Skip to content

Global doubts

CHARLEVOIX, CANADA – JUNE 9: In this photo provided by the German Government Press Office (BPA), German Chancellor Angela Merkel deliberates with US president Donald Trump on the sidelines of the official agenda on the second day of the G7 summit on June 9, 2018 in Charlevoix, Canada. Also pictured are (L-R) Larry Kudlow, director of the US National Economic Council, Theresa May, UK prime minister, Emmanuel Macron, French president, Angela Merkel, Yasutoshi Nishimura, Japanese deputy chief cabinet secretary, Shinzo Abe, Japan prime minister, Kazuyuki Yamazaki, Japanese senior deputy minister for foreign affairs, John Bolton, US national security adviser, and Donald Trump. Canada are hosting the leaders of the UK, Italy, the US, France, Germany and Japan for the two day summit. (Photo by Jesco Denzel /Bundesregierung via Getty Images)

This piece in the Washington Post addresses the big question when it comes to foreign policy and national security: is the US a rogue super power? As far as the rest of the world is concerned the jury is still out:

For President Biden and his circle, a low point in America’s global standing under President Donald Trump came when he blew up a meeting of U.S. allies in 2018, accusing close partners of “robbing” the United States and hurling insults at his Canadian host.

So it was no accident that Biden’s push to reclaim American leadership in recent days has pointedly included a starring role for Canada, as the new administration seeks to woo an array of allies with a message that “America is back.”

But it’s increasingly clear that Biden cannot simply sweep up the broken diplomatic china and restore the world order that reigned when he was vice president.There is one simple reason: Allies know Trumpism could always come back, either in a 2024 bid by Trump himself or from another presidential hopeful offering a similar pitch.

That has left friends and foes alike with doubts about the value of any new American commitments, given the country’s deep political divide and the possibility that the pendulum could swing back in four years. Allies have begun hedging their bets, musing about a Europe-only security force and exploring wider trade with China.

That’s even true for America’s closest allies, like Great Britain. “The Bidenites say with good reason that they recognize that ‘not politics as usual’ was the theme of the election in the past few years,” Karen Pierce, Britain’s ambassador to the United States, said. “It is a theme that they know they’re going to have to contend with.”

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said “there’s no doubt” that foreign leaders now wonder about America’s reliability, given the country’s divisions and the persistence of support for Trump.

Trump officially ended the American Century and the Pax Americana, to the extent either of those things ever existed. And I don’t think it’s possible or desirable to return to that arrangement. But the world is still a very complicated place and it’s evolving in unpredictable ways as the central, overriding global challenge is climate change. Everything has to be focused on cooperation not confrontation.

The US still has the worlds biggest military and arsenal and it’s economy is huge so it’s going to be a major player. But we are no longer trustworthy and the world is going to have a hard time believing that we are responsible actors as long as our politics remains batshit crazy. I am surprised that we haven’t seen adversaries and allies alike arming up. That’s the usual response to a military power going crazy. Maybe the rest of the world was just holding back to see if we could pull ourselves together. Trump’s cult completely taking over the GOP and seemingly impervious to reality, isn’t a good sign.

Published inUncategorized