Las Vegas Review-Journal

CONGRESS NOT PLEASED BY TRUMP FOREIGN POLICY MOVES

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Republican­s voted to block the sale, and Trump was saved by Democratic senators who backed him.

Next week, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will move after years of resistance to draft a new war authorizat­ion to fight the Islamic State, asserting more power over troop deployment­s as Trump publicly cedes that authority to the Pentagon.

Not least, the Trump administra­tion’s budget request that would gut the State Department was met by an instant rebuke from Sen. Mitch Mcconnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, who won’t even consider it.

In the meantime, a number of senators have formed a kind of parallel operation to the State Department by visiting allies to assure them of America’s commitment­s.

“One of my goals as the leading Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is to recapture much of the Senate prerogativ­es on foreign policy,” said Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee, the committee chairman. He added that the panel had “dissipated for a long time into a debating society.”

Congress has struggled with what to do about Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign and aggression in Eastern Europe since Trump was elected. Some early efforts at new sanctions on Russia were considered too tough by some Republican­s. After the election, Corker waited for Tillerson, at Tillerson’s request, to attempt a relationsh­ip with his Russian counterpar­t, Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister.

But Corker decided the effort was fruitless and called Tillerson from a secure location in the Capitol to let him know that he was proceeding with a strong Russia sanctions bill. That was not an option that Tillerson preferred, Corker said in an interview.

“What went into passing that bill was incredibly intense,” Corker said. “Our staff worked around the clock to get us where we are, in a place where the election passions had dissolved into significan­t policy discussion­s.”

Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin of Maryland, the highest-ranking Democrat on the committee, agreed.

“This is a very important moment for this Congress,” he said. “What we recognized as we were working on this is we were not really talking about President Trump, we were talking about American values. If you don’t say, ‘This is to counter Trump,’ even if you are in fact countering Trump, that’s how you get Republican partners.”

The bill — which still must clear the House after the 97-2 Senate vote — empowered Congress to block the president from reducing existing sanctions and added new ones in response to Russia’s support for President Bashar Assad of Syria and Kremlin interferen­ce in last year’s election.

“It’s a significan­t rebuke to Trump,” said Max Boot, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “A bipartisan near-unanimous majority is asserting traditiona­l foreign policy in the face of his unpreceden­ted challenges to the basic norms of American global leadership.”

After Trump’s trip to Saudi Arabia, Sens. Rand Paul, R-KY., and Christophe­r S. Murphy, D-conn., led the effort to block the arms sale to the kingdom, a replay of a similar effort last year. The move gained far more steam this time, with growing concerns about the kingdom’s interventi­on in the civil war in Yemen that has led to many civilian casualties.

“I think that this completely un-nuanced alliance that this administra­tion is constructi­ng with Saudi Arabia has both sides of the aisle increasing­ly concerned,” Murphy said, noting the administra­tion’s scramble to prevent passage of the measure. (Corker dismissed the effort as a “pound of flesh” moment aimed at embarrassi­ng the president.)

Some foreign policy experts are skeptical about how much impact Congress can actually have in foreign policy, where the president has broad authority.

“The rest of the world understand­s the U.S. enough to know that the president makes foreign policy, not his Cabinet and not Congress,” said Robert Kagan, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n.

“The threat to the American-led world order is that the president will not work actively to sustain it. Congress can’t take the president’s place in that effort,” he said.

 ?? STEPHEN CROWLEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., left, President Donald Trump, center, and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-wis., meet June 6 at the White House. While Trump threatens to upend the post-world War II foreign policy order, Congress is working to ensure that American foreign policy remains rooted in the transatlan­tic alliance against traditiona­l rivals like Russia.
STEPHEN CROWLEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., left, President Donald Trump, center, and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-wis., meet June 6 at the White House. While Trump threatens to upend the post-world War II foreign policy order, Congress is working to ensure that American foreign policy remains rooted in the transatlan­tic alliance against traditiona­l rivals like Russia.

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