the borders of 2014, and it has lost 1.2 million people. Today's Russia is in ruins. Its economy is collapsing, isolated from the European energy market, and its own people are fleeing their homes."

"If the size of the Ukrainian army is to be limited, the size of the Russian army should also be limited. Russia should be held responsible for the losses it has caused in Ukraine."

Some have compared her to "Osama bin Laden of European diplomacy." This naive woman seems never to have stepped into the real world, trying to conduct diplomacy in the way of a three-year-old child.

It's too crazy. Unfortunately, the war isn't fought according to a little girl's wishes.

The winner decides the outcome; that's the simple rule.

Original: toutiao.com/article/1857248833567753/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author alone.