The Pak Banker

Trump's diplomatic legacy: lost trust, scarred ties and sanctions

- WASHINGTON -APP

President Donald Trump made some of his flashiest 2016 campaign pledges in foreign policy areas, such as vowing to reevaluate the U.S. relationsh­ip with NATO, abandon a landmark nuclear deal with Iran and bring U.S. troops back from "forever wars." The Republican president, a former businessma­n from New York who boasts about his deal-making skills, has delivered on some of his pledges, while partially meeting a few others. Some he has so far completely failed to achieve.

If Trump is defeated in the Nov. 3 election by Democratic rival Joe Biden, the new administra­tion's hardest challenge will be to restore the global standing and trustworth­iness of the United States, analysts and former U.S. and European officials say. Biden, vice president under President Barack Obama, will be taking over a scarred transatlan­tic relationsh­ip, deep antagonism with China and sanctions-dominated pressure campaigns against Iran, Syria and Venezuela.

A central theme in Trump's 2016 campaign was to accuse China of "ripping off" the United States while vowing to seal a fair trade deal with Beijing that would help American businesses and create U.S. jobs. After almost two years of tit-for-tat trade war with the world's second largest economy, Trump has so far managed a stalled first phase of such an agreement.

Meanwhile, Washington and Beijing have slapped tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of each others' goods and the global spread of the coronaviru­s from China has soured bilateral ties to their worst level in decades, raising fears of a new Cold War.

Washington has acted against Beijing on multiple fronts: It ended the special status of Hong Kong, sanctioned top officials over human rights abuses and sought to ban Chinese technology companies from operating in the United States. A Biden administra­tion would have little option but to maintain the hard stance, analysts say, but would likely seek to dial down some rhetoric to create room for engagement.

In 2018, the Trump withdrew from the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, saying he could strike a better one. He also launched a "maximum pressure" campaign to choke off Tehran's sources of income. Despite almost two years of sanctions on everything from oil revenue to minerals and Iran's central bank, Washington has yet to force a change of behavior by Tehran and bring it back to the negotiatin­g table. Instead, escalating tensions have carried the two nations to the brink of war.

Biden has said he would deal with Iran through diplomacy and re-enter the agreement, but only if Iran first returned to compliance with the deal's restrictio­ns on its nuclear program. Trump has repeatedly complained about the failure of many NATO partners to meet defense spending targets. He has also questioned the continued relevance of the organizati­on created in 1949 at the start of the Cold War with Russia.

His attacks soured ties with several European allies, but more members of the alliance have now increased spending to meet its target of two percent of GDP.

This year, Trump vowed to cut the number of U.S. troops in Germany, accusing Berlin of taking advantage of the United States while not meeting its NATO obligation­s. Analysts say repairing the transatlan­tic alliance will take time, but should be one of the easier tasks awaiting a potential Biden administra­tion. Trump promised in his 2016 campaign to stay out of foreign wars and bring home U.S. troops deployed in Afghanista­n, America's longest war, which is now in its nineteenth year. Washington has begun cutting troop numbers in Afghanista­n after striking a deal with the Taliban in February that envisaged the withdrawal of all U.S. troops. This depends, however, on talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government, which have stalled.

Trump also ordered a pullout of U.S. troops from Syria. The decision was repeatedly watered down by aides and the military, but numbers have still been reduced by more than half.

One of Trump's most controvers­ial decisions was his withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement, something he had repeatedly vowed to do during the 2016 campaign. Trump said the agreement imposed "draconian" financial and economic burdens on the US and vowed to negotiate a better one.

A new agreement has not materializ­ed. The Biden campaign said he would recommit to the original Paris deal and lead an effort to get major countries to toughen their domestic targets. Trump delivered on his 2016 campaign promise to relocate the U.S. Embassy in Israel to divided Jerusalem. The move was slammed by most of the Arab world but won praise from the Israeli government and its supporters, as well as evangelica­l Christians.

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