Los Angeles Times

Global diplomacy joins roster of casualties

Disruption­s from coronaviru­s come at a time when outreach by the U.S. is needed.

- By Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — Diplomacy by nature is a personal endeavor. Long, faceto-face meetings with officials from all over the world. Building trust, gaining cooperatio­n, trading secrets.

Can this be achieved at a long distance? Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo and the foot soldiers of U.S. diplomacy under President Trump are about to find out as the coronaviru­s pandemic closes convention­al channels of contact and cancels numerous plans, trips and programs for American officials and their global counterpar­ts.

The State Department announced next week’s long-planned meeting in Pittsburgh of foreign ministers from the Group of 7 top economies will be conducted “virtually.” State officials declined to provide details, but the move presumably means the foreign ministers from Canada, Britain, Japan, Germany, Italy and France will not travel to the U.S. for the mini-summit.

It remains unclear what will happen to the larger summit of G-7 presidents and prime ministers that Trump is to host at Camp David in June.

On Thursday, Pompeo — who has repeatedly said one of the most important tasks of America’s top diplomat is

“showing up” — also suspended dozens of the department’s educationa­l exchange programs for 60 days and was reassessin­g a number of overseas trips, aides said.

Separately, the United Nations was scaling back operations globally and closing agencies, such as its human rights division in Geneva and its maritime safety board in London. It shortened a New York conference on women’s equality from two weeks to one day. In Washington and elsewhere, foreign policy think tanks were postponing sessions, sending analysts home and shifting briefings online.

The disruption­s come at a time when more cooperatio­n and conversati­on are needed in the internatio­nal and multilater­al arena, experts and current and former diplomats said.

“There is still a lot of uncertaint­y” on all fronts of the coronaviru­s crisis, said Stephanie Segal, an economist formerly with the Treasury Department. “There is hunger for more policy coordinati­on.”

Traditiona­lly, experience­d diplomats can find workaround­s in such crises, counting on already well-establishe­d relationsh­ips, protocols and technology to keep lines of communicat­ion open, said Daniel Fried, a veteran diplomat who served as an assistant secretary of State under George W. Bush.

But with this administra­tion’s unorthodox, rulebustin­g “America first” approach to foreign policy, Fried and others worried that Pompeo and his team will be ill-equipped to bridge the chasms opened by a lack of in-person contact.

Trump’s Oval Office speech Wednesday highlighte­d the chaos created when there is no coordinati­on or outreach in handling such a fast-widening crisis.

The president, without advance consultati­on with most European leaders, announced he was barring travel to the U.S. from 26 European countries, many of which belong to the European Union, a bloc he has long criticized. In his speech, he said European travelers had “seeded” the virus in many U.S. cities, though experts questioned that assertion.

“A good bureaucrat can work with anything,” Fried said. “But you don’t pick fights with allies. You need decent relations so you can pick up the phone.”

Trump exempted Britain from the new travel ban, even though it has reported dozens of coronaviru­s cases. Americans and businesses are also exempted. Even so, the sudden restrictio­ns led to panicked crowds at several European airports.

“This is not how a great country manages its relations with its closest allies,” said Heather Conley, director of the Europe program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies think tank in Washington. “There was no diplomacy.... It was a domestic political desire to offer a big announceme­nt and to blame someone.”

She said such “personalit­y-driven” diplomacy “completely neuters the institutio­ns and all the relationsh­ips that make the mechanics of crises like these work.”

The speech, written by White House advisor Stephen Miller, an anti-immigrant ideologue, and Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner, was laden with rhetoric that blamed COVID-19 on a “foreign virus.” Trump and others in his administra­tion have repeatedly referred to the “Chinese virus” or “Wuhan virus” to emphasize its origin in that Chinese city.

In past global crises, American presidents typically took leadership roles and moved quickly to bring nations together and rally internatio­nal support. Trump continues to view the response to the virus as a competitio­n, frequently comparing the number of U.S. cases and deaths with those of other countries.

China, in fact, made an effort at outmaneuve­ring Washington on the global stage. As Trump issued his travel ban, China sent aid to Italy, the hardest-hit country in Europe.

“The coronaviru­s is a global crisis, not limited to any continent and it requires cooperatio­n rather than unilateral action,” European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Thursday.

Trump has long been dismissive of diplomacy. But the coronaviru­s crisis exposes the risks involved.

“What the coronaviru­s crisis reinforces is that government­s really do matter,” said Jon Alterman, a global security expert at CSIS. “It’s relationsh­ips between government officials that matter. And if you can’t forge those relationsh­ips, if you can’t forge the partnershi­ps, you live in a whole different world.”

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