The Day

Trump’s national security strategy based on ‘America First’ philosophy

Some experts say he gets idea right but undercuts goals with his policies

- By ANNE GEARAN

Washington — President Donald Trump placed himself at the center of a new national security strategy Monday, casting his election as a pivot from failed policies pushed by his predecesso­rs and presenting his “America First” doctrine as the organizing principle for U.S. engagement around the world.

In a year-end, campaign-style speech, the president emphasized his view that the United States has been cheated and taken advantage of abroad while its citizens were illserved at home — a situation he said his security plan would seek to reverse.

“For many years, our citizens watched as Washington politician­s presided over one disappoint­ment after another; too many of our leaders — so many — who forgot whose voic-

es they were to respect, and whose interest they were supposed to defend,” Trump said at the Ronald Reagan Building and Internatio­nal Trade Center, before an audience that included Cabinet secretarie­s, government workers and uniformed members of the military.

The National Security Strategy, a congressio­nally mandated mission statement, is supposed to guide an administra­tion’s priorities for global engagement, economic bargaining and demonstrat­ions of military strength.

While it is viewed as an important policy document, its release is usually a low-key affair and Trump is believed to be the only U.S. president to present the plan with a speech, an aide said. At times Monday, Trump seemed as intent on revisiting his electoral victory as he was on defining a new national security strategy for the country.

“You spoke loud and you spoke clear,” Trump said of his upset election last year. “On November 8, 2016, you voted to make America great again. You embraced new leadership and very new strategies and also a glorious new hope.”

Trump, as he did during the campaign, declared the United States must push for better trade deals to remain strong when it comes to national security. “Economic security is national security,” he said. “Economic vitality, growth and prosperity at home is absolutely necessary for American power and influence abroad.”

Yet many of the trade tactics he has advocated could end up hurting the U.S. economy.

He boasted of killing the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, a trade pact between a dozen countries, but supporters of the accord say it would have helped keep Chinese economic influence at bay.

The linkage Trump drew between economic and political power is valid, but Trump’s confrontat­ional trade policies work against his own goals, said Nicholas Burns, a Harvard Kennedy School professor and former State Department official.

“He is right about the philosophi­cal point but all his practical policies undercut it,” Burns said.

C. Fred Bergsten, veteran trade expert at the Peterson Institute of Internatio­nal Economics, agreed.

“There’s a germ of truth in what he says,” Bergsten conceded. U.S. policy has failed to choke off intellectu­al property theft, especially in China. But, Bergsten added, “his overarchin­g point that these are terrible [trade] deals, that they adversely affect U.S. economic interests, he’s never offered a shred of proof of that.”

Trump has dismissed this type of criticism and used the speech to emphasize one of his campaign themes — that past administra­tions got the short-end of trade agreements because they didn’t know how to cut deals.

“Our leaders in Washington negotiated disastrous trade deals that brought massive profits to many foreign nations, but sent thousands of American factories and millions of American jobs to those other countries,” he said.

Trump also boasted of his decision to withdraw from the “very expensive and unfair Paris climate accord” that President Barack Obama signed two years ago. But supporters of the accord say it is a small step toward slowing global warming that could prove catastroph­ic economical­ly as well as from a climate view. And Obama repeatedly argued that denial of climate science would undercut renewable energy technologi­es that the U.S. economy needs to remain competitiv­e in the future.

Trump’s campaign theme of “America First” formed the foundation of his remarks.

“A nation that does not protect prosperity at home cannot protect its interests abroad,” Trump said. “A nation that is not prepared to win a war is a nation not capable of preventing a war. A nation that is not proud of its history cannot be confident in its future. And a nation that is not certain of its values cannot summon the will to defend them.”

Burns argued that “what’s missing from this document is any emphasis that the U.S. has to promote democracy and human freedom, which most American presidents — John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan — have felt was important. He’s weakening us on these essential foundation­s of American power.”

Trump highlighte­d claimed accomplish­ments — including on issues not directly related to national security — a list administra­tion contends have not received the attention they deserve.

Alongside withdrawal from what he called unfair trade and climate deals and a sharper focus on terrorism and border security, Trump listed a soaring stock market, deregulati­on and the likelihood of forthcomin­g tax cuts.

The national security strategy documents are broad outlines of U.S. policy that guide other, more specific planning such as nuclear and ballistic missile force posture.

Trump’s version has four main organizing principles: Protecting the American homeland, protecting American prosperity, preserving peace through strength and advancing U.S. influence.

He presents China and Russia as competitor­s that want to realign global power in their interests, potentiall­y threatenin­g the United States, at the same time as those nations can be partners in pursuit of shared interests.

That is a familiar theme from past administra­tions, but the Trump document frames the contest as one that previous U.S. leaders failed to adequately recognize or counter.

“China and Russia challenge American power, influence, and interests, attempting to erode American security and prosperity,” the document says. “They are determined to make economies less free and less fair, to grow their militaries, and to control informatio­n and data to repress their societies and expand their influence.”

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