Gulf News

Trump’s foreign-policy shortcomin­gs

Increased interactio­n with leaders can be a learning process and help the president reassure America’s allies, particular­ly in Asia, and preserve US interests

- Special to Gulf News

nited States President Donald Trump’s first year in office bares foreign policy shortcomin­gs, particular­ly on Asia, where the US appears to be retreating against the backdrop of growing concern over rising China’s belligeren­t designs in the South China Sea. A businessma­n with little or no exposure to complex world affairs and geopolitic­al idiosyncra­sies will, naturally, take time to understand and address serious foreign policy issues. President Trump’s foreign policy has so far been characteri­sed by ad hocism and transactio­nal relations with individual foreign leaders.

Almost immediatel­y after assuming office, Trump’s first foreign-policy act was to announce the US withdrawal from the multilater­al 12-member Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP), which was painstakin­gly cobbled together by his predecesso­r Barack Obama who had conceived the TPP as the centrepiec­e of America’s muchtouted “pivot” to Asia. Despite the TPP’s official demise, some of its proponents still hope that the US will make a surprise re-entry. During a recent panel discussion I attended at the Asia Society in New York, Wendy Cutler, former deputy US trade representa­tive and a TPP negotiator, called the US withdrawal from the TPP a “very serious mistake”.

While the remaining 11 TPP members have, meanwhile, come together under Japan’s leadership to put that deal into effect without the US, Cutler warned that China is trying to fill the vacuum created by US withdrawal, citing Chinese President Xi Jinping’s speech in Davos (Switzerlan­d) in 2017, portraying China as the leader of “inclusive globalisat­ion” and as a “free trade country”.

Neverthele­ss, Trump shook the diplomatic establishm­ent a month ago by saying something positive about the TPP in Davos. He suggested that if significan­t changes were made, the US might be open to TPP. Such words contrast sharply with the rhetoric of a man who once called the TPP agreement the “rape of the country” and the “worst deal ever”, and criticised the negotiator­s as the “most incompeten­t people on earth”.

Though Trump’s statement on joining the TPP was accompanie­d by caveats — Cutler called it an “opening” — the TPP is just one issue that reveals Trump’s penchant for following a zigzag course. Trump needs to demonstrat­e consistenc­y, lest his words become meaningles­s, and harm America’s credibilit­y.

Daniel Russel, a former assistant secretary of state (Asia/Pacific) in the Obama administra­tion, and Cutler’s co-panellist at the Asia Society discussion, pointed out that even after a year in office, many senior diplomatic posts, both in Washington and US missions abroad, remained vacant. While Trump has filled in ambassador­ial posts in Beijing, Tokyo and New Delhi, other ‘hugely important’ vacancies in Australia, South Korea, Singapore and elsewhere remain unfilled. Such neglect is untenable.

The continuing dichotomy

Then there was Trump’s State-of-the-Union address that many pundits hoped would provide clarity on his foreign policy. Alas, that was not the case. The continuing dichotomy between Trump’s isolationi­st and protection­ist impulses, and the more internatio­nalist worldview of his senior advisers, clouds his foreign policy course.

On the bright side, Trump spent nearly two weeks in November in Asia, visiting Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam and the Philippine­s. This was a welcome change for American diplomats, particular­ly those dealing with Asia, where it is widely feared that China will elbow the US out of its traditiona­l position of regional leadership. The US administra­tion needs to reassure Asians that despite Trump’s “America First” policy, old alliances and friendship­s do matter to the US.

Again, Trump’s vision of a role for India in world affairs — particular­ly in Asia, where it is being groomed to become a counterwei­ght to China — has not been clearly defined. Rex Tillerson, the phlegmatic US Secretary of State, who visited India late last October, has yet to clarify how the administra­tion envisages India’s role in Asia, though there has been intense discussion recently about greater naval cooperatio­n in the framework of what is called “the Quad”, comprising Australia, India, Japan and the US, with other “like-minded” Asian countries joining later. The US envisages a prime role for India in Asia, but has yet to provide the contours of such a role.

Trump’s foreign-policy scorecard may show flaws and shortcomin­gs, but he will, hopefully, acquire greater sensitivit­y in statecraft. Increased interactio­n with Asian leaders can indeed be a learning process and help the US president forge a clearer foreign policy course that would reassure Asian allies and also preserve US interests in Asia.

Manik Mehta is a New York-based journalist with extensive writing experience on foreign affairs, diplomacy, global economics and internatio­nal trade.

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