From ‘America First’ to global confrontation: How Trump’s strategy is changing US power Donald #Trump saw his historic mission as restoring American greatness and pulling the United States out of the strategic drift of the past decade and a half....
... Initially, both Trump and his MAGA allies framed this task in terms of national concentration and restraint.Their idea was to move away from liberal globalism and the ideology of “wokeness” toward a pragmatic, business-minded approach to foreign policy. Instead of defending the interests of an American empire across the globe, Washington would turn inward and focus on domestic problems. In this conception, the United States would acknowledge the diversity of the international system and a...
...ccept the reality of several great powers with whom it would have to negotiate.The priorities were supposed to be clear. First would come the United States itself, then the Western Hemisphere, then #China, and only after that the rest of the world. The main sphere of American activity would be geo-economics. Among security challenges, illegal immigration and drug trafficking would take precedence. The challenge posed by China was understood primarily as technological and economic.Trump pro...
...mised quick solutions to international conflicts, including #Ukraine. He presented himself as a president of peace.Trump’s second presidency began energetically. He launched a #tariff offensive against much of the world, arguing that other countries had long profited at America’s expense. He distanced himself ideologically from Western #Europe. At the same time, the United States carried out a devastating strike against Iran’s nuclear infrastructure. Trump also openly lobbied for the Nobel...
...he high point of the current phase in US-Russian relations.After Anchorage, progress stalled. Trump failed to persuade his European allies to support the emerging settlement framework. Unlike Trump, many European leaders remained committed to continuing the war against Russia “to the last Ukrainian.”The American president had significant leverage over his allies and, theoretically, over #Kiev. Yet he chose not to use it. This suggested that the American political establishment – Congress, ...