Business Standard

Trump’s mixed signals on security approach

- MARK LANDLER & DAVID E SANGER

US President Donald Trump presented a blueprint for the country’s national security on Monday that warns of a treacherou­s world in which the United States faces rising threats from an emboldened Russia and China, as well as from what it calls rogue government­s, like North Korea and Iran.

To fend off these multiple challenges, the report says with Cold War urgency, the government must put “America First,” fortifying its borders, ripping up unfair trade agreements and rebuilding its military might.

But in his speech announcing the strategy, Trump struck a much different tone. Instead of explaining the nature of these threats, he delivered a campaign-like address, with familiar calls to build a wall along the southern border with Mexico and a heavy dose of self-congratula­tion for the bull market, the low jobless rate and tax cuts, which, he promised, were “days away.”

“America is in the game, and America is going to win,” he said, to an audience that included cabinet members and military officers.

The disconnect between the president’s speech and the analysis in his administra­tion’s document attests to the broader challenge his national security advisers have faced, as they have struggled to develop an intellectu­al framework that encompasse­s Trump’s unpredicta­ble, domestical­ly driven and Twitter-fuelled approach to foreign policy. The same confusion has confronted foreign government­s trying to understand Trump’s conflictin­g signals.

Trump, for example, spoke of how Russia and China “seek to challenge American influence, values and wealth.” But he made no mention of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election, even though the document itself makes fleeting reference to “Russia using tools in an attempt to undermine the legitimacy of democracie­s.” Indeed, Trump preferred to focus on a Sunday phone call from President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, who thanked him for intelligen­ce that the CIA had passed on to Russian authoritie­s, which Trump said foiled a terrorist attack in St. Petersburg that could have killed thousands of people.

 ??  ?? In his speech, US President Donald Trump mentioned about building US-Mexico border wall, low jobless rate and tax cuts
In his speech, US President Donald Trump mentioned about building US-Mexico border wall, low jobless rate and tax cuts

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