The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Tillerson gone; Trump unleashed

- Gwynne Dyer Global Affairs Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

Rex Tillerson did not suffer fools gladly. He called Donald Trump a “moron” in a private conversati­on after one meeting at the Pentagon, and did not take the opportunit­y to deny it when a journalist asked him in public. In meetings with the president, he would “roll his eyes and slouch” whenever Trump said something he thought was particular­ly stupid. It’s amazing that he lasted as long as he did.

He wasn’t a very good Secretary of State either. He gutted the State Department in the name of efficiency, and large numbers of experience­d diplomats quit in despair as he ‘downsized’ the organizati­on. His only real achievemen­t in his 14 months in office was to restrain Trump from doing some truly dangerous things like starting a major confrontat­ion with Iran. But we’ll miss him now that he’s gone.

Donald Trump used to enjoy dismissing people with a brutal ‘You’re fired!’ when he was doing reality television, but he seems to have problems doing it face-to-face. Tweets addressed to the world at large are more his style, with his actual victims left to find out from the media. But he is getting rid of the people who question his judgement at an impressive rate.

The net effect of all this ‘turmoil’ in the White House, unsurprisi­ngly, has been to remove most of the people whose ideas, values, or experience and knowledge of the world led them to disagree with Trump’s obsessions, his policies (to the extent that he has any), or just his whims of the moment

The era of adult supervisio­n in the White House is coming to an end, and Donald Trump is more and more “free to be Donald.” As he said on Tuesday, “I’m really at a point where we’re getting very close to having the Cabinet and other things that I want.”

The Cabinet he wants is one that is entirely free from the constraint­s that were initially imposed on him by the Republican Party’s establishm­ent. He is a populist who cherry-picks ideas from anywhere, and no more a Republican than he is a Democrat. In fact, he once was a Democrat, and even considered trying to hijack the Democratic Party’s presidenti­al nomination before the 2008 election.

In the end he hijacked the Republican Party instead, but it did try to rein him in by putting orthodox Republican­s in key positions in his administra­tion. His struggle to be free began with the dismissal last July of the Republican Party’s choice as his chief of staff, Reince Priebus. It has ended in total victory in the past two weeks with the resignatio­n of his chief economic adviser, Gary Cohn, and the firing of Rex Tillerson.

Cohn resigned last week because of Trump’s decision to impose steep tariffs on U.S. imports of steel and aluminum. The Republican Party has been a staunch supporter of free trade for the past half-century, and Cohn feared that the new tariffs were likely to cause an internatio­nal trade war that impoverish­es everybody.

His new Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, is a hard-liner who shares Trump’s obsession with breaking the internatio­nal deal that stops Iran from developing nuclear weapons for the next 10 years. “When you look at the Iran deal, I think it’s terrible. I guess (Tillerson) thought it was OK,” he said. “With Mike Pompeo, we have a very similar thought process. I think it’s going to go very well.”

So stand by for Trump to alienate all of America’s main allies by sabotaging a treaty they worked very hard to achieve. Since he has swallowed Saudi Arabia’s argument that Iran is an ‘expansioni­st’ power that must be stopped, even direct military clashes between the U.S. and Iran, especially in Syria, become a lot more likely.

And what about the unpreceden­ted meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un that Trump agreed to last week (without consulting Tillerson)? In theory it’s a good idea, because nuclear war in the Korean peninsula is a very bad idea. But there are few people left around Trump who can steer him away from disastrous decisions.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada