Amid the hand-wringing of foreign-policy experts over former President Donald Trump 's reelection campaign, Alexander Gray , senior fellow at the American Foreign Policy Council, argued that a second Trump term would be good for America because it would strike fear into the nation's adversaries again.
There's just one problem with that narrative, according to Gray: "The U.S. alliance system didn't crumble during Mr. Trump's first term. On top of that, the Obama administration's "toleration of Chinese malign activity in the South and East China seas, and its promise of a 'new model of great-power relations' with Beijing had brought U.S. relations with allies and partners like Japan, Taiwan, Israel, the Gulf Arab states and much of Eastern Europe to a historic low point."
"Mr. Trump did likewise — and, perhaps unlike his predecessors, was seen as willing to take decisive action to secure change," Gray wrote. "Through public and private cajoling — also known as diplomacy — he secured a commitment from NATO members to beef up their contributions. From 2017 through 2021, nearly every signatory raised defense spending, contributing substantially to the alliance's ability to respond to Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
"So far, a catastrophic withdrawal from Afghanistan, the failure of American deterrence in Ukraine, an Iranian nuclear breakout inching ever closer, and an accelerating Chinese threat toward Taiwan," he answered. America's allies around the world have also "begun to chart their own course in the face of an uncertain U.S. trumpet."
Alexander Gray Nato Foreign Policy Adversaries Fear Joe Biden
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