The European Union, NATO, the European Council, the European Court of Human Rights, the Council of Europe, and other post WWII institutions undermine the national sovereignty of Western nations. Many, like NATO, originally formed to guard against Soviet expansion, have outlasted the original threat by decades and are now used to spread and enforce a progressive liberal hegemony.
This ideological force-feeding has been disastrous for Westerners. As we wrote here, the European Court of Human Rights ordered Romania to adopt pro-LGBT policy against the majority wishes of its people. Here, we explained how Estonia followed suit with hopes that their Prime Minister would become the next head of the organization.
Meanwhile, the European Union is unable to tackle a mounting migration crisis and punishes states like Greece, Poland, and Hungary who make even the most feeble attempt to defend their borders.
If not replaced or abolished, these institutions will be the death of traditional Western civilization.
Outside of the Western world, nations such as Argentina are in thrall to the International Monetary Fund. White South Africans suffer marginalization and genocidal violence. Armenia is threatened by Turkic aggressors. And majority European Russia allies with civilizationally foreign powers such as China and Iran to defend itself against NATO which is still expanding with the goal of promoting universal liberal democracy.
Our greatest threat is not the Soviet Union. It is not authoritarianism in Syria. It is extinction.
This exposition gives rise to a question: What would a pro-Western foreign policy look like? What would a government, ostensibly a pro-West government, bring to the global stage on behalf of its population and of the West more generally? What alliances should a pro-Western government seek to preserve the best interests of its people?
This piece seeks to offer our initial thoughts on what a pro-Western foreign policy would look like and will serve as one of the foundational pieces of our future work.
A pro-Western foreign policy has seven key points:
1.     National and civilizational self-reliance
2.     Mutual defense against foreign civilizations
3.     Abandon the project of exporting liberal-democracy abroad
4.     A strict policy of deporting illegal aliens and humane repatriation of racial foreigners to their homelands
5.     Truly neutral global institutions
6.     New pro-Western institutions in the West
7.     Fostering a shared cultural heritage
Over the next two weeks, we will expand each of these points and provide examples of how they can be achieved while both respecting national sovereignty and international cooperation in defense of Western civilization.