×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Wednesday
04
Feb 2026
weather symbol
Athens 11°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> World

Why the White House is reading Greek History

The Trump team is obsessing over Thucydides, the ancient historian who wrote a seminal tract on war

Newsroom June 21 07:06

The Trump White House isn’t known as a hot spot for Ivy League intellectuals. But last month, a Harvard academic slipped into the White House complex for an unusual meeting. Graham Allison, an avuncular foreign policy thinker who served under Reagan and Clinton, was paying a visit to the National Security Council, where he briefed a group of staffers on one of history’s most studied conflicts—a brutal war waged nearly 2,500 years ago, one whose lessons still resonate, even in the administration of a president who doesn’t like to read.

The subject was America’s rivalry with China, cast through the lens of ancient Greece. The 77-year-old Allison is the author of a recent book based on the writings of Thucydides, the ancient historian famous for his epic chronicle of the Peloponnesian War between the Greek states of Athens and Sparta. Allison cites the Greek scholar’s summation of why the two powers fought: “What made war inevitable was the growth of Athenian power and the fear which this caused in Sparta.” He warns that the same dynamic could drive this century’s rising empire, China, and the United States into a war neither wants. Allison calls this the “Thucydides Trap,” and it’s a question haunting some very important people in the Trump administration, particularly as Chinese officials arrive Wednesday for “diplomatic and security dialogue” talks between Washington and Beijing designed, in large part, to avoid conflict between the world’s two strongest nations.

It might seem curious that an ancient Greek would cast a shadow over a meeting between a group of diplomats and generals from America and Asia. Most Americans probably don’t know Thucydides from Mephistopheles. But the Greek writer is a kind of demigod to international relations theorists and military historians, revered for his elegant chronicle of one of history’s most consequential wars, and his timeless insights into the nature of politics and warfare. The Yale University historian Donald Kagan calls Thucydides’ account “a source of wisdom about the behavior of human beings under the enormous pressures imposed by war, plague, and civil strife.”

Thucydides is especially beloved by the two most influential figures on Trump’s foreign policy team. National security adviser H.R. McMaster has called Thucydides’ work an “essential” military text, taught it to students and quoted from it in speeches and op-eds. Defense Secretary James Mattis is also fluent in Thucydides’ work: “If you say to him, ‘OK, how about the Melian Dialogue?’ he could tell you exactly what it is,” Allison says—referring to one particularly famous passage. When former Defense Secretary William Cohen introduced him at his confirmation hearing, Cohen said Mattis was likely the only person present “who can hear the words ‘Thucydides Trap’ and not have to go to Wikipedia to find out what it means.”

>Related articles

US shoots down Iranian drone approaching aircraft carrier Lincoln in the Arabian Sea

GEK TERNA: Mediobanca raises target price to €45.7

Reuters: Greece set to announce ban on social media for children under 15

That’s not true in the Trump White House, where another Peloponnesian War aficionado can be found in the office of chief strategist Steve Bannon. A history buff fascinated with grand conflict, Bannon once even used “Sparta”—one of the most militarized societies history has known—as a computer password. (“He talked a lot about Sparta,” his former Hollywood writing partner, Julia Jones, told The Daily Beast. An unnamed former colleague recalled for the New Yorker Bannon’s “long diatribes” about the Peloponnesian War.)

In an August 2016 article for his former employer, Breitbart News, Bannon likened the conservative media rivalry between Breitbart and Fox News to the Peloponnesian War, casting Breitbart as the disciplined warrior state of Sparta challenging a decadently Athenian Fox. There’s also NSC spokesman Michael Anton, a student of the classics who owns two copies of Thucydides’ fabled work. (“The acid test for me is: Do you read the Hobbes translation?” he says. “If you’ve read that translation, you’ve got my respect.”)

Source

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#ancient greece#greece#Greek history#james mattis#President Donald Trump#Thucydides#Thucydides Trap#usa#Washington DC#white house
> More World

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Serious incident in Chios between coast guard and migrant smugglers leaves 14 dead and many injured

February 3, 2026

“Dear Jeffrey, I gave birth to a little Greek girl”: the message from an unknown woman to Epstein and and the “cheeseburger” fueling conspiracy theories

February 3, 2026

US shoots down Iranian drone approaching aircraft carrier Lincoln in the Arabian Sea

February 3, 2026

GEK TERNA: Mediobanca raises target price to €45.7

February 3, 2026

Reuters: Greece set to announce ban on social media for children under 15

February 3, 2026

Vatican intervenes over the “Meloni angel” in a Rome church: Orders changes to controversial mural after backlash

February 3, 2026

Dubai BC – Olympiacos 108-98: Took it to overtime but the Piraeus team folded

February 3, 2026

Who is the 55-year-old Greek arrested for sabotage on German warships?

February 3, 2026
All News

> Economy

GEK TERNA: Mediobanca raises target price to €45.7

Overweight rating on the stock – The Italian bank notes that with the launch of the Egnatia Motorway and the acquisition of an additional 15% stake, GEK TERNA unlocks significant value

February 3, 2026

EIB: Towards a new record of close to €4 billion in lending to the Greek economy

February 3, 2026

Real Estate: How apartment building management can cut up to 20% off a property’s value

February 2, 2026

Official EU law bans Russian natural gas imports, upgrading Greece’s role and the vertical corridor

February 2, 2026

Luxury Housing in Attica: The five-year period that changed the game (2021–2026)

February 2, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα