Mike Pence’s blunt rebuke of Donald Trump’s approach to Vladimir Putin marks a rare moment of open defiance from a once-loyal lieutenant. No longer speaking in cautious euphemisms, Pence framed Putin as a dictator who only respects raw strength, and warned that any softness from Washington will be read in Moscow as permission, not diplomacy. His call for “the hammer” was not just rhetorical; he urged immediate passage of secondary sanctions he says could “literally break” Russia’s economy and reinforce U.S. backing for Ukraine.
The deeper drama is personal as much as geopolitical. Pence stood beside Trump for four turbulent years, defending his foreign policy instincts. Now, with Ukrainian civilians dying and Trump entertaining concessions over the Donbas, Pence is drawing a moral red line. In doing so, he’s betting that history—and perhaps Republican voters—will ultimately side with confrontation over accommodation.