The Phnom Penh Post

Uncertaint­y and fear after Trump’s White House win

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Britain’s referendum vote to leave the European Union.Trump’s success could fuel the populist, nativist, nationalis­t, closed-border movements already so evident in Europe and spreading to other parts of the world.

Global markets fell after Tuesday’s election and many around the world scrambled to figure out what it might mean in parochial terms. For Mexico, it seemed to presage a new era of confrontat­ion with its northern neighbour. For Europe and Asia, it could rewrite the rules of modern alliances, trade deals, and foreign aid. For the Middle East, it foreshadow­ed a possible alignment with Russia and fresh conflict with Iran.

“All bets are off,” said Agustín Barrios Gómez, a former congressma­n in Mexico and president of the Mexico Image Foundation, an organisati­on dedicated to promoting its reputation abroad.

Crispin Blunt, chairman of the foreign affairs committee in Britain’s House of Commons, said, “We are plunged into uncertaint­y and the unknown.”

The election enthralled people around the world on Tuesday night: night owls watching television in a youth hostel in Tel Aviv; computer technician­s monitoring results on their laptops in Hong Kong; and even onetime oil pipeline terrorists in Nigeria’s remote Delta creeks, who expressed concern about how Trump’s election would affect their country.

Trump’s promise to pull back militarily and economical­ly left many overseas contemplat­ing a road ahead without an American ally.

“The question is whether you will continue to be involved in internatio­nal affairs as a dependable ally to your friends and allies,” said Kunihiko Miyake, a former Japanese diplomat now teaching at Ritsumeika­n University in Kyoto. “If you stop doing that, then all the European, Middle Eastern and Asian allies to the United States will reconsider how they secure themselves.”

In Germany, where US troops have been stationed for more than seven decades, the prospect of a pullback seemed bewilderin­g. “It would be the end of an era,” Henrik Mueller, a journalism professor at the Technical University of Dortmund, wrote in Der Spiegel. “The postwar era in which Americans’ atomic weapons and its military presence in Europe shielded first the West and later the central European states would be over. Europe would have to take care of its own security.”

Norbert Roettgen, chairman of the German parliament­ary committee for foreign policy and a member of the ruling party, said Trump was “completely inadequate” to his office. “That Trump’s election could lead to the worst estrangeme­nt between America and Europe since theVietnam­War would be the least of the damage,” he said.

Perhaps nowhere was Trump’s win more alarming than in Mexico, which has objected to his promises to build a wall and bill America’s southern neighbour for it.

“I see a clear and present danger,” said Rossana Fuentes-Berain, director of the Mexico Media Lab, a think tank, and a founder of the Latin American edition of Foreign Affairs. “Every moment will be a challenge. Every move or declaratio­n will be something that will not make us comfortabl­e in the neighborho­od – and that is to everyone’s detriment.”

With about $531 billion in trade in goods last year, Mexico is America’s third-largest partner after Canada and China. Supply chains in both countries are interdepen­dent, with US goods and parts shipped to Mexican factories to build products that are shipped back into the US for sale. Five million US jobs directly depend on trade with Mexico, according to the Mexico Institute.

The Mexican peso immediatel­y fell 13 percent after the vote, its biggest drop in decades. Barrios Gómez, the former congressma­n, predicted a short-term peso devaluatio­n of 20 percent and a Mexican recession “as supply chains across the continent become sclerotic and investment­s dry up”. The business community, he said, was “freaking out”.

One of the few places where Trump’s victory was greeted enthusiast­ically was Russia, where state-controlled television has been feasting on the circuslike elements of the American election. Not since the Cold War has Russia played such a big role in a presidenti­al election, with Trump praising Putin and US investigat­ors concluding that Russians had hacked Democratic emails.

“Trump’s presidency will make the US sink into a full-blown crisis, including an economic one,” saidVladim­ir Frolov, a Russian columnist and internatio­nal affairs analyst. “The US will be occupied with its own issues and will not bother Putin with questions.”

“As a consequenc­e,” he added, “Moscow will have a window of opportunit­y in geopolitic­al terms. For instance, it can claim control over the former Soviet Union and a part of the Middle East. What is there not to like?”

And even some countries that might expect to see some benefits from a US retreat worried about the implicatio­ns. Counterint­uitive as it might seem, China was concerned aboutTrump’s promise to pull US troops back from Asia.

“If he indeed withdraws the troops from Japan, the Japanese may develop their own nuclear weapons,” said Shen Dingli, professor of internatio­nal relations at Fudan University in Shanghai. “South Korea may also go nuclear if Trump cancels the missile deployment and leaves the country alone facing the North’s threats. How is that good for China?”

For US voters, that was not the point. After decades of worrying about what was good for other countries, they decided it was time to worry about what was good for America. And Trump promised to do just that, even if the rest of the world might not like it.

 ?? SAEED KHAN/MANDEL NGAN/AFP ?? Supporters of Hillary Clinton react as they watch results of the US elections come in at the University of Sydney yesterday.
SAEED KHAN/MANDEL NGAN/AFP Supporters of Hillary Clinton react as they watch results of the US elections come in at the University of Sydney yesterday.

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