“We have no eternal
allies, and we have no perpetual enemies. Our interests are eternal and perpetual
and it is those interests it is our duty to follow”.
Lord Palmerston
Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, 9
November. Well, that went well didn’t it? I am sitting at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport
about to cross the new inner-West border by flying to London. In June large
hordes of British people told Brussels where to go with Brexit. Now, large
swathes of the American people have told Washington where to go with Trumxit. Some
Chicken Littles here in Europe are already screaming ‘the sky is falling, the
sky is falling’. But is it? What are the ‘strategic’ implications of
President-elect Trump’s victory? What would a Trump Doctrine look like?
US grand strategy: President Trump will certainly abandon the values
that infused the ‘Obama Doctrine’ and likely adopt a hard-headed interests-led
foreign and security policy. However, he alone will decide just what the US
interest actually is. Certainly, there will be more money for the US armed
forces, but probably also a surprisingly ‘pragmatic’ approach to dealing with the
likes China and Russia. As for ISIS there is nothing Trump has said thus far
that suggests he either understands the issues implicit in the threat, or is
willing to commit the immense forces and resources over time and distance
needed to deal with it.
Brexit: Britain suddenly has a powerful ally in the White House for
the coming Brexit negotiations with the EU, if for once London can exploit such
an opportunity. Trump made no effort to hide his admiration for the decision of
the British to quit the EU and even claimed Brexit was an inspiration for his
campaign. The Special Relationship might
linger on a little longer if Theresa May’s Cabinet can hold its nose long
enough to make use of it. If I were London I would get that British new
super-carrier over to the US pronto! After all, President-elect Trump clearly enjoys
the theatre of power.
NATO: Much will depend on how the Allies react to President Trump. As
I wrote in a piece earlier in the year President Trump is likely to adopt a transactional
foreign and security policy. As such he will hold the Allies to a far greater
degree of burden sharing if the US is to remain the security guarantor of
Europe. He will certainly demand the Allies at the very least fulfil and quickly
the commitment made at the 2014 Wales Summit to spend 2% GDP on defence of
which 20% must be spent on new military equipment. However, comments this
morning that NATO is finished are as ever premature.
The West: The old West is dead, long-live the new West? The West
was born of an Anglo-American partnership that spawned a global institution-based
security order. It is not a little ironic then in that it is the
Anglo-Americans who are fast killing it off, which from a British viewpoint is actually
a disaster. President Trump will probably accelerate a trend toward Machtpolitik which has sadly been
underway for some time, and which speaks to the very nature of a transactional
foreign policy. A shared understanding of, and penchant for, big, uncouth power
seems to be the spring of Trump’s bromance
with Putin, and seems to be how he conducts his business empire. Equally, if the idea of the West as a bloc is
to survive under President Trump, then the Europeans will at least have to
abandon some of the overdone institutionalism that passes for foreign and security
policy in Europe, and properly reinvest in tools of power and influence.
There is of course a big ‘but’
with all of the above. As I write this it looks like Republicans are making gains
in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. With people like Senator
John McCain (R-Az) likely to hold key positions on the Senate Armed Services
and other important congressional committees, the confirmation process for the
new Administration will impose at least some level of balance. In any case, for
all Trump’s fiery rhetoric during the campaign from about America’s place and
role in the world his emphasis is likely to be overwhelmingly on undoing Obama’s
domestic legacy, most notably the Affordable Healthcare Act. Yes, the armed forces will get a boost to
shore up the support of his base, but foreign policy will not be President
Trump’s over-riding concern. In any case, he will be mired in endless battles
with a Washington that he regards as a ‘swamp’ and which he has vowed to ‘drain’.
Which brings me to the real
danger; there will be no Trump Doctrine. Rather, a Trump foreign policy could
well descend into a mix of bluster, opportunism, isolationism, idiosyncratic
activism, mercantilism, and trade protectionism, but offer little or no coherent
or consistent strategy. Given how dangerous uncertainty is already making the
world there is little question that President Trump could make the world more,
not less dangerous. That is why European leaders far from rejecting
President-elect Trump must now hug him close.
When Lord Palmerston made that
famous statement about British interests at the height of Empire he did so firm
in the belief that it was in the British interest to maintain strategic balance.
President-elect Trump has as yet to evince any suggestion that he understands
America’s pivotal role in the maintenance of today’s strategic balance. One can
only hope he develops such a vision and quickly…for all our sakes.
Plane to catch!
Julian Lindley-French
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