Defending Donald Trump or deflecting his statements, some top G.O.P. officials reflected the trajectory of a party that the former president has largely bent to his will.

After Donald J. Trump suggested he had threatened to encourage Russia to attack “delinquent” NATO allies, the response among many Republican officials has struck three themes — expressions of support, gaze aversion or even cheerful indifference.

Republican Party elites have become so practiced at deflecting even Mr. Trump’s most outrageous statements that they quickly batted this one away. Mr. Trump, the party’s likely presidential nominee, had claimed at a Saturday rally in South Carolina that he once threatened a NATO government to meet its financial commitments — or else he would encourage Russia to “do whatever the hell they want” to that country.

In a phone interview on Sunday, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina seemed surprised to even be asked about Mr. Trump’s remark.

“Give me a break — I mean, it’s Trump,” Mr. Graham said. “All I can say is while Trump was president nobody invaded anybody. I think the point here is to, in his way, to get people to pay.”

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  • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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    69 months ago

    Man, remember when NATO scepticism was the left wing policy?

    Putin really just flipped the table of policy alignment huh?

    • @Gradually_Adjusting
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      79 months ago

      The only constant in life is conservatives being wrong; back when they hated Russia it was for the wrong reasons, and now they like it for the wrong reasons.

      • @zigmus64
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        19 months ago

        Back in the day, the Democrats were the Klansmen, and Lincoln was a Republican.