Timothy Snyder delivers a chilling, high-stakes warning that the United States is not merely vulnerable to terrorism, but actively constructing the conditions for its own exploitation. Unlike standard security analyses that focus on threat vectors, Snyder argues that the current administration's deliberate dismantling of intelligence agencies and its embrace of chaos have created a vacuum where a catastrophic attack becomes almost inevitable, followed by a predictable authoritarian overreach. This is not a prediction of doom for its own sake; it is a forensic breakdown of how institutional decay invites disaster and how that disaster will be weaponized to end American democracy.
The Architecture of Vulnerability
Snyder's central thesis is that the government has been systematically hollowed out, transforming national security agencies from protective shields into instruments of political theater. He writes, "The present government invites a terror attack." This is a bold claim, but Snyder supports it by detailing a specific roster of leadership changes that prioritize ideology over competence. He points to the appointment of figures like Tulsi Gabbard as the director of national intelligence, noting her history as an apologist for the Assad and Putin regimes, and Kash Patel as FBI director, describing him as a recipient of payments from sources linked to Russia who promotes conspiracy theories.
The argument gains weight when Snyder details the operational consequences of these appointments. He notes that under this new leadership, "Close to half of the FBI is now at work on border enforcement, which means that it is not at work on solving crimes or preventing terror attacks." This shift in resources is not a minor bureaucratic adjustment; it is a strategic withdrawal from core national security missions. Snyder observes that the Department of Homeland Security has been reduced to a tool for migration enforcement, quoting an insider who says, "The vibe is: How to use DHS to go after migrants, immigrants. That is the vibe, that is the only vibe, there is no other vibe."
This focus on internal political battles leaves the nation exposed to external and domestic threats. Snyder argues that the administration's obsession with culture wars has effectively federalized local law enforcement for irrelevant objectives, making life easier for aspiring terrorists. He warns that "A media strategy does not stop actual terrorists. It summons them." The logic here is sound: when security agencies are trained to chase political narratives rather than real threats, they become blind to the actual dangers lurking in the shadows.
The Historical Echo of the Reichstag Fire
Snyder anchors his warning in historical precedent, drawing a direct line from the current political climate to the rise of fascism in the 20th century. He invokes the concept of "terror management," where authoritarians exploit sudden disasters to consolidate power. "When the terrorist attack comes, remember that authoritarians exploit such events in order to consolidate power," he writes, citing his own "Lesson 18" from On Tyranny. He reminds readers that "The sudden disaster that requires the end of checks and balances... is the oldest trick in the Hitlerian book."
This historical framing is not merely rhetorical; it is a structural analysis of how power shifts during crises. Snyder references the Reichstag Fire of 1933, where Hitler used a single act of arson to suspend civil liberties and dismantle democracy, and the Kirov assassination in the Soviet Union, which Stalin used to launch the Great Purge. He argues that the current administration is preparing to replicate this playbook. "In just three months, the Trump people have made the unthinkable much more likely," Snyder asserts, suggesting that the administration has not only created the conditions for an attack but is also positioning itself to use the aftermath to "undo remaining American freedoms."
The danger is compounded by the administration's potential reaction to an attack by its own ideological allies. Snyder points out that the most lethal domestic terror attack in US history, the Oklahoma City bombing by Timothy McVeigh, was directed against federal workers. He notes that "Right-wing terrorists might believe that terror is what Trump wants," especially given the administration's coddling of January 6th criminals and its rhetoric that encourages violence. This creates a paradoxical situation where the administration's own base may feel empowered to strike, believing they are serving the leader's agenda.
A media strategy does not stop actual terrorists. It summons them.
Critics might argue that Snyder's focus on right-wing extremism and Russian interference overlooks the persistent threat from other sources, such as international Islamicist groups. However, Snyder addresses this by noting that the administration's erratic behavior in the Middle East and its dismantling of monitoring capabilities for Russian sabotage have opened new avenues for attack. He argues that the current leadership's dismissal of Russian threats is a gift to the Kremlin, stating, "This is all beyond the wildest dreams of the Kremlin." By rationalizing Russian aggression and firing officials who track Russian operations, the administration has effectively lowered the guard against a foreign power that stands to gain immensely from a false-flag attack on American soil.
The Human Cost of Institutional Decay
Beyond the political maneuvering, Snyder highlights the human toll of this institutional unraveling. He describes a government where "More good people have departed from the crucial agencies," leaving behind a workforce that is "disoriented and angry." The departure of experienced professionals and the hiring of unqualified loyalists have created a demoralized environment that is dangerous for everyone. "It is demoralizing for those who protect us and encouraging for those who wish us ill," he writes.
The consequences of this decay are not abstract; they are measured in the lives of the 168 people killed in the Oklahoma City bombing and the countless others injured. Snyder reminds us that "The horror was treated for what it was: an attack by a racist, right-wing anti-government terrorist." Today, he fears, a similar attack would be met with a different response—one that prioritizes political consolidation over justice and safety. He warns that "The point of this essay is that the rest of us have to anticipate this chain of events and recognize the sad probability of the attack itself and the absolute predictability of this administration's response."
The administration's actions are not just ineffective; they are actively harmful. Snyder notes that policies like gutting environmental protection, undoing weather forecasting, and ending food inspections "make life easier for terrorists and open avenues of attack." By taking apart the government and dividing the population, the administration is creating a fertile ground for chaos. "By taking apart the government, crashing the economy, and dividing the population, Musk and Trump invite attention of the worst sort, from people who wish to hurt Americans."
Bottom Line
Snyder's argument is at its strongest when it connects the specific personnel decisions of the current administration to the broader historical patterns of authoritarianism, offering a terrifyingly plausible roadmap for how democracy could be dismantled in the wake of a crisis. The piece's greatest vulnerability lies in its reliance on the assumption that the administration will inevitably succeed in its authoritarian project, potentially underestimating the resilience of American institutions and the public's ability to resist. However, the core warning remains urgent: the path to tyranny is paved with the debris of neglected security agencies and the exploitation of fear, and the time to prepare for that path is now, before the unthinkable arrives."