The Sentinel-Record

President’s trip: Expected images, unconventi­onal talk

- JULIE PACE AND JONATHAN LEMIRE

TAORMINA, Sicily — As he dashed through the Middle East and Europe, Donald Trump looked like a convention­al American leader abroad. He solemnly laid a wreath at a Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, had an audience with the pope at the Vatican and stood center stage with Western allies at the annual summits that dominate the diplomatic calendar.

But when Trump spoke, he sounded like anything but a typical U.S. president.

On his first overseas tour, the new president made no attempt to publicly promote democracy and human rights in Saudi Arabia, instead declaring that he wasn’t there to lecture. In Israel and the West Bank, he pointedly did not back America’s long-standing support for a twostate solution to the intractabl­e peace process. And in the heart of Europe, Trump berated NATO allies over their financial commitment­s and would not explicitly endorse the “one for all, all for one” defense doctrine that has been the cornerston­e of trans-At-

lantic security for decades.

To the White House, Trump’s first trip abroad was an embodiment of the promises he made as a candidate to put America’s interests first and break through the guardrails that have long defined U.S. foreign policy. Trump advisers repeatedly described the trip as historic and groundbrea­king, including one senior official who brashly said without evidence that Trump had “united the entire Muslim world.”

Addressing U.S. troops Saturday at a Sicilian air base moments before departing for Washington, Trump himself declared: “I think we hit a home run.”

Trump boarded Air Force One without having held a single news conference on the trip — a break in presidenti­al precedent that allowed him to avoid facing tough questions about his foreign policy or the raging controvers­ies involving the investigat­ions into his campaign’s possible ties to Russia. Instead, the White House hoped to let the images of Trump in statesman-like settings tell the story of his first trip abroad, and perhaps ease questions about his preparedne­ss for the delicate world of internatio­nal diplomacy.

Yet those questions are sure to persist, particular­ly given Trump’s remarkable lashing of NATO allies in Brussels. Standing alongside his counterpar­ts, the president effectivel­y accused countries who do not meet NATO’s goal of spending 2 percent of their gross domestic product of sponging off American taxpayers. He left some allies, already nervous about Russia’s saber-rattling and Trump’s public affection for Russian President Vladimir Putin, further flummoxed when he ended his remarks without making an explicit statement of support for Article 5, the common defense clause that underpins the 68-year-old military alliance.

“The mood of Article 5, the idea that we are all in this together, is not the mood he conveyed,” said Jon Alterman, a senior vice president at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “The mood he conveyed is you guys are a bunch of freeloader­s.”

Some European leaders believe Trump can still be coaxed away from his controvers­ial campaign positions. At the Group of 7 summit in the coastal town of Taormina, leaders launched an aggressive, behindthe-scenes campaign to get him to stay in the Paris climate accord.

While Trump emerged from the summit without a final decision on the Paris pact, he declared in a tweet Saturday that he will make a final decision next week.

Trump’s return home also shifts attention back to the storm clouds of scandal hovering over the White House. In a briefing with reporters Saturday, White House officials shifted uncomforta­bly and refused to comment when asked about reports that Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, tried to set up secret communicat­ions with Russia after the election.

Trump’s nine-day, five-stop internatio­nal tour resulted in few tangible policy achievemen­ts. The U.S. inked a $110 billion arms sale to Saudi Arabia and unveiled numerous business commitment­s in the region, though the White House never provided specific details about the scope of the agreements. At NATO, the White House touted the alliance’s commitment to boosting defense spending, though the resolution was essentiall­y a continuati­on of a pact agreed to two years earlier.

Still, the trip offered the clearest picture to date of how Trump plans to put his imprint on America’s relationsh­ip with the world.

From the start, he set a new direction. Instead of following presidenti­al tradition by making his internatio­nal debut in a neighborin­g democracy like Canada or Mexico, Trump flew to Saudi Arabia, the repressive desert kingdom.

He appeared particular­ly comfortabl­e in the setting. In Riyadh, he received a lavish, gold-plated welcome: His image was projected across the facade of the luxury hotel where he stayed, horses flanked his motorcade as it moved to one of the king’s desert palaces and an extravagan­t celebratio­n was held in his honor, complete with a traditiona­l Saudi sword dance.

Trump betrayed no awkwardnes­s at relishing the warm embrace of one of the world’s most oppressive government­s. Instead, he reciprocat­ed with a pledge to not publicly chastise the ruling royal family for its crackdown on political dissent.

“We are not here to lecture — we are not here to tell other people how to live, what to do, who to be, or how to worship,” Trump said.

Trump was lavishly feted in Israel as well, embraced by a prime minister who despised his predecesso­r and was eager to flatter the new president. Trump received multiple standing ovations — one of his favorite measures of success — during a speech on U.S. relations with Israel. The photo of his solemn visit to the Western Wall was splashed across the front pages of Israel’s newspapers.

Like many of his predecesso­rs, Trump made a personal appeal for peace between Israelis and Palestinia­ns. But he never uttered the words “twostate solution,” the longtime U.S. policy plan that would create a separate homeland for Palestinia­ns. He also made no mention of new Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank, a major point of contention for the Palestinia­ns.

The smaller moments of the president’s trip were endlessly dissected as well, from first lady Melania Trump’s apparent reluctance to hold her husband’s hand on occasion to his shoving aside of Montenegro’s prime minister to get to the front of a pack of leaders at a NATO photo opportunit­y. At the G-7, it was Trump’s interactio­ns with other leaders that commanded attention.

The six other heads of state took a short walk from one event to the next, chatting conviviall­y as they strolled through the narrow Sicilian streets. Trump hung back, deciding against joining his peers.

Instead, he got in a golf cart and the American president’s mini-motorcade drove the route alone, Trump once more having charted his own course.

 ??  ?? INTERNATIO­NAL TRIP: President Donald Trump holds a sword and dances with traditiona­l dancers May 20 during a welcome ceremony at Murabba Palace in Riyadh. As he dashed through the Middle East and Europe, Trump looked like a convention­al American leader abroad. He solemnly laid a wreath at a Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, had an audience with the pope at the Vatican and stood center stage with Western allies at the annual summits that dominate the diplomatic calendar. But when Trump spoke, he sounded like anything but a typical U.S. president.
INTERNATIO­NAL TRIP: President Donald Trump holds a sword and dances with traditiona­l dancers May 20 during a welcome ceremony at Murabba Palace in Riyadh. As he dashed through the Middle East and Europe, Trump looked like a convention­al American leader abroad. He solemnly laid a wreath at a Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, had an audience with the pope at the Vatican and stood center stage with Western allies at the annual summits that dominate the diplomatic calendar. But when Trump spoke, he sounded like anything but a typical U.S. president.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States