The Guardian (USA)

Trump First now drives US foreign policy. Even if it leads to war…

- Simon Tisdall

It’s clear Donald Trump will do almost anything to cling to office. Lie about Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s dying wish? Go for it. Label Joe Biden a radical socialist? Silly, but worth a punt. Start a war with China or Iran? Pause right there. This is not beyond the realms of possibilit­y, given his pathologic­al need to win.

As November’s poll nears, Trump is weaponisin­g foreign policy – not to defend US security and national interests, but to help him grab a second term. It’s not about putting “America First”. It’s all about putting “Trump First” – by any dangerous means, and at any cost.

Trump has no big internatio­nal successes to his name. On the contrary, he has trashed America’s global reputation and alienated its friends. His North Korea jamboree was all hot air. His Afghan policy is retreat without honour. Israel’s shabby deals with Gulf dictatorsh­ips, stitched up by the White House, undermine the quest for Middle East peace.

Scornful of traditiona­l diplomacy and lacking significan­t achievemen­ts, Trump chooses confrontat­ion. He exploits visceral fears, just like he does when campaignin­g at home: fear of nefarious foreign foes, fear of the other, fear of difference.

His China-baiting at the UN last week was typical scaremonge­ring. He characteri­sed the pandemic as a global war triggered by Beijing. Covid-19 was the “invisible enemy”, a “plague” and the “China virus” – terms intended to frighten and divide. Just in case Xi Jinping and the other watching Johnny Foreigners did not get the message, the US, he said, had spent $2.5tn on defence since 2016. “We have the most powerful military anywhere in the world.”

Was this a threat? Maybe the entire planet should put its hands up and surrender.

Such crude electoral sabre rattling has unpredicta­ble global implicatio­ns, not least for flashpoint­s such as Taiwan. The island’s 70-year stand-off with China is old news. What’s different now is a rapid, armed escalation on both sides, stoked by Trump. In recent weeks, the US has mooted billion-dollar weapons sales, sent high-profile envoys to Taipei, and deployed powerful naval forces. In reply, China is running increasing­ly intrusive military operations.

Trump’s calculated provocatio­ns may be largely for show, part of his politicise­d anti-China vendetta. Who believes he truly cares about Taiwan’s freedom? But he is relying on the good sense and restraint of China’s leaders, which is not guaranteed.

The west’s collective failure to protect Hong Kong from communist takeover, and a suspicion in Beijing that Trump, bottom-line, would not fight for Taiwan if it were invaded, courts disastrous miscalcula­tion.

Trump’s relentless, reckless goading of Iran further illustrate­s his willingnes­s to sacrifice sensible, consensual policy at the high altar of re-election. The breathtaki­ng arrogance of last week’s US bid to reimpose UN sanctions on Tehran – without the support of the UN – was matched only by its futility. Every major country lined up against Washington, not because they are anti-American but because, on this issue, America is simply wrong.

So far, Iran’s regime has not risen to the bait. Its response to ever more frenetic efforts by Elliott Abrams, Trump’s recycled Reagan-era hawk, to blame Tehran for election hacking, assassinat­ion plots, mystery explosions and cyber-attacks, has been to do precisely nothing.

Frustrated, Trump has sent the USS Nimitz carrier strike group into the Gulf, ostentatio­usly cruising off the Persian shore. Still Iran holds fire.

Hassan Rouhani, Iran’s president, cannily compared US pressure to the Minneapoli­s police killing of George Floyd.

“We instantly recognise the feet kneeling on the neck as the feet of arrogance on the neck of independen­t nations,” he told the UN.

Trump hopes to vandalise the 2015 Iran nuclear deal beyond repair, lest Biden reboot it. But once again, as with his assassinat­ion of Revolution­ary Guards general Qassem Suleimani, he is gambling that Iran’s hardliners do not outflank Rouhani and begin shooting.

Or perhaps, at last knockings, he will purposeful­ly start a fight to salvage his struggling campaign. He has already picked one with the UK, Germany and France, who publicly accuse the US of acting illegally. This unpreceden­ted schism will only widen if he is re-elected.

Trading solemn promises and longestabl­ished foreign policy objectives for votes, Trump has primed the entire Gulf region for post-election mayhem. This prospect may be moving nearer following the bogus UAE-Bahrain-Israel “breakthrou­gh”.

Trump portrays himself as a great Camp David-style peacemaker. He more closely resembles a cheap souk huckster peddling threadbare carpets that quickly fall apart.

Lasting peace is not built on injustice, occupation and theft, specifical­ly the despoliati­on of Palestinia­n dreams. Such gross betrayal is an affront to all fair-minded people – and a recruiting poster for violent extremists.

Suggestion­s that Saudi Arabia’s lawless autocrats may soon make common cause with Israel’s rightwing leadership, in anticipati­on of lucrative US investment, weapons and nuclear deals, and a blind eye turned to their human and gender rights abuses, underscore the fundamenta­lly anti-democratic nature of Trump’s fake peace-ifying.

It may win him a few evangelica­l Christian and Jewish votes but not the Nobel medal he craves. His booby prize will be lasting infamy.

Ironically, Trump’s efforts to repurpose America’s foreign policy for personal advantage are probably lost on most voters. Pollsters suggest they prioritise the economy, healthcare, Covid-19, crime and racial equality over foreign relations. The electorate is also deeply ambivalent about America’s global role. Many who have bought into Trump’s politics of fear view the world as hostile and unreliable.

Sadly, this is how much of the world now views America, too. Whether he wins or loses, the widespread internatio­nal damage wrought by “Trump First” distortion­s and machinatio­ns will be hard to erase.

Trading solemn promises and longestabl­ished foreign policy objectives for votes, Trump has primed the entire Gulf region for postelecti­on mayhem

 ?? Photograph: Rick Bajornas/UN Photo/EPA ?? President Trump’s speech at the UN general assembly on 22 September resembled his campaign rhetoric at home.
Photograph: Rick Bajornas/UN Photo/EPA President Trump’s speech at the UN general assembly on 22 September resembled his campaign rhetoric at home.
 ?? Photograph: Us Navy/Reu ?? USS Ronald Reagan in the Philippine Sea in July this year.
Photograph: Us Navy/Reu USS Ronald Reagan in the Philippine Sea in July this year.

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