The Mercury News

Chaos or not, Trump racking up record of foreign policy success

- By Marc A. Thiessen Marc Thiessen is a Washington Post columnist.

In his new book “Fear,” Bob Woodward recounts that in April 2017, after President Trump saw images of dead Syrian children with their mouths foaming from a sarin attack, he called Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and issued an order: Get me a plan for a military strike to take out Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

“Let’s f — ing kill him!” Trump told Mattis, according to the book. “Let’s go in. Let’s kill the f — ing lot of them.” Mattis, Woodward writes, assured the president that “he would get right on it.” But as soon as Mattis hung up the phone, he told a senior aide: “We’re not going to do any of that.” Instead, Woodward said, the defense secretary gave Trump options for morelimite­d strikes.

Today, as Assad menaces 3 million civilians in the last rebel stronghold, the Idlib province, it’s clear that Trump’s instinct was right. We should have taken out the Syrian dictator last year.

When Trump was elected in 2016, many worried that he would usher in a new age of American isolationi­sm and withdrawal. That hasn’t happened. Trump has pursued a foreign policy that is not only not isolationi­st but also a significan­t improvemen­t over his predecesso­r’s.

In Israel, Trump moved the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, which he recognized as the country’s capital. He also withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal and refocused U.S. efforts in the Middle East on shoring up relations with allies such as Israel and Saudi Arabia instead of courting Iran.

In Afghanista­n, after a careful deliberati­ve process in which Trump (correctly) pressed his generals for answers to tough questions, the president reversed his campaign position favoring a troop pullout and sent additional forces, with no timetable for withdrawal.

In Turkey, Trump is taking a hard line with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s regime, imposing tariffs as the Turkish lira has gone into free fall. Trump’s move was intended to punish Erdogan for his continued detention of an American pastor, Andrew Brunson, and followed his threats against U.S. forces in Syria and his plans to buy an S-400 advanced air-defense system from Moscow.

Trump also has taken a surprising­ly tough line with Russia. He approved a massive arms and aid package for Ukraine, expelled 60 Russian diplomats and authorized new sanctions against Moscow at least four times. And the Trump administra­tion recently warned Russia that it would face “total economic isolation” if Moscow backed the Assad regime’s assault in Idlib. Trump’s policies more than make up for his disastrous Helsinki news conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin in July.

On North Korea, Trump issued credible threats of military action, which brought Kim Jong Un to the negotiatin­g table. The chances of successful denucleari­zation are slim, but every other approach by Trump’s predecesso­rs has failed.

The list of good foreign policy moves goes on. Trump has taken a strong stand against the narco-dictatorsh­ip in Venezuela, and his administra­tion even considered supporting coup plotters seeking to remove the Maduro regime. He strengthen­ed NATO by getting allies to kick in billions more toward the alliance’s collective security. He declared war on the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, which purports to have jurisdicti­on over U.S. soldiers and citizens even though America is not a signatory to the treaty creating the ICC.

Liberals might not like any of these developmen­ts, but longstandi­ng policy goals of conservati­ve internatio­nalists are being achieved. There may be chaos in the Trump White House, but so far at least the chaos is producing pretty good results.

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