Thursday, October 17, 2019
Trust is Not a Factor
If you are family. If you never question the boss and do
exactly what he says. And if you can take the pressure, cross the line and
assume the risk, knowing that you will be sacrificed and dumped if that’s what
it takes to protect the boss. Fine. For everyone else on staff or in a position
of power in the administration… and for the rest of the world… you have Donald
Trump working with you only so long as it suits his purpose. Trump has no
loyalty, despises consistency, governs by keeping his opponents and even
purported allies off-balance.
He understands social media and how to hold his base,
catering to their fears and totally controlling the medium that sets their
tone: Fox News. “Donald Trump might not be president were it not for Fox
News, the right-wing network that for years gave the blustery game show host a
political platform and in 2016 promoted his long-shot candidacy. His symbiotic
relationship with Fox has continued as president, with the outlet essentially
acting as state media, not to mention an employee pipeline. But lately there’s
been trouble in paradise. While hosts like Sean Hannity and Laura
Ingraham are as loyal as ever, the president has grown increasingly angry
with other of the network’s reporters, including Chris Wallace and Shep
Smith, along with polls that suggest its viewers are coming around on his
impeachment. ‘It is so different than it used to be,’ Trump lamented Thursday [10/10].
“It was against this backdrop that William Barr, Trump’s
dutiful attorney general, met with Fox News mogul Rupert Murdoch on
Wednesday night [10/9]. Why they met, or what they discussed, is not clear,
according to the New York Times, which first reported the rendezvous. But the timing of the
meeting—as Trump, under siege from Democrats, ramps up his criticism of Fox
News—raised eyebrows, leading to questions about whether the administration is
attempting to get the network back in line. ‘What is the Attorney General of
the United States doing meeting with the owner of a private television
network?’ CNN’s Vicky Ward tweeted Thursday [10/10].” Vanity Fair, October 11th.
Two days after that meeting: “Shepard Smith, the chief Fox News anchor who was despised by President Trump, said on his Friday
program [10/11] that after more than two decades at the network, he was
stepping down and leaving the company.” CNNBusiness.com, October 11th.
Coincidence? Right, uh-huh. For Trump, constantly being the focus of liberal and
conservative media, “it’s all about me,” is just marketing.
There’s a general feeling among Senate Republicans, stated
privately, that there are only two possibilities that could move the Senate to
convict and remove Donald Trump as president: a secret ballot (not happening)
and if Fox News turned on Trump. Does that make Rupert the most powerful
influence on the President? And exactly… exactly… what’s the deal?
For most of those who have seriously studied history and
economics, Donald Trump is a walking disaster. While rich corporate interests
may adore his massive and unneeded tax cut, his moves to deregulate, given the
ballooning deficit and accelerating environmental and financial nasties, it is
equally clear that his policies are not remotely in the best interest of most
Americans. But nothing evidences his incompetence like his foreign policy,
shifting and twisting in a wind-driven maelstrom.
North Korea has ceded nothing despite the bromance between
the President and brutal Kim Jong-un.
Tensions with Iran are escalating as they
restart their nuclear enrichment program and seem willing to bear the toll of
American sanctions… following Trump’s unilateral disavowal of the UN nuclear
accord. China is the hands-down winner in the interim, phase one trade
agreement with the United States. Farmers are probably permanently damaged,
despite “promises to buy” from China… which has shifted its agricultural import
strategy to buy from more reliable nations that have no powerful political
agenda. China is also “immediately on scene” when America cuts any foreign aid…
ready to step in to replace us.
By giving Benjamin Netanyahu legitimacy in his rather
dramatic reduction of local Palestinian hopes and rights, making symbolic
changes (moving our embassy to Jerusalem or stating that the Golan Heights will
always belong to Israel) that are a slap in the face to regional allies, Trump
has all but removed the United States as a potential influential mediator for
regional disputes. The biggest winner in the international scene remains
Russia. Trump refuses to accept what Congressional committees, from both sides
of the aisle, have affirmed (along with every US intelligence agency): Russia
was and continues to be deeply meddling in our election process.
