The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Trump’s tough talk makes us weaker on world stage

- EJ Dionne Columnist

The worst aspect of President Trump’s speech at the United Nations on Tuesday was not his immature taunting of a dangerous foreign leader when the stakes far outweigh those of a schoolyard fight.

Calling North Korea’s dictator Kim Jong Un “Rocket Man” may make Trump happy by reminding him of the glory days of “Little Marco,” “Lyin’ Ted” and “Crooked Hillary.” It does nothing to win over allies we need.

And his pledge “to totally destroy North Korea” is what you’d expect to hear in a bar conversati­on from a well-lubricated armchair general, not from the leader of the world’s most powerful military.

The most alarming part of an address that was supposed to be a formulatio­n of the president’s grand strategy in the world was the utter incoherenc­e of Trump’s “America First” slogan.

The speech tried to rationaliz­e “America First” as a great principle. But every effort Trump made to build an intellectu­al structure to support it only underscore­d that his favored phrase was either a trivial applause line or an argument that, if followed logically, was inimical to the United States’ interests and values.

The notion that “sovereignt­y” is in such danger that it demanded 21 mentions is absurd. No member state at the United Nations rejects national sovereignt­y, and many use it as a cover for dismissing the values of democracy and human rights, casting both as the imposition­s of outsiders.

No wonder Trump won applause when he said that “you, as the leaders of your countries, will always and should always put your countries first.” Selfishnes­s is popular. Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping no doubt nodded approvingl­y when they were briefed about Trump’s words.

But Trump was so selective and inconsiste­nt in his applicatio­n of sovereignt­y that the concept itself had collapsed before he finished. If sovereignt­y is the highest principle, what justificat­ion does he have for threatenin­g to destroy North Korea (which asserts its sovereign right to nuclear weapons)?

How can he suggest interventi­on against Venezuela simply because we disapprove of its governing system? Trump’s criticism of Venezuela was clearly based on the idea that some things actually are more important than sovereignt­y. Trump proudly invoked Harry Truman, a fine role model. But Truman was the antithesis of Trump’s us-above-everybody-always talk. The 33rd president understood that American power was more effective when exercised in cooperatio­n with other nations, creating multilater­al organizati­ons that have endured for decades.

The Marshall Plan was very much in our country’s interests. But its passage required facing down the America Firsters of Truman’s day. Its opponents could not understand why we would spend so much of our own money to rebuild the economies of Western Europe.

Trump said that Polish, French and British resistance to Nazism was motivated by “patriotism,” and indeed it was. But patriotism is a richer and more complicate­d commitment than Trump’s offhand comment suggests.

Pulling punches about the many outlandish elements of Trump’s approach means throwing out every standard we have upheld to this point about how presidents of the United States should behave. It requires giving up on the idea that presidents should be eloquent, persuasive, responsibl­e and thoughtful.

Any other president, Republican or Democrat, who gave a speech of the sort Trump delivered would have faced an avalanche of criticism. It just won’t do to smile indulgentl­y and say, “Oh, that’s Trump being Trump,” or, “He’s just appealing to his base.”

Trump’s invocation­s of America First will ultimately leave our country behind in the world. His rhetoric sounds tough but will only make us weaker.

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