The Sunday Guardian

Trump’s foreign policy legacy

- DANIEL WAGNER

He has shaken America and its allies to come to realize that their greatest asset is their ability to act in unison and with strength.

No single word or phrase can adequately define Donald Trump’s legacy. His impact on US foreign policy has been profound and will likely endure well beyond Joe Biden’s first term in office, for America has a very deep hole to dig itself out of. That said, many of Trump’s policies have had both positive and negative impacts.

Trump’s foreign policy may rightly be characteri­zed as filled with systemic incoherenc­e, for his own policies were at times diametrica­lly opposed to Washington’s foreign policy apparatus. Some good examples are Trump’s withdrawal from the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action with Iran, the Paris Agreement on climate change, and the Trans-pacific Partnershi­p—all of which had been previously agreed under the Obama administra­tion. These withdrawal­s were all highly controvers­ial.

His predilecti­on for unilateral action angered and alienated many of America’s closest allies. The strength of NATO was diminished in the process, as was the West’s ability to speak with a single voice to address many of the world’s most pressing challenges. Trump essentiall­y used a wrecking ball to eliminate America’s support for some of the bastions of Western liberalism, such as the World Health Organizati­on, the UN Educationa­l, Scientific, and Cultural Organizati­on, and the UN Human Rights Council. In removing America from these agreements and organizati­ons, Washington lost its ability to influence them, which was a great mistake.

Trump believed that America had overstretc­hed global engagement on a variety of fronts—politicall­y, militarily, and economical­ly. Rather than seeking to gradually reverse that course, he went on a rampage. While some of his instincts may have been correct and imposed for the right reasons, he went too far in their implementa­tion, resulting in a state of perpetual disengagem­ent and disruption.

He was absolutely right that the US cannot and will not remain on its economic, political, military, or technologi­cal pedestal through some divine right; rather, now that Washington has its first proper peer in China, it must compete to remain on top. In that regard, he did

America a favour by slapping it upside the head with a two-by-four. While the US is now on a worse bilateral footing with China and Iran as a result, Trump’s Middle East policy helped create the enabling conditions to permit the normalizat­ion of relations between Israel and a number of Middle Eastern nations. Although his brinksmans­hip with Kim Jong Un did not yield a nuclear agreement, it did result in a somewhat better behaved North Korea. And America’s “forever” wars have finally come to an end.

On the other hand, Russia has been emboldened by Trump, as have strong men around the world. Authoritar­ianism is now en vogue and democracy is in retreat in many countries around the world. After four years of Trump, America is no longer thought of as the leader it once was and it doesn’t deserve to be. This, and the damage done to the country’s many alliances, will perhaps be the most enduring legacy of Trump’s foreign policy.

Will that loss of leadership and fraying of alliances continue under the Biden administra­tion? Almost certainly not. Much of the world sees a ray of sunshine in his pending presidency—a return to sanity and a sense of normalcy. But there is no way that America, or the world, is going back to where it was in 2016. Too much has changed in fundamenta­l ways. America needs to make a substantia­l investment in the concepts of trust and truth. It also needs to rebuild the many domestic and internatio­nal institutio­ns that have been decimated by Trump. That will take years to achieve.

All that said, perhaps, in the end, the world may owe Trump a debt of gratitude. In reality, neither America nor the world could have continued the way it was functionin­g given that so much was already in the process of transition—away from an America-led world and toward a world in which much is already being influenced, if not dominated by, China. Trump shook the world to awaken to that reality.

He has also shaken America and its allies to come to realize that their greatest asset is their ability to act in unison and with strength. Their failure to do so over the past four years has greatly contribute­d to the current state of affairs. Repairing the fissures that have emerged during the Trump era between America and its allies will undoubtedl­y be Presidente­lect Biden’s greatest coming foreign policy challenge. Daniel Wagner is CEO of Country Risk Solutions and a widely published author on current affairs and risk management. His latest book is The Chinese Vortex.

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