Even as he castigates traditional allies, Trump cozies up to
continuing and temporary foes. Breaking treaties, going it alone, doing what he
perceives to be best for Donald Trump regardless to the risk of harm to the
United States, the President has made the United States fundamentally an
unreliable world power, whose word has become meaningless.
Even as our official policy of supporting Ukraine because of
a clear and present danger from Russian forces operating within its borders
with annexation on the agenda, it certainly appears that the President withheld
almost $400 million in necessary military aid that Ukraine needed to restrain
that Russian threat… to force Ukraine to investigate the Democratic frontrunner
and his family and find dirt.
Russians smiled again when Donald Trump unilaterally (and
without consulting his experts) announced the withdrawal US troops from
Northern Syria and seems to have given Turkey’s President, Recep Erdogan, a
greenlight to attack the very same Kurdish forces that fought with us against
ISIS. A “but he knew what we were going to do” from the Turkish President on
October 16th. Erdogan calls them “terrorists” because they want more autonomy
in their ethnic enclaves. We called them allies and friends. Oh, Trump just
suggested they were worse than ISIS, but he was alone among Republicans in that
assessment. Simply, we abandoned them. The result: a massive Turkish incursion
into northern Syria to crush the Kurds, now abandoned by the United States, who
turned to the only folks who might help them: Assad’s brutish military, Russia
and Iran. ISIS prisoners, held by the Kurds, were escaping detention facilities
by the thousands. Will they find ways to attack America and her interests
again?
Trump tweeted: “Let Syria and Assad protect the Kurds… Anyone
who wants to assist Syria in protecting the Kurds is good with me, whether it
is Russia, China or Napoleon Bonaparte. I hope they all do great, we are 7000
miles away!” When GOP Senators decried the measure, Trump slapped some
meaningless sanctions on Turkey, economic perils that would take months to have
any impact. Then the Republicans smiled and said all the bad decisions Trump
made were really the result of the destabilizing impact of the impeachment
inquiry. Huh? OK, a bizarre letter from Donald Trump to Erdogan, Kurds dying in
the field, American evangelicals fearing the rise of Israel’s mortal enemy,
Iran, and a few Republicans began breaking ranks. And then…
But Peter, didn’t Mike Pence and Mike Pompeo just implement
a Trump-directed and Erdogan-accepted Syrian border ceasefire on Thursday,
October 17th, that solved everything? Look at Trump’s tweets: Oct 17, 2019 01:13:15 PM - This is a great day for
civilization. I am proud of the United States for sticking by me in following a
necessary, but somewhat unconventional, path. People have been trying to make
this “Deal” for many years. Millions of lives will be saved. Congratulations to
ALL! Oct 17, 2019 01:03:25 PM - This deal could NEVER have
been made 3 days ago. There needed to be some “tough” love in order to get it
done. Great for everybody. Proud of all!
Really? Only Trump could solve what he directly caused by
that phone call to Erdogan? After Turkey’s troops effectively already
accomplished what they set out to do: drive the Kurds out of their Syrian
territory, giving them 120 hours to abandon the balance of the entire 20 mile
Turkish-declared safe zone within Turkey? Coincidentally 120 hours before a
Putin-Erdogan meeting? The Kurds got nothing. Turkey crushed them without any
consequences (Trump removed the threat of sanctions against Turkey). Somewhere
between 100 and 200 thousand people had already been displaced. Thousands of
ISIS fighters were released. Untold numbers of Kurdish fighters lost their
lives or were seriously injured. Where are the protections for the Kurds who
fought side-by-side with us? Erdogan 10, Putin 10, Trump ZERO.
