The Jerusalem Post

Sifting through Trump’s Europe tour for signs of a foreign policy

- • By TRACY WILKINSON

WASHINGTON – Critics already are calling it the “blame America first” tour.

That was perhaps inevitable after President Donald Trump blamed American “foolishnes­s and stupidity” on Monday for the nosedive in US relations with Moscow, not Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, Syria and in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Later, after an unpreceden­ted two-hour private meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump said he didn’t see “any reason why” Russia would meddle in America’s electoral politics, citing Putin’s “strong and powerful” denials, a stunning rebuke to US intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agencies.

That followed six days of jaw-dropping presidenti­al taunts aimed at internatio­nal institutio­ns and alliances that have formed the backbone of US foreign policy and national security for decades, unnerving traditiona­l partners in NATO, the European Union and allied capitals around the globe.

The reaction was even more severe in Washington, where Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul D. Ryan led a storm of bipartisan complaints that Trump’s budding “bromance” with Putin had seemingly blinded him to Russia’s malign behavior.

Even Trump’s director of national intelligen­ce, Dan Coats, challenged the president for dismissing the conclusion­s of the US intelligen­ce community, both House and Senate intelligen­ce committees, and two federal indictment­s that Putin’s government deliberate­ly sought to disrupt America’s last presidenti­al race with hundreds of cyberattac­ks, phony social media accounts and other tools.

“We have been clear in our assessment­s of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and their ongoing, pervasive efforts to undermine our democracy,” Coats said in an extraordin­ary break with the White House.

On Friday, Coats had warned that US counterint­elligence was “blinking red” with threats of continued Russian cyberattac­ks, comparing it to the danger signs before the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Analysts struggled to discern a clear strategy in Trump’s latest unconventi­onal foray into foreign policy. Though some suggested his disruption­s sought to shake up and reform ossified internatio­nal security and trading systems for the 21st century, others saw the raw id of an inexperien­ced leader in the global spotlight.

Although Trump insisted every stop on his trip produced a success, it probably will be remembered for his threatenin­g to quit NATO if allies didn’t pony up more money; calling Germany a Russian “captive” because of a natural gas pipeline; kneecappin­g British Prime Minister Theresa May with a derisive interview before they met; slamming the European Union as America’s chief trading “foe” ahead of Russia and China, and more.

“It’s been a week of a degree of calamitous-type events,” said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

But Trump’s startling put-down of America before his summit with Putin in Helsinki, Finland – even though he later said “both countries” were at fault – was head-snapping even for Republican­s inured to Trump’s steady outpouring of boasts, jibes and falsehoods.

“I disagree with the president’s comments,” said Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “There is simply no comparing the actions of the United States and Vladimir Putin.”

“Russia is not our friend,” said Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., chairman of the House Oversight Committee and normally one of Trump’s most ardent supporters. He urged Coats and other senior Cabinet members “to communicat­e to the president it is possible to conclude Russia interfered with our election in 2016 without delegitimi­zing his electoral success.” AFTER THEY MET, Trump and Putin announced no agreements or even progress on Ukraine, Syria, Afghanista­n, nuclear arms control, or even on stopping harassment of US diplomatic personnel in Moscow, major areas of US concern. It wasn’t clear whether Trump got anything beyond a World Cup soccer ball, a gift from Putin.

Instead, their joint news conference became another venue for Trump to praise the Russian strongman, boast about his own electoral victory, and lash out at Democrats and the special counsel investigat­ion that last week indicted a dozen Russian intelligen­ce officers for hacking Democratic Party computers during the 2016 campaign.

“The message he is sending is that... allies are more dangerous than adversarie­s,” said Thomas Wright, director of the Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institutio­n, a nonpartisa­n think tank in Washington.

“We are operating in a world without safety rails,” he added.

Trump’s affinity for strongmen and his dismissive attitude toward NATO is a “gift” to Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping, said William Burns, president of the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace and a former deputy secretary of State.

“It’s reflective of his worldview, that the world should be run by big guys, big powers, that might makes right,” said Burns, who also served as US ambassador to Russia. “There’s also a bit of Putin envy,” he added.

Trump has expressed similar praise of North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, who runs a police state, and Turkey’s authoritar­ian leader, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has jailed tens of thousands of his opponents, noted Ojars Eriks Kalnins, a former Latvian ambassador to the US, during a seminar Monday in Washington on Russian election interferen­ce.

“He likes leaders who don’t need to be accountabl­e to their voters,” Kalnins said.

Trump increasing­ly appears at odds with parts of his own administra­tion when it comes to Russia.

Though he has suggested he might recognize Russia’s seizure of Crimea, for example, his administra­tion has supplied anti-tank rockets to the government in Kiev, expanding US support for Ukraine in its battle with Moscow.

Similarly, the administra­tion has formally backed Britain’s claims that Moscow was almost certainly to blame for a chemical toxin attack against a former Russian spy living in England.

But Trump has been slow to punish Moscow. In March, the administra­tion announced new sanctions on Russia – but they fell well short of the penalties Congress had approved nearly unanimousl­y last year, and focused on a narrow list of targets.

Trump’s advisers and aides sometimes urge foreign leaders to watch what he does, not what he tweets, arguing that there is purpose under the bluster.

“His negotiatin­g style is always to leave the other guy an off-ramp,” said James Carafano, a senior analyst at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation, which has advised the administra­tion.

“Sometimes he is very effusive and that can come off as being off-putting,” he said. But it can be an effective negotiatin­g technique to change an adversary’s behavior, he added.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., a hawk on foreign policy who is generally supportive of Trump, said the president may have miscalcula­ted with Putin, however.

“All I can speculate is that there is an effort to figure out if by being nice to Vladimir Putin there is a way we can establish a better working relationsh­ip,” Rubio said. “The flaw in that, which I think goes to the heart of this very issue, is that Vladimir Putin is not interested in a better working relationsh­ip with the United States.” (Los Angeles Times/TNS)

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