Democratic New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is facing criticism following her appearance at the Munich Security Conference, where she struggled to answer several foreign policy questions despite months of preparation.
According to The New York Times, Ocasio-Cortez paused for approximately 20 seconds when asked whether the United States should deploy troops to defend Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion. When she responded, she reiterated the country’s longstanding policy of strategic ambiguity rather than offering a more direct position.
During her remarks, Ocasio-Cortez also mistakenly referenced the “Trans-Pacific Partnership” when discussing transatlantic relations, an error she later acknowledged online. She additionally stated that Venezuela is “below the equator,” despite the country being located in the Northern Hemisphere.
Her appearance followed months of preparation with Matt Duss, a former foreign policy adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders. Politico reported that the two connected roughly six times via video calls and in-person meetings after Ocasio-Cortez received her invitation to attend the conference. The trip was reportedly conceived in part as a rebuttal to a speech delivered at the same venue last year by Vice President JD Vance.
In an interview with The New York Times from Berlin, Ocasio-Cortez refused accountability for her amateur commentary, accusing conservative media outlets of amplifying short clips to distract from the substance of her remarks.
“They make any five-to-10-second thing go viral to distract from the substance of what I am saying,” she said.
She also dismissed speculation that her appearance signaled presidential ambitions. “Am I acting like someone who is trying to run? No!” she told the paper, after bristling at a reporter’s comparison of the conference to a presidential primary stop.
Criticism extended beyond conservative media. Democratic strategist Hank Sheinkopf told The Hill that Ocasio-Cortez is “not ready for prime time on the international stage,” adding that the appearance was meant to demonstrate her foreign policy credentials but instead revealed a “complete lack of chops about international issues.”
Independent journalist Glenn Greenwald offered a similar critique on X, writing that whoever advised Ocasio-Cortez she was prepared to publicly present on foreign policy “should look for another line of work.”
The episode has ignited debate over Ocasio-Cortez’s foreign policy readiness as many speculate about her 2028 ambitions.
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So AOC is really sitting on someone’s lap (eeeewww) like a ventriloquist’s dummy and the ventriloquist is to blame for not knowing which hemisphere is home to Venezuelan? Of course, somehow the substitute ventriloquist who was assigned at the last minute is really a MAGA Republican. I wonder how she ever remembered the drink recipes when she was tending bar. On second thought, maybe she couldn’t so she decided to run for Congress.