Houston Chronicle

Trump outlines ‘America First’ foreign policy

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Donald Trump strains to lay out a clear vision of his foreign policy, vowing to substitute hard realism for what he calls an era replete with national security failures.

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s vision for America’s place in the world, spelled out in a rare policy speech Wednesday, offered a gauzy overview that left even some favorable to his campaign calling for more specificit­y.

Trump says that as president he’d put “America first” when it comes to foreign policy. He’d bolster defense spending and push U.S. allies to spend more money on defending themselves — or let them fend for themselves. Not in the fine print

Combating Islamic State militants? A priority — but his plans are secret. “We must as a nation be more unpredicta­ble,” the Republican presidenti­al front-runner said Wednesday, promising a surprise attack and quick finish to the terrorist group as he delivered the first foreign policy address of his unorthodox campaign.

The calls for more details began with his embracing “America First,” a phrase that harkens back to aviator Charles Lindbergh and his leadership of the political party that championed American isolationi­sm on the eve of World War II.

“‘Put America first,’ we could put some more meat on that bone on what that means,” said Donald Smith, a member of the Center for National Interest, which hosted Trump’s talk.

Smith said he wanted more foreign policy specifics on NATO — which Trump has called “obsolete.” Speech for wary voters

Yet Smith said U.S. allies wouldn’t “suffer from his policies at all. Our enemies might suffer a little more, not our allies.”

Trump’s campaign in recent weeks has sought to make overtures to the Republican establishm­ent ahead of what could be a contested convention this summer in Cleveland.

And the speech sought to give Trump the imprimatur of president. He even used a teleprompt­er to deliver prepared remarks with little of the bombast that marks a Trump campaign speech, but for a reference to his campaign slogan.

He largely shied away from his prior attacks against George W. Bush’s handling of the Iraq war, instead aiming to place the blame for turmoil in the Middle East squarely on President Barack Obama - and his first term Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton.

“The legacy of the Obama-Clinton interventi­ons will be weakness, confusion and disarray, a mess,” he said.

Trump’s speech appeared to be aimed not so much at allaying fears among the conservati­ve foreign policy community, as it was to voters wary of U.S. spending and involvemen­t abroad, many of whom have helped drive the brash billionair­e to victory. ‘Just trust me’

He assailed U.S. allies for not putting up enough money for their security and he bashed trade deals that he said had bled jobs from the U.S. — a familiar refrain for attendees at Trump campaign events.

“It was definitely an attempt at a coherent strategy, but it has these contradict­ions that are not resolved and that doesn’t help elucidate how he would actually manage,” Kathleen Hicks, director of the Internatio­nal Security Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies said of Trump’s speech.

“He seems to point to a desire to say ‘Just trust me and trust my principles,’ I will learn the facts and do what’s right,” she said.

 ?? Evan Vucci / AP Photo ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump presented his foreign policy speech Wednesday in Washington, saying the nation must be “more unpredicta­ble.”
Evan Vucci / AP Photo Democratic presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump presented his foreign policy speech Wednesday in Washington, saying the nation must be “more unpredicta­ble.”

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