Yuma Sun

Senate reasserts foreign policy role, reshapes Trump agenda

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WASHINGTON — Two years into Donald Trump’s presidency, his allies in Congress are quietly trying to influence and even reshape his “America First” foreign policy agenda.

The Republican-led Senate is reassertin­g itself as a check on Trump’s instincts, while individual GOP lawmakers are seeking sway — defense hawks vying with noninterve­ntionists — over policy in the Middle East, Latin America and beyond.

Within one recent week, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio led a group of lawmakers to the White House encouragin­g Trump to back Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido as the interim president. Trump tweeted his support. Days earlier, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul was at the White House reinforcin­g Trump’s plan to withdraw U.S. troops from Syria and Afghanista­n.

The result can often seem like a foreign policy in flux, zigzagging from bold pronouncem­ents to more measured actions as “a number of different voices on the Hill are trying to put their imprint on the policy,” said Brian Katulis, a former Clinton administra­tion national security adviser now at the Center for American Progress.

“It’s sort of this great improvisat­ion directed by the president of the United States, that doesn’t really follow any of the notes or sheets of music,” Katulis said. “Like he’s making things up as he goes along.”

Setting the tone in the Senate, the first bill of the new year reaffirms sanctions on Syrian officials involved in war crimes and soon will include an amendment taking the unusual step of signaling opposition to Trump’s plan to withdraw troops from Syria and Afghanista­n.

Pushed forward by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the legislatio­n also is driving a political wedge dividing Democrats, particular­ly those running for president in 2020, over the troop withdrawal and a separate provision supporting Israel.

Rubio, who led the floor debate and is emerging as

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a foreign policy leader, said the vote was about ensuring that senators and the legislativ­e branch “play our rightful role in the setting of American foreign policy.”

“It is important that the Senate be on the right side of this issue so that we can hope to influence future actions and policies before they are taken, and we can help change them once they have been taken in places headed in the wrong direction,” Rubio said.

Next up, McConnell is promising a debate on the importance of NATO, as Trump re-evaluates the U.S.’s long-standing commitment to its allies in Europe.

“NATO deserves the Senate’s support,” McConnell said.

Danielle Pletka, a senior vice president at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute, said lawmakers are doing exactly what they should — asserting themselves as a separate but equal branch of government that has been largely dormant on foreign policy.

“It’s abnormal for members of Congress to be as disengaged as they have been,” she said. “This is a return to normal.”

Trump rode a populist wave to the White House with an “America First” approach focused on rebuilding the United States and bringing U.S. troops home, rather than funding wars overseas.

It’s an instinct that fits more neatly into Paul’s noninterve­ntionist wing, which rose to prominence with the tea party, rather than the worldview of traditiona­l foreign policy conservati­ves such as McConnell, Rubio and Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JAN. 22 PHOTO, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla. (from left), Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., speak to the media after their meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JAN. 22 PHOTO, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla. (from left), Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., speak to the media after their meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington.

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