Stefanik UN pick: Win for hardliners aiming to frontload Trump WH
She previously worked at neocon think tanks including
one co-founded by Bill Kristol and Bob Kagan
Nov 11, 2024
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/stefanik-un-pick-win-for-hardliners-aiming-to-frontload-trump-wh/
The nomination is one of the first major appointments
Trump has made since winning the election last week. Stefanik has been a
staunch Trump loyalist going back to his first term in office, and she has been
one of the most vocal supporters of the war in Gaza over the last year.
Different factions in the Republican Party have been
competing over the direction of Trump’s foreign policy, and the choice of
Stefanik appears to be a clear win for hardline hawks. Putting Stefanik at the
UN seems to be Trump’s signal to the world that he doesn’t necessarily care how
isolated the U.S. and Israel have become because of the wars in Gaza and
Lebanon.
First elected in 2014, Rep. Stefanik, 40, has been
considered a rising star in the Republican Party. Before being elected to
Congress, she worked at the hardline Foundation for Defense of
Democracies think tank, and she worked at the extremely hawkish Foreign Policy
Initiative that
was co-founded by Bill Kristol and Robert Kagan.
Then she gained national notice when she defended Trump during his first impeachment, after which
she became one of his most reliable supporters. Trump’s decision to send her to
the UN is clearly a reward for her years of loyalty. Stefanik has no background
in international relations or diplomacy that would prepare her for representing
the United States at the international body, but then the point of sending her
is probably to pick fights with other states rather than trying to resolve
them.
Republican presidents have appointed hostile
ambassadors to the United Nations before. Reagan gave the job to Jeane
Kirkpatrick, George W. Bush chose John Bolton (but had to settle for making him
a recess appointment), and Trump appointed Nikki Haley in his first term. If
confirmed, Stefanik would likely follow her Republican predecessors in their
dislike for the institution.
Unlike Haley, however, Stefanik is not going to try
running her own parallel
foreign policy from
New York. Stefanik will face few hurdles in being confirmed by the Senate.
Republicans will control the chamber, and she is unlikely to face the sort of
organized opposition that Bolton faced almost twenty years ago.
As a member of Congress, Stefanik has been a harsh
critic of the United Nations, smearing the institution as antisemitic whenever
it has afforded Palestinians an opportunity to express their grievances or to
bring pressure to bear against Israel in the General Assembly. She has denounced the Biden administration for its supposed
failure to combat antisemitism at the UN.
Stefanik was a leader of the campaign to smear antiwar college campus
protesters as antisemitic, and she played a role in pressuring the presidents
of Ivy League universities to crack down on the protests at their schools. She
has also supported the cutoff of funding for the United Nations
Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), the agency that is essential to providing
humanitarian assistance to Palestinian civilians in Gaza.
Stefanik has distinguished herself as one of the most
extremely anti-Palestinian members of Congress.
Like Trump, Stefanik has been an opponent of the nuclear deal with Iran from its
inception. She recently joined her Republican leadership colleagues in calling
for a “return to a maximum pressure campaign against Iran.” She repeated the call for maximum pressure again this week.
Ambassadors to the U.N. typically have little influence in shaping policy, but
the choice of Stefanik is consistent with reporting that Trump plans to pursue a more aggressive Iran policy in the
new term.
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