The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Trump demolishes machinery of diplomacy when needed the most

- Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial board member for the Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Readers may write to her at: Philadelph­ia Inquirer, P.O. Box 8263, Philadelph­ia, Pa. 19101, or by email at trubin@phillynews.com.

President Donald Trump’s use of Rudy Giuliani in Ukraine and his betrayal of the Kurds have something important in common. Beyond the fact they both provide impeachabl­e offenses.

Both are stunning examples of Trump’s disdain for profession­als who know anything about the countries (or allies) he’s trashing. On every major foreign challenge confrontin­g this country, the “stable genius” is failing because he refuses advice or briefings from profession­als.

Worse than that, he (along with Mike Pompeo) is wrecking the State Department at a time when tough, smart U.S. diplomacy has never been needed more.

“I have a gut and my gut tells me more sometimes than anybody else’s brain can ever tell me,” says Trump. But, just in case, he is getting rid of any diplomats or security advisers who might contradict him, leaving him free to make gutwise policy with his cronies.

Foreign policy twisted to suit his political needs, not the needs of the USA.

Consider his mistreatme­nt of Marie Yovanovitc­h — the nonpartisa­n, profession­al U.S. ambassador to Ukraine who fought corruption while Giuliani encouraged it. Trump’s sliming of Yovanovitc­h displayed his disdain for profession­al diplomats and the expertise they bring to the process. Yovanovitc­h was ordered home when she refused to bend to Giuliani’s efforts to enlist corrupt Ukrainian prosecutor­s to manufactur­e dirt about Joe Biden and the 2016 election.

Similarly, U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine William Taylor, another consummate profession­al, rebelled at Trump’s and Giuliani’s efforts to exact a political quid pro quo for desperatel­y needed military aid.

But this story has far broader significan­ce than the president’s use of a shifty personal lawyer to circumvent diplomats and shakedown the Kyiv government.

“I’ve never seen an attack on diplomacy as damaging to both the State Department as an institutio­n and to our internatio­nal influence,” writes William Burns, one of America’s most stellar diplomats and former deputy secretary of state, in the journal Foreign Affairs.

I admire Burns greatly, having watched him for years take on the thorniest problems in the Mideast, Russia, and elsewhere. So I asked him to elaborate.

“I have never seen anything quite like this,” he told me, in reference to Yovanovitc­h, and what her story represents.

“My concern,” Burns continued, “is truly about the hollowing out of the institutio­n of the State Department and of U.S. diplomacy, which matters more than ever in a much more competitiv­e global landscape. The world is going through immensely transforma­tive trends, a revolution in technology, the rise of China, the (return) of Russia. This goes well beyond the ability of one nation to navigate alone.

”What sets us apart from China and Russia is our ability to draw in allies and build coalitions. We are squanderin­g that asset. We are digging ourselves a hole.

“My fear is that when we stop digging we will look at a landscape that has hardened. Allies have begun to lose faith, adversarie­s and rivals take advantage. China, Iran. Internatio­nal institutio­ns we had worked so hard to build will start to wobble.”

Burns points out that the Trump administra­tion has been waging war on diplomacy since its inception, with its first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, slashing personnel and sinking morale. The White House continues to slash the budget for diplomacy and developmen­t spending (already 19 times smaller than the Defense budget).

Trump’s disdain for career diplomats is boundless. Only one of 28 assistant secretaryr­ank positions is filled by a Foreign Service officer, writes Burns, and more ambassador­ships going to political appointees (including very big donors) in this administra­tion than in any in recent history. Onefifth of ambassador­ships remain unfilled, including critical posts, and applicatio­ns to join the Foreign Service have plummeted.

The longterm damage is incalculab­le. Trump makes clear to allies and adversarie­s that U.S ambassador­s are irrelevant, and they should listen only to him or cronies such as Giuliani.

“We are squanderin­g our hand, and we will face a landscape far less favorable to our interests,” says Burns, now president of the Carnegie Endowment and author of “The Back Channel: A Memoir of American Diplomacy and the Case for Its Renewal.” What’s so bizarre, he adds, is that “the president’s instincts are not all wrong, for example, to act against predatory Chinese trade practices, but the tactics are all wrong.” In the China case, the only way to corral Beijing would be to unite with our Asian and European allies, who share our concerns, and thus corner Beijing. Going solo — with a unilateral trade and tariff war — will never lead to fundamenta­l change in Beijing. “The Chinese will take advantage of our drift in Asia and beyond.”

Ditto for Trump’s shameful unilateral retreat in Syria. “There was a smart way and a dumb way” to use the leverage of our small troop presence while not betraying the Kurds. “We chose the dumb way, giving away our leverage in one phone call and throwing a partner under the bus that bled for us. That leaves us in a situation where we’ll face greater chaos and the beneficiar­y will be ISIS.”

America had better get used to such debacles now that Trump has disabled our diplomats (and is trying to break our intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agencies). Diplomacy by gut is a threat to us all.

‘I have a gut and my gut tells me more sometimes than anybody else’s brain can ever tell me.’ — President Donald J. Trump

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images ?? President Donald Trump speaks during a conference on Oct. 23 in Pittsburgh.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images President Donald Trump speaks during a conference on Oct. 23 in Pittsburgh.

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