Trump’s policies are based on bullying and doing what the
other side does not expect. Keep them off-balance. Who cares about “foreign”
unless there is a Trump real estate deal there? Trump voters do not care about
international matters anyway, so “do what you have always said America should
do,” even if it does not make sense. It just has to sound good and be sold as
“America First.” And since Republicans know that they cannot win elections
without the base, and since the base is all Trump, all the time, do what the
Trump-man tells them to do… or else. But was the base wavering on this
“withdrawal from Syria” issue? Did a bi-partisan congressional rebuke to the
President’s withdrawal reveal a new vulnerability?
“For his first years in the White House, Trump was
surrounded by aides who tried to nudge him toward a conventional version of
conservative internationalism: support for traditional allies, competition (if
not confrontation) with Russia and China, a muscular U.S. role in the Middle
East.
“Republicans in Congress tried to restrain him too, joining
Democrats to slap sanctions on Russia over the president’s objections… Trump
never liked it. Now, with a new national security advisor (his fourth in less
than three years), an untested Defense secretary and a secretary of State
acting as his most pugnacious defender, the president faces few restraints.
He’s increasingly conducting foreign policy as he sees fit.
“What that means in practice should come as no surprise,
because he’s reverting to views he’s held for more than 30 years… The popular
notion that Trump is mercurial and inconsistent in foreign policy is mistaken,
Thomas Wright of the Brookings Institution wrote in a 2016 essay that remains
one of the clearest dissections of the president’s strategic thinking: ‘He has
a remarkably coherent and consistent worldview.’
“Trump doesn’t want U.S. troops fighting overseas. He’s
willing to use air power, but reluctant to deploy troops on the ground — and
implacably opposed to using U.S. forces for peacekeeping, which he dismisses as
‘police work.’
“He doesn’t much care who runs other parts of the world or
how they run it, as long as they don’t ask the United States for help… He
admires authoritarian rulers, including Turkey’s Erdogan, Russia’s Vladimir
Putin, China’s Xi Jinping and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un… He has little interest
in human rights or democracy promotion… And he’s allergic to lasting
commitments, whether with small, dependent partners like the Kurds or
long-standing allies like Germany, France and other members of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization.
“‘Trump’s starting point and defining emotion on foreign
policy is anger — not at America’s enemies, but at its friends,’ Wright wrote… In
1990, Trump expressed grudging admiration for China’s massacre of protesting
students in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. ‘They were vicious, they were horrible,
but they put it down with strength,’ he said in an interview with Playboy
magazine. ‘That shows you the power of strength.’
“And in a 2000 book on foreign policy, Trump bluntly
proposed U.S. withdrawal from NATO, an idea he’s frequently returned to… The
surprisingly rich record of early Trump pronouncements on world affairs
provides a road map to future Trump policies.
“An unfettered Trump will seek to withdraw more of the
remaining 14,500 U.S. troops from Afghanistan… He’ll renew his threat to take
the United States out of NATO… He’ll be tempted to pull U.S. troops out of
South Korea, especially if it can help him make a deal to freeze Kim Jong Un’s
nuclear program. (The U.S. goal has long been to dismantle North Korea’s nukes,
but Trump has tacitly redefined success at a less ambitious level.)… On the
other hand, Saudi Arabia may continue to benefit from a U.S. defense umbrella…
‘They pay cash,’ Trump explained last month.” Doyle McManus, writing for the
October 16th Los Angeles Times.
Trump also has little respect for the US Constitution, rails
constantly against its Bill of Rights, finds federal statutes an annoyance and
attempts by Congress to pass laws he does support are labeled as unpatriotic.
He abhors anyone who opposes him, castigates them, creates lasting pejorative
labels for them and denigrates their persona and their beliefs. Trump is and
remains an a corporate autocratic who is not used to being challenged… on
anything. We are now perceived as a rogue nation, unreliable and untrustworthy.
Global diplomacy is increasingly predicated on “work-arounds” to exclude the
United States from processes and new global treaties and accords. Can our
democracy withstand such callous disregard of the rule of law? Maybe not.
I’m Peter
Dekom, and even post-Trump, will the rest of the world ever trust our word
again?
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