China Daily (Hong Kong)

‘America first’ hobbles global leadership of US

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Since Donald Trump took office in January, 2017, there has been much speculatio­n about the direction of US policy in the Middle East. Now it has begun to take shape and it spells ill for the region. With the US president announcing he was withdrawin­g the United States from the Iran nuclear deal last week, and the US opening its new embassy in Jerusalem on Monday, the ire in the region has grown. If previous US government­s tried hard to shore up the US image as an impartial mediator of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict — despite the long tradition of close US-Israeli ties — the pendulum of the current Trump administra­tion has ultimately swung fully in favor of Israel.

Now that the divisions in the Middle East are deepening, Trump is looking to take advantage of these to fish for US interests in the region through its alliance with Israel.

A similar motivation prompted Trump to tear up the Iran nuclear deal, as he sees Teheran’s rising influence in regional affairs as an increasing threat to the US interests and influence in the region. Obviously, Trump’s new Middle East policy bears every hallmark of all his other actions, that is undoing whatever his predecesso­r did and putting America first, never mind the consequenc­es for others.

However, Trump may have underestim­ated the sensitivit­y of the Jerusalem issue. History shows Jerusalem is one of a few issues that can rally all Muslim countries against the US despite their difference­s and disputes.

By unilateral­ly changing the status quo of the Jerusalem issue, the Trump administra­tion is further intensifyi­ng the enmity between the entire Muslim world and Israel and pushing the Palestinia­ns and Israelis into another vicious circle of violence and bloodshed. In the worst-case scenario, as some have already warned, the US move could even lead to war.

Such unilateral policies, which have become the mainstay of the Trump administra­tion’s foreign policy, undermine the very spirit of diplomacy, multilater­alism and internatio­nal cooperatio­n. To some extent, Trump is pushing the US self-centeredne­ss to the extreme — the devil take the rest.

From the Paris climate change pact to the Jerusalem issue and the Iran deal, Trump seems intent on proving the US is unable or unwilling to play a responsibl­e and constructi­ve role in world affairs.

If the US continues to shrug off the responsibi­lities of power and continues to pursue narrow-minded interests, it is only natural that more and more people will turn their backs on its leadership.

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