Jerusalem, etc.: How US global leadership has changed under Trump
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| Washington
The scene at the United Nations Security Council last week was reminiscent of the run-up to the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, when the international community balked at President George W. Bush鈥檚 鈥渨ith us or against us鈥 message to the world body concerning the coming war.
This time the impetus for the emergency Security Council meeting was President Trump鈥檚 recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel 鈥 a move in opposition to decades of US-backed council resolutions on the holy city鈥檚 status 鈥 and neither friend nor foe of the United States was having anything to do with it.
Bolivia鈥檚 United Nations ambassador fumed that if the Security Council did not stand up to the rogue US action, the Council would cease to be anything other than 鈥渁n occupied territory.鈥
A group of America鈥檚 European allies, some of whose leaders had personally cautioned Mr. Trump against the move, issued a joint statement at the council session condemning the US action as contrary to established international policy on the issue and 鈥渦nhelpful in terms of prospects for peace.鈥
But the Jerusalem decision was only the latest in a year of go-it-alone actions and retreat from international cooperation and commitments that have typified the 鈥淎merica First鈥 president.
Trump came into office with two seemingly contradictory messages to the world: one a nationalist clarion call that the US would no longer be a tied-up Gulliver, but would break free of international strictures and put its own interests first; and the other, a commitment to restore 鈥渟trong American leadership鈥 in confronting the world鈥檚 pressing security challenges.
Nearly a year later those two messages have taken form through actions suggesting that under Trump, it鈥檚 hard power over soft power, national action over international cooperation, and immediate gains over what a business-mogul president sees as gauzy long-term pursuits.
The promotion of hard power and a nationalist vision of prosperity over values and soft-power pursuits is expected to gain further traction when Trump releases his first National Security Strategy Dec. 18.
Reemphasis on military power
Thus Trump鈥檚 first year has been marked by a stark withdrawal from international diplomacy and from the system of international institutions and governance that the US designed and led for over seven decades.
In ways large and small 鈥 from withdrawing from the Paris climate accords and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal, to pulling out of an international migration pact and the UNESCO culture and education agency 鈥 Trump has shown his disdain for the system of international institutions the US built.
Yet at the same time, Trump has coupled a diplomatic retreat with a reemphasis on military power, which 鈥 under a long line of Republican and Democratic administrations alike 鈥 had increasingly shared the national-security stage with priorities like democracy and human rights promotion, development, and international trade expansion.
This week Trump signed a $700 billion defense authorization act he called the 鈥渇irst step in rebuilding our military.鈥 He has stepped up US military action against ISIS in Iraq and Syria while dialing back the US role in Syria diplomacy, recommitted to a US military presence in Afghanistan, and pursued a hard-power posture toward North Korea 鈥 once quipping that diplomacy toward Pyongyang was a 鈥渨aste of time.鈥
For some US foreign-policy hawks, like former ambassador to the UN John Bolton, Trump is pursuing bold leadership 鈥 the Jerusalem decision being just one example 鈥 after what they saw as two terms of namby-pamby interaction with the world under President Barack Obama.
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'Almost total abdication' of leadership
Yet while many in the foreign-policy community see Trump as a sharp deviation from the path followed by post-World-War-II presidents, few concur with the idea that a more muscular but inward-focused America will provide stronger global leadership.
鈥淭rump represents a clean break with the last eight decades of American foreign policy 鈥 really going back to Pearl Harbor 鈥 and a dismissal of the liberal order of American-led institutions the US worked so hard to build,鈥 says Charles Kupchan, senior director for European affairs on Mr. Obama鈥檚 National Security Council and now a professor at Georgetown University.
鈥淭here may have been differences over the years between Republicans and Democrats concerning the means,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut even George W. Bush, despite the Iraq War, was not interested in dismantling the US-led international order, but rather in advancing it.鈥
But Trump, Professor Kupchan adds, 鈥渟ees that same order as a recipe for other countries to take advantage of the US. He wants to back away from the international institutions and agreements that [other presidents] saw advancing US security and prosperity, but which he sees as tying us up.鈥
Others are more categorical about the impact of Trump鈥檚 foreign policy.
