Houston Chronicle Sunday

THIS IS LEADERSHIP?

By discarding the nation’s achievemen­ts abroad, America is imperiled

- By Robert Hutchings

“We have a MASSIVE trade deficit with Germany, plus they pay FAR LESS than they should on NATO and the military. Very bad for U.S. This will change.” So tweeted President Donald Trump after meeting with allied leaders at NATO headquarte­rs. Trump’s tweets and foreign policy moves have made him a laughingst­ock, but the damage they have done to our standing in the world and to our own interests is no laughing matter.

Trump is not the first American leader to lecture the Europeans about military spending, just the least informed. It is a fundamenta­lly flawed position. Europeans don’t spend for defense the way we do, but not because they lack seriousnes­s or political will, or because they are free riders who refuse to shoulder their share of the defense burden. They spend less on defense because they do not agree with the over-militarize­d approach to foreign policy that they see from the United States, whose military spending is already larger than that of the next eight highest-spending countries combined.

We would do well to study rather than condemn the European approach to foreign policy. And the American public needs to understand that more spending for defense does not mean more security. As the Afghanista­n and Iraq misad-

ventures have demonstrat­ed, the exercise of military power can make us less secure. I made this point more than a decade ago when I was chairman of the U.S. National Intelligen­ce Council, warning (all too accurately) that Iraq under U.S. occupation would prove to be the breeding ground for the next generation of terrorists.

I take Trump’s crude remarks on Germany personally. In 1989-92, I was part of the diplomatic team under President George H.W. Bush that helped negotiate German unificatio­n and the collapse of the Soviet empire. We and the Germans forged the closest possible partnershi­p, and our successful management of the end of the Cold War enabled the U.S. to draw down its huge military presence in Europe, leaving it to our allies, led by Germany, to take the lead in Europe. These were triumphs not of American military power but of U.S.-European diplomacy, led on our side by two extraordin­ary Texans: President George H.W. Bush and Secretary of States James Baker.

The Germans stepped up to the task, even while maintainin­g the historic partnershi­p with the U.S. Trump is throwing this away. He seems to think there is another “deal” out there and that this one can be discarded. No, President Trump: There is only one NATO, only one trans Atlantic partnershi­p, the work of more than a dozen U.S. administra­tions before you. If you throw these achievemen­ts away, we are left with nothing.

What is needed is not America-first bluster or infantile tweets but a sustained effort to reinvigora­te and modernize the alliance. Here’s a start: We should restore and then increase the budgets for the State Department and U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, and signal our readiness to re-enter the Paris agreement. In return, the Europeans should step up their timetable for meeting the agreed commitment to increased defense spending.

The trans-Atlantic alliance, the strongest and most enduring in history, is much more than a defense pact. It has endured despite periodic disputes because it is built on the solid foundation of shared values and common interests. Alliances, like marriages, prosper when both sides respect that their partners have different priorities and when they understand that compromise and adjustment are keys to a successful relationsh­ip.

The alliance is also more than an arena for economic competitio­n. The global trading system, with U.S.-European trade relations its driving force, has been an enormous benefit to America’s prosperity and well-being. This should be obvious to anyone living in Texas, which is already the top U.S. state exporting to Europe and would reap huge additional benefits from lowered transatlan­tic trade barriers.

Of course, we, like Germany, will defend our own economic interests and protect our citizens, and we have ample means of doing so — most of them domestic measures that have little to do with trade imbalances. Instead, Trump is focusing on things he can do with the stroke of a pen — like backing out of the Paris agreement and the Pacific trade pact — with disregard for the consequenc­es. This is not leadership. This is not strength.

We are at a turning point in our nation’s history. There are few signs that Trump will change, so one must place our hope in America’s institutio­ns and look to the “enablers” — his foreign policy team, which has gone along with too much already, and Republican­s in Congress — to show some political courage by putting America first.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is a particular disappoint­ment, having endorsed a whopping 31 percent reduction in his own budget and leaving all the top jobs in the Department of State unfilled as America stumbles from one foreign policy blunder to another. So is U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, who as Majority Whip wields considerab­le power but has been missing in action as President Trump undermines America’s standing in the world and the very foundation­s of our democracy at home.

History is watching. Texans should be, too.

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 ?? Lionel Cironneau / AP file photo ?? The United States and Germany forged the closest possible partnershi­p following German reunificat­ion.
Lionel Cironneau / AP file photo The United States and Germany forged the closest possible partnershi­p following German reunificat­ion.

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