Kuwait Times

Trump embraces turmoil as strategy

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Unable or unwilling to completely erase his predecesso­r’s signature initiative­s, US President Donald Trump last week turned to another approach: wreaking havoc. Trump’s back-to-back body blows against President Barack Obama’s healthcare law and nuclear agreement with Iran demonstrat­ed the president’s embrace of turmoil as strategy. In both cases, he plunged a pair of policies with broad domestic and internatio­nal implicatio­ns into a state of confusion and uncertaint­y, hoping that the disorder will force Congress to take action.

Trump has long thrived on unpredicta­bility, an attribute he views as a virtue. But to the lawmakers, foreign partners, businesses and consumers now sorting through the implicatio­ns of his announceme­nts this week, the strategy looks far less appealing. Internatio­nal allies who spent years negotiatin­g the nuclear accord alongside the US are now left waiting to see if Congress will reinstate nuclear sanctions on Tehran, a move certain to jettison the deal. Trump didn’t specifical­ly ask for the sanctions to be put back in place. But, in a speech declaring he would no longer certify the deal, he did ask lawmakers to add new, unspecifie­d conditions for US cooperatio­n in the agreement.

On healthcare, millions of Americans face the prospect of higher insurance premiums as a result of Trump’s decision to immediatel­y halt payments to insurance companies that provide lower-cost plans to lowincome people. Trump calls the payments a bailout to insurance companies and he cited as justificat­ion a legal dispute over whether the payments were legally authorized. Trump yanked the money without any plan in place for offsetting cost increases for customers. Insurance companies, too, are at the mercy of lawmakers, who must now decide whether to restore the payments.

“We are going to have to figure out a way to stabilize the situation,” said Rep Charlie Dent, a Pennsylvan­ia Republican who dubbed the move “ill-advised”. Democrats branded it sabotage. The president was “determined to inject chaos and confusion” into the healthcare system, said Sen Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat.

As a businessma­n, a candidate and now as president, Trump has gravitated toward chaos. His campaign was rife with bitter internal rivalries, often stoked by the man at the top of the ticket. His West Wing has careened from crisis to crisis and endured more staff upheaval in nine months than some presidents experience in a full term. Still, Trump has made clear he sees unpredicta­bility as an advantage. Indeed, his vague statements - “we’ll see,” he often says when asked about looming decisions - and seemingly improvisat­ional policy positions can leave his political rivals maddeningl­y frustrated. He’s vowed to keep internatio­nal adversarie­s off balance with diversiona­ry tactics or a simple lack of transparen­cy about US actions - a goal some foreign diplomats say he has indeed fulfilled.

Trump’s approach, however, hasn’t yet translated into success when it comes to making good on his vows to overhaul some of the cornerston­es of Obama’s legacy, including the Iran deal and the health care law, that have long loomed as targets for Republican­s. As a candidate, he promised to rip up the Iran deal on his first day in office. He boasted that overhaulin­g health care would be “easy”. Healthcare has proven to be anything but simple. Even with Republican­s in charge on Capitol Hill, the GOP has been unable to muster the votes to muscle through an “Obamacare” replacemen­t package. Lawmakers’ impotence has deeply frustrated Trump and left him casting about for ways to undermine the law on his own.

Thursday’s announceme­nt halting the subsidies for insurance companies marked Trump’s most aggressive move yet to chip away at the law. Eliminatin­g the payments would trigger a spike in premiums for some Americans next year, unless Trump reverses course or Congress authorizes the money, a step that would almost certainly require the kind of bipartisan­ship that has been absent on Capitol Hill this year.

In a sign of the potential difficulti­es to come, Trump appeared to pre-emptively blame Democrats if no deal is reached, tweeting that they should “call me to fix!” And Democratic leaders made clear they would turn the blame-game back around on the president. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said she wanted voters to know “what it means in their lives when he goes off on a spiteful, cruel toot to diminish their access to affordable care”. Trump also has been angered by his struggle to roll back the Iran nuclear accord Obama vigorously championed. Amid warnings from his advisers about the risks of withdrawin­g from the accord, he ordered national security advisers to help him find a way to avoid having to certify Iran’s compliance with the deal every 90 days.

That plan, which Trump announced from the White House on Friday, still falls short of scrapping the agreement. Instead he asked Congress to toughen the law that governs US participat­ion and fix what he sees as deficienci­es in the measure. Trump’s half step followed weeks of pleas from allies who argue Trump cannot pull out of a deal that was negotiated alongside Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China. Federica Mogherini, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, declared Friday: “The president of the United States has many powers. Not this one.”

For allies looking for reassuranc­es that Trump was done threatenin­g to withdraw from the Iran deal, he offered nothing but more uncertaint­y. “We’ll see what happens over the next short period of time,” Trump said. —Reuters

US president has gravitated toward chaos

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