Gulf News

Trump vision puts global bodies in their place

The call for reform of the UN is a show of faith that improvemen­t is possible. The world cannot gloss over the organisati­on’s failures in the past 70 years

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ivining the Trump Doctrine is like reading tea leaves or crystal-ball gazing, the sort of activity that invites a healthy level of scepticism. A foreign policy doctrine is immutable, a fixed lens through which a president sees the world. The current US president’s nebulous flirtation­s with different policy positions and world leaders would therefore seem to make a Trump Doctrine a contradict­ion in terms.

I would argue that there is, in fact, a core ideology underneath Donald Trump’s flaky layers of personal animosity and poor impulse control. We can take the president at his word that he is proud to be an American, and that he believes the United States to be a global superpower with the potential to do extraordin­ary good in the world. But he is a nationalis­t, so his vision of this “good” is conditione­d on Americans benefiting from any actions taken abroad. It is still unclear how exactly his cost-benefit analysis works, but we can guess from examples of Trump’s inaction (Myanmar being only the latest) that, at a minimum, American lives would have to be at risk for him to want to commit.

These are the classic tenets of American populism, and they create no small amount of cognitive dissonance among their adherents. The desire to see America as a superpower, and more than a smidgen of resentment about the blood and treasure that must be spent to maintain that status, are held in constant tension. We saw this on display at the UN General Assembly last week, as the president sought simultaneo­usly to distance himself from, and to reform, the world’s largest intergover­nmental body.

Threatenin­g nuclear war, like banging one’s shoe on the table, is one way to train the spotlight on yourself at the UN — but as with Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev’s famous outburst at the height of the Cold War, those who would focus only on him labelling Kim Jong-un “rocket man” will miss the greater point of Trump’s speech. For the president spoke in favour of internatio­nal cooperatio­n, calling for a strong coalition of like-minded nations to work together to solve the world’s most pressing problems. He praised UN programmes which provide relief from Aids and malaria, and the extraordin­ary Global Fund to End Modern Slavery. But he did so from a distinctiv­e position: for Trump, these global issues are the proper remit of multilater­al institutio­ns like the UN. Nation states should be left, where possible, to solve their own problems. He argued in defence of the prerogativ­es of national sovereignt­y, and made the case that a nation is the body best equipped to help its people, and its people are the best-prepared group to come to the defence of their nation.

While rather rough around the edges, the foreign policy vision that the president described is perhaps more closely in line with core American values than anything espoused by his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, who was more warmly embraced by the internatio­nal community. Freedom, democracy and the sacrosanct importance of every individual sit at the heart of American political life. The sort of freedom we enjoy in America is not simply a set of allowances, but also freedom from oppression, from hunger, from fear. Trump has clearly not given up hope that the world’s multilater­al institutio­ns can play a part in evangelisi­ng those freedoms. The call for reform of the UN, articulate­d by both Trump and Theresa May last week, is a show of faith that improvemen­t is possible. To pretend that the organisati­on has fulfilled its mandate over the past 70 years is to gloss over its failures to its core constituen­cy: the global poor. Molly Kiniry is a researcher at the Legatum Institute, London.

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