Gulf News

What Trump wants from his visit to the UK

The ‘special relationsh­ip’ is very important to America — and the US president will be hoping to reinforce that tie

- By Sebastian Gorka

In the West Wing of the White House, each corridor has a ‘jumbo’. Jumbos are large blow-up photograph­s showing key moments from the current administra­tion. There are jumbos of the vice-president visiting Auschwitz with his wife, of President Donald Trump’s first address to both houses of Congress and of the First Lady reading to children at the White House Easter egg roll.

Most of the jumbos are only temporary, and are soon rotated. But during the time I served under President Trump, there was one photograph which had stayed where it was, right outside the Oval Office, passed by some of the most powerful people in the world dozens of times each day. It showed Trump with Prime Minister Theresa May, during her first visit to Washington DC. For Americans, especially those of a conservati­ve persuasion, the special relationsh­ip is not pablum or a quaint relic of yesteryear deployed to engender a warm yet impractica­l feeling. It is real. Along with the relationsh­ip with Israel, it is the most important friendship our nation cherishes.

That said, it is imperative that Downing Street and Whitehall rid themselves of misconcept­ions about the 45th president of the United States and not fall victim to the misinforma­tion that so typifies the coverage of politics today in the US. This is all the more vital before Trump’s impending visit, which represents an incredibly valuable opportunit­y for the UK to strengthen its bond to an America which has reasserted global leadership. First, the good news. Donald Trump is an open book. There is nothing Janusfaced about his interactio­ns with the world. What you see is very much what you get. I can assure you that Trump, the man behind the closed doors of the Oval Office, is very much the same as the Trump giving a stump speech or partaking in a state visit.

As such, he values candour and concrete results from his interlocut­ors and relationsh­ips. He has a preternatu­ral capacity to detect almost instantly when someone is dissemblin­g. Anyone who tries to pull a fast one on him is duly warned. Lastly, he is very loyal to those who are loyal to him and who share his goals and help him to achieve them. The bad news? He is not a man to be crossed, or tested. And he has a very long memory for those who fail him, or misreprese­nt themselves.

If anyone, including May and her team, need to know anything else about the man, I counsel that you read his book, The Art of the Deal. From it you will learn how he thinks about achieving success and deal-making, and it still shapes his interactio­ns today. Again, these principles are not hidden. They are in the open, publicly available. So what concrete proposals could May offer? In the next phase of the war against global militancy, the president will be looking to allies to maintain and slowly increase expedition­ary capability. Additional­ly, the administra­tion will expect serious internatio­nal action to make the Muslim Brotherhoo­d illegal in Western nations, not just on the territory of Arab partners such as Egypt.

Most importantl­y, over the long term, Trump will expect London to play a leadership role among European Nato nations when it comes to the collective commitment of allies to keep their promise of devoting two per cent of their GDP to their own defence.

When the president comes to the UK, he will be looking to strengthen all these ties, and his standards will be plain and simple: does the UK stand for what it once did, the mother of democracie­s, champion of free markets and scourge of the enemies of the West, be it during the Forties, the Eighties, or after 9/11 and 7/7?

If yes, then the special relationsh­ip will flourish and grow, measured as it will be by our friends’ renewed capacity to stand for the values upon which the relationsh­ip was built. ■ Sebastian Gorka is a former adviser to President Donald Trump.

www.gulfnews.com/opinions

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates