Los Angeles Times

A combative Trump at U.N.

President’s foreign policy doctrine puts emphasis on major powers’ sovereignt­y.

- By Noah Bierman and David Lauter

WASHINGTON — President Trump used variations of the word “sovereign” 21 times in his 42-minute speech Tuesday to the United Nations General Assembly, driving home his belief that countries, not internatio­nal institutio­ns like the U.N., will and should determine the fate of the world by pursuing their own best interests.

The speech offered the most fleshed-out definition yet of the Trump doctrine, a style of big-power nationalis­m that the president and his advisors have also labeled “principled realism” and “America first.” It brushed aside decades of American policy in favor of an approach that was dominant in the 1940s and 1950s.

“The nation-state remains the best vehicle for elevating the human condition,” Trump declared. “Our success,” he said, “depends on a coalition of strong and independen­t nations that

‘The United States has great strength and patience, but if it is forced to defend itself or its allies, we will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea.’ — PRESIDENT TRUMP

embrace their sovereignt­y, to promote security, prosperity and peace for themselves and for the world.”

The speech’s emphasis on nationalis­m was consistent with Trump’s campaign themes, but its assertive view of the U.S. role in the world broke sharply with some campaign rhetoric that suggested a more isolationi­st path.

It contrasted even more directly with the foreign policy approaches of his two most recent predecesso­rs.

Gone was President Obama’s focus on climate change and human rights, as well as his concern with the limitation­s of U.S. military force and emphasis on internatio­nal organizati­ons.

Instead, the speech featured a denunciati­on of Obama’s nuclear accord with Iran and a repeated emphasis on the need for the U.S. to consider its citizens before those of other nations.

“You really are seeing ‘America first’ campaign rhetoric being turned into a global strategy,” said Frederick Kempe, president and chief executive officer of the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based think tank.

But the speech also drew a sharp contrast with the foreign policy approach of the last Republican president, George W. Bush, who justified his administra­tion’s invasion of Iraq in part by emphasizin­g the hope that removing dictatoria­l regimes in the Middle East would lead to the spread of democracy.

“The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom,” Bush declared in one of his main foreign policy speeches.

Trump, by contrast, downplayed the idea that the U.S. should intervene to spread democratic systems worldwide.

“We do not expect diverse countries to share the same cultures, traditions or even systems of government,” Trump said. “But we do expect all nations to uphold these two core sovereign duties: to respect the interests of their own people and the rights of every other sovereign nation.”

As the speech showed, Trump accepts that rival powers such as China and Russia will pursue their own goals, which will often run afoul of U.S. values or even global norms. He treats relationsh­ips with those countries as transactio­nal, aimed at serving security or economic goals. He thanked Moscow and Beijing for help with sanctions against North Korea and avoided any criticism of either by name, making only oblique references to instabilit­y in Ukraine and the South China Sea.

Yet even as Trump preached a live-and-let-live philosophy with America’s most powerful rivals, he made exceptions for weaker ones. He made clear that his respect for sovereignt­y does not cover the behavior of smaller countries that he considers to be “rogue regimes,” employing his most bellicose rhetoric to threaten them with destructio­n and belittle their leaders. He directly and at length denounced North Korea, Iran and Venezuela and offered shorter criticism of Cuba.

Despite the audience of global leaders, the criticism of Venezuela and Cuba, in particular, were among several nods Trump made to his domestic political base. He branded North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as “Rocket Man on a suicide mission” as if he were insulting him during a campaign rally, called out “loser terrorists,” and boasted that “the United States has done very well since election day last Nov. 8.”

Trump’s address left some in his audience filled with misgivings.

“This was the wrong speech, at the wrong time, to the wrong audience,” Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom told the BBC.

Europeans who sit in Trump’s nationalis­tic camp, however, were gleeful. Nigel Farage, an enthusiast­ic proponent of “Brexit,” the vote last year for Britain to depart the European Union, tweeted: “Trump’s UK approval ratings will go up significan­tly after this UN speech.”

Trump’s speech rejected Bush’s argument that the best path to security involves promoting U.S.-style democratic systems around the world.

Bush’s clearest expression of his foreign policy doctrine came in a speech at the National Defense University at Ft. McNair, a few miles from the White House, on March 8, 2005, where he offered a strong defense of U.S. interventi­on overseas.

“Our strategy to keep the peace in the longer term is to help change the conditions that give rise to extremism and terror, especially in the broader Middle East,” Bush said, adding that the region had “been caught for generation­s in a cycle of tyranny and despair and radicalism.”

Bush railed against “decades of excusing and accommodat­ing tyranny, in the pursuit of stability,” but Trump, who has lavished praise on strongmen for their ability to contain extremists in their countries, said that economic prosperity would be the chief force leading to stability.

But like so much else in the Trump presidency, a bigger feature of his foreign policy is a direct assault on Obama.

The former president, along with some Republican­s, such as George H.W. Bush, saw the United Nations and other alliances as mechanisms to promote trade, restrain global conflict and underscore a sense of fair play that would keep rogue nations in line. In Obama’s worldview, an occasional compromise of short-term interests was worthwhile to promote alliances and fight for the longer-term goal of enforcing internatio­nal rules.

“This administra­tion takes exactly the opposite approach to that and probably the exact opposite approach to the people in that room,” said James Carafano, a fellow at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation who advised Trump during the transition. “Institutio­ns are not what holds the world together. They are standing on what holds the world together.”

Obama, in his foreign policy speeches, emphasized the importance of internatio­nal institutio­ns and the limitation­s on the United States’ ability to use its military to enforce its will.

“Since World War II, some of our most costly mistakes came not from our restraint, but from our willingnes­s to rush into military adventures — without thinking through the consequenc­es, without building internatio­nal support and legitimacy for our action or leveling with the American people about the sacrifice required,” he said in his speech to the graduating class at West Point in 2014.

Obama said the U.S. should use the military “when our core interests demand it,” but warned against going it alone.

“We cannot exempt ourselves from the rules that apply to everyone else,” he said. “I believe in American exceptiona­lism with every fiber of my being. But what makes us exceptiona­l is not our ability to flout internatio­nal norms and the rule of law; it’s our willingnes­s to affirm them through our actions.”

Trump, by contrast, spoke of an America that would not only act primarily in its own interest, but would also encourage others to do the same.

“As president of the United States, I will always put America first,” he said. “Just like you, as the leaders of your countries, will always and should always put your countries first.”

That remark drew scattered applause in an audience split between internatio­nalists and leaders of countries who have sought for decades to avoid U.S. scrutiny of their domestic and foreign behavior.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ??
Richard Drew Associated Press
 ?? Justin Lane EPA-EFE/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? “WE DO NOT expect diverse countries to share the same cultures, traditions or even systems of government,” President Trump said in his address. “But we do expect all nations ... to respect the interests of their own people and the rights of every other...
Justin Lane EPA-EFE/REX/Shuttersto­ck “WE DO NOT expect diverse countries to share the same cultures, traditions or even systems of government,” President Trump said in his address. “But we do expect all nations ... to respect the interests of their own people and the rights of every other...

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