The Mercury News

President Trump has squandered advantage on foreign policy issues

- By Doyle Mcmanus Doyle Mcmanus is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2020, Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

When President Donald Trump launched his reelection campaign, he hoped to run, in part, on a record of foreign policy success.

He told voters he was making progress toward a big trade deal with China: “The biggest deal ever,” he promised.

He was holding peace talks with North Korea aimed at dismantlin­g Kim Jong Un’s nuclear arsenal and ending a 70-year-old conflict.

He even held out hope for a new nuclear deal with Iran — one he said would be better than the pact his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, signed in 2015.

“Our country is respected again,” the president boasted in February. “We were not a respected nation.”

That seems a long time ago now.

Trump’s diplomatic successes, which were rarely as momentous as he claimed, have mostly evaporated. Foreign policy has become a source of trouble for his reelection campaign instead of a strength.

The president’s personal summitry with Kim Jong Un has deadlocked; the North Korean leader is testing missiles and manufactur­ing nuclear warheads again.

His trade agreement with China turned out to be little more than a short-term deal to sell U.S. agricultur­al products, not the big structural change his China hawks yearned for.

The president’s harsh economic sanctions have succeeded in punishing Iran’s economy, but have produced no progress toward a deal to tighten limits on Tehran’s military.

As for respect, Trump’s chaotic response to the coronaviru­s has made the United States a global example of how not to fight a pandemic. Last week the European Union announced that it was reopening to tourists from 15 “safe” countries including Canada, Japan, South Korea and Rwanda — but not the United States.

Even worse for a president whose go-to adjective is “strong,” embittered ex-aides and in-house leakers keep suggesting that when Trump gets into negotiatio­ns with autocratic chiefs of state, he’s not a tough guy after all.

His former national security adviser John Bolton denounced the president for pursuing cozy deals with his favorite autocrats, China’s Xi Jinping, Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“There was “no coherent basis, no strategy,” Bolton complained after writing his tell-all book. “There really isn’t any guiding principle that I was able to discern other than what’s good for Donald Trump’s reelection.”

Last week, reports emerged that one of Putin’s intelligen­ce agencies offered bounties to Afghanista­n’s Taliban for killing American troops. The reports reached the desk of Trump’s current national security adviser, Robert C. O’brien, but the president denied knowing anything.

No matter how the controvers­y turns out, it bolsters the picture of a foreign policy team in disarray.

And voters, who rarely pay close attention to foreign policy even without the distractio­n of a pandemic, appear to have noticed.

A Gallup poll in mid-june found that public approval of Trump’s job performanc­e on foreign policy has sagged to 41%, significan­tly lower than the 47% who approved of his handling of the nation’s economy.

Democrats and their presumptiv­e presidenti­al nominee, Joe Biden, have noticed Trump’s vulnerabil­ity on these issues, too.

Last month, the Democratic National Committee launched a 30-second television commercial in swing states deriding Trump’s performanc­e on trade.

“Trump said he’d get tough on China,” a narrator intones. “He didn’t get tough. He got played.”

The Trump campaign has fired back with a commercial calling Biden “China’s puppet” and reviving charges that his son, Hunter Biden, was paid suspicious­ly large sums by a Chinese firm.

That’s the closest this race has come to a debate on internatio­nal affairs — a barroom brawl over who is softer on China.

China policy won’t be the deciding issue in November’s presidenti­al election — far from it.

But this argument isn’t about the nuances of foreign affairs; there’s nary a nuance in sight. It’s a slanging match about competence, toughness and strength.

Historical­ly, Republican­s have had an advantage among voters on national security issues; they’re traditiona­lly the party of military strength and diplomatic toughness.

Trump appears to have squandered that advantage. We may be seeing a historical anomaly: a campaign in which voters give the Democratic candidate the benefit of the doubt on toughness in foreign policy.

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