Gulf News

Trump is getting the job done

From taking on Iran to renegotiat­ing trade deals, the US president is delivering exactly what he promised

- By Con Coughlin

Donald Trump, the United States President, is not going to win any plaudits for his response to the death of his bitter rival Senator John McCain. Trump’s critics have lost no time in castigatin­g him over what they regard as his lack of respect for Senator McCain, reflected in the president’s decision to only keep the Stars and Stripes at half mast for little more than a day after the 81-year-old war hero finally succumbed to brain cancer.

The public outcry eventually forced a change of heart, and the flag will now fly in tribute until the funeral takes place. Trump, though, will be a notable absentee because, in his final days, Senator McCain made a point of excluding the president from the list of attendees, a deliberate posthumous snub designed to cause the White House maximum embarrassm­ent.

The deep-seated personal antipathy between these two leading figures in Republican politics should not, however, be allowed to overshadow Trump’s achievemen­ts beyond the self-obsessed bubble of the Washington beltway. For, as the new trade deal announced this week between Mexico and the US demonstrat­es, when the president’s performanc­e is looked at in the round, the evidence suggests Trump is making a good fist of delivering on his election promises.

One of the key objectives of Trump’s “America

First” approach is to tackle the country’s astronomic­al trade deficit, which last year stood at $810 billion (Dh2.97 trillion) in goods alone. The president argues that the deficit puts the American economy at a distinct disadvanta­ge, one that has resulted in the devastatio­n of communitie­s throughout America that are dependent on manufactur­ing.

To reverse this trend, Trump is demanding better terms with those trading partners, such as China and the European Union (EU), that benefit enormously from their access to America’s $20 trillion economy. The president has attracted enormous criticism over his threat to initiate trade wars with countries that are unwilling to negotiate new trading arrangemen­ts. To this end, Trump has already imposed 25 per cent tariffs on steel and 10 per cent tariffs on aluminium.

Trump has been especially critical of the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta), the 24-year-old commercial arrangemen­t between the US, Mexico and Canada, which accounts for a significan­t slice of Washington’s shortfall. Trade with Mexico is responsibl­e for $71 billion of the deficit, a figure Trump now expects to be reduced radically, following the successful conclusion of trade talks with the Mexican government. The new deal seeks to end the unfair advantage Mexico has enjoyed for two decades by dint of its lower employment costs.

Much work still needs to be done to keep Nafta alive, not least persuading the Leftwing government of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that Toronto’s interests are best served by negotiatin­g fairer trading terms with Washington. The fact, though, that, with the Mexico deal, Trump has proven his detractors wrong, and that it is possible to secure better trading conditions for American businesses, is a significan­t victory for the White House — one that suggests the Trump administra­tion is deeply serious about fulfilling its manifesto commitment­s.

Massive budget deficit

Furthermor­e, it should send a warning shot across the bows of other trading partners that are disincline­d to take seriously Trump’s determinat­ion to end America’s massive budget deficit. China, at least, has taken the hint, and its officials have just completed two days of intensive negotiatio­ns, which finished inconclusi­vely at the end of last week, about addressing America’s staggering $371 billion trade deficit with Beijing.

The Mexico deal will also encourage Trump to maintain pressure on the EU, which currently enjoys a $151 billion surplus with the US. Trump can already point to the fact that a number of European members of the Nato alliance have agreed to raise their defence expenditur­e as proof that Europe is no longer taking American policymake­rs for a ride.

Nor is it just in the field of trade talks that the Trump administra­tion can claim to be making headway. The negotiatio­ns over North Korea’s nuclear programme may have stalled, but the recent reunion of family members after decades of separation on the Korean peninsula points to an improvemen­t in relations between North and South.

In Iran, the political turmoil over the country’s increasing­ly perilous economic predicamen­t is the direct result of Trump’s decision to withdraw from the nuclear deal and impose new sanctions. For all the criticism Trump has received, including from Britain, for withdrawin­g from the deal, it still remains the best way of persuading Tehran to behave more responsibl­y. All of which suggests that, while Trump may not be the most sensitive politician ever to have occupied the Oval Office, he could still prove to be one of the most effective.

■ Con Coughlin is the Daily Telegraph’s defence editor and chief foreign affairs columnist.

 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ??
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News

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