Calgary Herald

TRUMP REVIVES COLD WAR RHETORIC IN ANNOUNCING HIS NATIONAL SECURITY STRATEGY ON MONDAY, FRAMING RUSSIA AND CHINA AS AMERICA’S RIVALS. NUCLEAR WEAPONS ARE THE ‘FOUNDATION OF OUR STRATEGY.’

President puts emphasis on nuclear weapons

- BEN RILEY-SMITH

• President Donald Trump outlined a new Cold War-style approach to U.S. foreign policy Monday by framing Russia and China as competitor­s and stressing the importance of nuclear weapons.

The president’s first national security strategy chastised previous U.S. administra­tions for their “complacenc­y” since the Soviet Union’s fall. It said American nuclear weapons were “the foundation of our strategy to preserve peace and stability” and called for new “significan­t investment.”

The strategy document said Russia and China were trying to “challenge American power, influence and interests” and “erode American security and prosperity.”

And it warned against “engagement” with rivals, saying the belief they could be turned into “benign actors and trustworth­y partners” had been proved wrong.

Climate change was also dropped as a national security concern.

“With the strategy I’m announcing today, we’re declaring that America is in the game and America is going to win,” Trump said.

Speaking about the strategy, Trump said “for years Washington politician­s presided over one disappoint­ment after another.” The president criticized Barack Obama and George W. Bush,

WE’RE DECLARING THAT AMERICA IS IN THE GAME AND AMERICA IS GOING TO WIN.

the former Republican president, as he attacked “disastrous” trade deals and the “shortchang­ing” of U.S. soldiers.

He pointed to foreign policy wins including victories against jihadists, sanctions on North Korea and more defence spending among NATO allies.

“The entire world has heard the news and already seen the signs: America is coming back strong,” Trump said.

The document outlined four “pillars” of security: Protect the American people; promote American prosperity; preserve peace through strength; and advance American influence.

The strategy read: “Following the remarkable victory of free nations in the Cold War, America emerged as the lone superpower with enormous advantages and momentum in the world. Success, however, bred complacenc­y. A belief emerged, among many, that American power would be unchalleng­ed and self-sustaining. The United States began to drift.”

On rival countries, it read: “They are determined to make economies less free and less fair, to grow their militaries, and to control informatio­n and data to repress their societies and expand their influence.”

The last national strategy document, prepared by Obama in 2015, declared climate change an “urgent and growing threat to our national security.” The Trump plan removes that determinat­ion.

 ?? AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI ?? Donald Trump speaks on national security on Monday in Washington, where he said that his new national security strategy puts America first.
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI Donald Trump speaks on national security on Monday in Washington, where he said that his new national security strategy puts America first.

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