鈥淲hat we鈥檝e seen over this first year of his presidency is very much in line with the nationalist vision from the campaign that promised a retreat from international diplomacy and governance and an end to the free-riding of others on the back of the United States,鈥 says Stewart Patrick, director of the Council on Foreign Relations鈥 International Institutions and Global Governance Program. 鈥淲hat that has translated to in practice is an almost total abdication of American leadership.鈥
Dr. Patrick, who served in the State Department during George W. Bush鈥檚 first term, says the Trump era has echoes of the 鈥渋nterwar period鈥 nearly a century ago that began with the US rejection of the stillborn League of Nations. An expert in the evolution of the concept of national sovereignty, Patrick says Trump is a 鈥渢hrowback鈥 to an era of a rigid, nationalist sense of sovereignty that rejects the interdependence at the core of postwar internationalist policy.
A constituency that felt cheated
Kupchan, a professor of international affairs at Georgetown University鈥檚 School of Foreign Service in Washington, says Trump鈥檚 鈥渇oreign-entanglement objections鈥 have roots that go back to the Founding Fathers. But he says Trump has found support for his views in a constituency that felt cheated and left behind by the US-built international system.
鈥淭rump represents a part of the population to whom the international order the US built has not been kind,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the swath of the population that feels disadvantaged by globalization, that sees the US championing trade deals that led to the disappearance of their jobs, and that does not recognize a country that is more and more diverse.鈥
Still, Kupchan says that when it comes to a US 鈥渨ithdrawal鈥 from the world, 鈥渢he bark has been much more pronounced than the bite鈥 鈥 largely because of Trump鈥檚 pumping-up of global hard-power pursuits. He points to reinforced military alliances in East Asia, higher force levels in Afghanistan, and an increased pace of overt and covert counterterrorist operations.
Others go further, contending that reports of Trump鈥檚 isolationist and unilateral tendencies are overblown.
The Trump administration, and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in particular, have had early successes mounting an escalating pressure campaign against North Korea and with efforts to thwart Iran鈥檚 rising influence, in part by fostering renewed ties between Iraq and Saudi Arabia, according to John Hannah, a senior counselor at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies in Washington.
Both portfolios have flummoxed US diplomats for years, and the attention and priority the two issues are getting do not suggest an inward-turned and globally cavalier administration, says Mr. Hannah, who was a senior national security adviser to former Vice President Dick Cheney.
'A post-American era'
What is happening, however,听is that the void left by the US retreat from its traditional role of global leader is being quickly filled by others, international affairs experts say.
鈥淲here Trump is pulling back, we鈥檙e seeing other countries move in to take advantage of that at every turn,鈥 says Kupchan, pointing to China advancing its own regional trade initiatives as TPP has faltered, or France moving to fill the vacuum left by the US retreat from a lead role in climate policy and from the Middle East.
鈥淎merica鈥檚 main allies are increasingly talking about a post-American era where they鈥檙e going on with life without the US as a reliable partner,鈥 he says.
The Council on Foreign Relations鈥 Patrick says that whereas the international debate during the Bush and Obama years 鈥渨as whether it was preferable to have America leading from out front or leading from behind, today the question out there is what happens when there鈥檚 no leading at all, what does a world without American leadership portend?鈥
The quick answer seems to be a growing tendency of countries once aligned with the US to 鈥渉edge their bets by turning increasingly to China,鈥 he says. Another trend is what appears to be a widening field of operation for expansive regional powers 鈥 along the lines of what Iran has done in the wake of a US pullback from the Middle East.
Patrick says it has yet to be determined if the US retreat from its postwar global role will be a Trump 鈥減arenthesis鈥 or the acceleration of an ending American-led era.
But he says what is clearly not coming to an end is an era of global challenges requiring global answers and international leadership.
鈥淚nterdependence is not going to go away,鈥 Patrick says, 鈥渂ut what may go away is the certainty and authority of the US as a relatively enlightened global leader. If the US retreats to become just another cynical 鈥榞reat power鈥 pursuing its own nationalist advantages,鈥 he adds, 鈥渋t鈥檚 not going to serve the world and it鈥檚 not ultimately going to enhance US security and prosperity.鈥