What To Expect from Trump II
by James
Carden Posted on November 27, 2024
https://original.antiwar.com/james-carden/2024/11/26/what-to-expect-from-trump-ii/
Remarks at the Yerevan Dialogue on November 23.
Reprinted with permission from the American Committee for US-Russia Accord (ACURA).
About a quarter of a century ago around this very
time, a newly elected Republican president who campaigned on a promise of a
more humble, less arrogant foreign policy was assembling his foreign policy and
national security team. By the time he was finished, even the new
president’s critics had to agree that the team he had assembled was an
impressive one.
The new Secretary of State – Colin Powell – had
previously served as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and was so popular
among the American people that he had been often urged to run for president
himself.
The incoming Secretary of Defense – Donald Rumsfeld –
had previously served as a congressman, Ambassador to NATO, White House
Chief of Staff and secretary of defense.
The young and brilliant national security adviser –
Condi Rice – had previously been the principal Soviet expert on the National
Security Council, and was a renowned political scientist who at the young age
of 39, was named provost of Stanford University.
And yet.
In a matter of three years this most experienced and
accomplished of national security teams steered the United States into a
needless and disastrous series of wars that ended up killing hundreds upon
hundreds of thousands of people and gave rise to terrorist groups such as ISIS.
All of which is to say, experience isn’t always a
predictor of success for presidential administrations.
Journalists and foreign affairs analysts who today are
quick to criticize Trump’s incoming team for its inexperience might do well to
keep that in mind.
On the other hand, from the standpoint of those of us
who care about global peace and stability, who worry about whether the
wars in Ukraine and the Middle East might spin out of control, Trump’s proposed
team gives plenty of reasons for concern – but for reasons other than
their lack of experience.
In order to explain why, I need to set the discussion
in the context of the debate in Washington around US foreign policy generally
and then within the context of the Trump team specifically.
For those of you who are not overly familiar with the
parameters of the foreign policy debate in Washington, I want to quickly review
the three principal schools of foreign policy in the United States:
neoconservatism, liberal interventionism and realism.
Neoconservatives view military force and
the threat of military force as the solution to nearly every problem. The
conservative thinker Russell Kirk once noted that neocons “mistook Tel Aviv for
the capital of the United States” – which is about as pithy and accurate a
description of neoconservatives as can be imagined.
Liberal interventionists, by and large,
are the people who staff the Biden administration. The policies they favor have
become hard to distinguish from those that the neocons want – the big
difference is that they pay lip service to multilateral institutions such as
the UN and couch their militarism in the vocabulary of humanitarianism.
Both neocons and liberal interventionists share what
the greatest statesman of the 20th century, Charles de Gaulle, once described
as “the American Messianic impulse which swelled the American spirit and
oriented it toward vast undertakings.”
America, said de Gaulle, had developed, “a taste for
interventions in which the instinct for domination cloaked itself.”
Yet such impulses are anathema to the 3rd school of
American foreign policy, realism. The primary difference between
realism and the first two schools is that realists are able to distinguish
between core and peripheral interests.
Generally speaking, we realists are critical of wars
of choice which we see as too often counterproductive and indeed immoral. We
also understand the imperative of achieving a stable balance of power and
recognize dangers of unipolarity.
There is a widely held assumption that Donald
Trump’s America First has some relationship in connection with the realist
school. It is also often and wrongly assumed that “America First” is
simply an updated brand of isolationism that was popular in the US in the
1930s.
I dispute these assumptions: Given the makeup of his
incoming national security team, Trump’s American First seems more and more
like a marketing ploy – employing the rhetoric of realists for the purpose of
disguising, laundering, camouflaging what are essentially neoconservative
policies. In other words, America First is just neoconservatism in realist
drag.
If this is so, we should expect a good amount of
continuity with the policies of the Biden administration.
On the war in Ukraine, Trump’s “plan” or, more
accurately, his expectation that he and he alone will be able to negotiate an
end to the war in Ukraine smacks of unreality. Despite his oft-stated
intention to end the war, it seems to me there is a real risk that he and his
team might try to escalate it in an attempt to end it.
And there is a troubling precedent to such an
approach: Recall that in 1968 Richard Nixon campaigned on promise to end the
war in Vietnam – Nixon said he had a secret plan to end the war. Yet once
he and his secretary of state Henry Kissinger were in office they escalated in
the mistaken assumption that that would bring the North Vietnamese to the
negotiating table.
So it is very easy for me to envision Trump attempting
such a gambit, after all it was he, in his first term, who sent Javelin
anti-tank missiles to Ukraine, repeatedly sanctioned Russia, expelled Russian
diplomats and appointed a hardline neocon as his Ukraine Envoy. Now a few from
team Trump have criticized Biden’s recent decision to sent ATACM long range
missiles to Ukraine, but honestly, given their past comments, the criticism
smacks of partisan opportunism.
Now I fully admit it would hard to imagine Trump doing
a worse job than Biden did in the Middle East. But ask yourself: Where
will the blank check Trump will no doubt hand over to Bibi Netanyahu lead?
It could very well lead to a direct war with Iran.
And Israel’s neighbors seem to be readying for some
kind of confrontation.
Consider: In the year and a half since
China brokered the historic rapprochement between Iran and Saudi Arabia,
Saudi Arabia has accused Israel of genocide and forcefully condemned
Netanyahu’s bombing of Lebanon. Only recently, the chief of the Egyptian
armed forces met with his Turkish counterpart for talks on deepening military
cooperation between the two nations. Turkey has also just announced it has
severed all diplomatic ties with Israel.
All the while, Trump’s soon to be national security
adviser has been publicly calling for Israel to escalate its war on Iran. In
October he suggested that Israel bomb Kharg Island, from where Iran ships 90
percent of its oil exports.
Meanwhile, neoconservatives in Washington have been
busy spreading pernicious propaganda — similar to the kind they spread in the
run up to the 2003 Iraq War.
A neoconservative operative at the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy, recently published a report that accused Iran
of developing a new kind of chemical weapon. “Iran,” says the report, “now
appears to have produced fentanyl-based” chemical weapon which they have
allegedly provided to partners and proxy groups in Iraq and Syria.
De Gaulle once wrote that “Deliberation is the
function of many; action is the function of one.”
Ultimately, it is up to Donald Trump to decide whether
to allow the neoconservatives to drag us into a war with Iran – a war which has
the very real potential – to ignite a world war. I wish I had a happier
scenario to present – but having come all this way, there is no point in not
being honest with you.
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